Library Review Series: Interlude article of Movie, The Name of the Rose
Review of: The Name of the Rose.
Movie. (1986). Directed
by
Jean-Jacques
Annaud. Starring Sean Connery, F. Murray Abraham, & Christian
Slater. Jake Eberts & Thomas Schühly,
Executive Producers.
For:
Clayton Hometown Gazette
By:
Tim Krenz
What
value would humanity ultimately price its knowledge? Who owns
civilization's knowledge, everyone or no one? What does one do with
knowledge?
In
the 1986 film, The
Name of the Rose,
the questions above form a Post-Historical dilemma of a “knowledge
hazard,” in which the accumulation of knowledge at every step of
its increase, from facts or fictions, science or poetics, holds the
secret to save, or destroy--nothing, anything, or everything at
anytime. The Post-Historical “knowledge hazard” increases when
information expands, becomes quicker and easier—at a cost—and
now less subtly reflects the ancient struggle of liberty for minds
versus tyranny over minds.
Italian
writer Umberto Eco wrote the best-selling novel adapted for the
screen. Director Jean-Jacques Annaud captures the novel quite well.
In the early 1300s, the story's time and place, literate men (not
women) of Western civilization controlled peasants and suppressed
powers of noble lords with the fear of God's wrath, hell, salvation
and the apocalypse directly through the canons of the Universal
Catholic Church. These men of cloth and sanctuary determined truth
without dissent.
Set
in a 14th
Century Benedictine Abbey in Northern Italy, the story plot concerns
a book, hidden in the abbey library, and that book's conflict with
Church infallibility. All issues become exposed by a dissenting
Franciscan monk who swore poverty for his faith. Played by
international film star Sean Connery, the protagonist-dissenter,
William of Baskerville, encounters and solves, but does not resolve,
a series of deaths & mysteries that will result in the
destruction of the gifted book the abbey had to offer.
Narrated
by the character of his young charge, Adso (played by Christian
Slater, but with a different voice-over of an older man),
Baskerville's journey arrives back to a dark mark of a near
conviction before the inquisition for heretical views from that of
the Church. First, however, when arriving at the abbey to participate
in a debate on whether the church should renounce its riches,
Baskerville passes the peasants paying indulgences for forgiveness,
or tithing their faith with the produce of their farming. Other
peasants, meanwhile, would scrounge the refuse of the well-fed monks
for the scraps of nourishment—absconders of the trash excess from
the wealth-gluttony within the abbey In entering the abbey as an
anti-hero of 20th
Century fiction, Baskerville notices a fresh grave in abbey cemetery,
intriguing a mystery the abbot commissions Baskerville to solve.
Mystery
leads to mystery, and to more death, as the first monk who died,
known for his talents as a book illustrator, did not die accidentally
as presumed. Having worked in the scriptorium copying and
embellishing volumes of knowledge, the monk committed suicide.
Before any hint of printing presses, books could only exist by
writing them; only disseminate and multiply by copying them; or
improving their appearance and saving them; by labor of hand and a
deal of patient effort. For this, many Benedictines valued the
illustrator. His lost talent lost itself in his youth betrayed.
With
the most educated scholars in Western Europe, the Church controlled
the physical books, the art and language of writing, and a spoken
language of the Church (Latin). Having a monopoly on knowledge in the
post-Hellenic Age (post-Greek and Roman empires), the religious
orders owned both the power of purse and the power of dissent. No
opposing view to the Church, or political force by collective power,
could prevail in a society under a central power that, as George
Orwell aptly put it, limited the range of the people's consciousness
by limiting the range of words used to express dissatisfaction, or to
analyze and reason by description and contrast.
Brother
William of Baskerville pursues the string of tragic events with
reason and analysis, a reduction from impossible to plausible, a
rejection of supernatural causes (and of skepticism of supernatural
faith), and a rational scientific mind to unlock the mysteries above
the abbey, in the library. The one obstacle: No one but the
librarians may enter the mysterious abbey library.
Having
made their way at night into the library tower by secret, Baskerville
and Adso discover one of the greatest libraries in the world—full
of thousands of books and maps, etc., from as far earth's memory.
Unfortunately, Baskerville and Adso become lost in a labyrinth, a
system as connected as any soul to the story. For Baskerville, the
ecstasy unfolds in this treasure tower, the abbey's Forbidden Eden,
of complete enlightenment. Baskerville's experience unfolds as much
as Adso's carnal knowledge unfolded in losing his innocence to a
peasant girl searching for food in the abbey trash heaps.
William
of Baskerville discovered the source of the events that caused
learned men to fear and encouraged well-fed men to gluttony: The only
“surviving” (i.e. a myth) copy of Aristotle's second volume of
poetics, on the topic of humor and comedy, that he and Adso find in a
secret library room.
Watch
Annaud's film of The
Name of the Rose,
or both watch the film and read Eco's novel (available in
translation). Find both or order them at a local library. Think about
the questions in the introduction. Knowledge
comes at the sacrifice to keep it, and preserve it. If not shared
widely, we forget it in time. If not shared openly and wisely,
knowledge can destroy people, and the earth in the end. Either way,
experiencing life has little value unless shared—for better, or for
not better. Teach and learn. In the Post-Historical Age, knowledge
has to have more than “information” to it. It must possess
substance, like a movie or a novel—with place, time, plot,
character, setting, and theme. A public library provides many of
these needs. And people provide what follow that prerscription, if
we use knowledge for one reason it might exist—to find truth in any
meaning, even like Baskerville in the end, if we cannot resolve it to
the satisfaction of self-assured ego.
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