Guy Ritchie’s 2005 Revolver is
the third crime film genre to focus on professional criminals but instead of
focusing in the typically East End of London like his previous films; Lock,
Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch. All three starring Jason Statham.
With Revolver Ritchie takes us on different path of the crime film genre in a philosophical
view focusing on the concept of a revenge seeking confidence trick but centring
on the Human Ego. Revolver is pretty well known for being a love it or hate it
film but in my personal opinion it’s a film for a very VERY narrow audience.
Though the films genre is crime film after watching and re-watching and
analysing it in several different views I honest feel Revolver is a fantastic
interpretation of the two philosophers theory’s; Friedrich Nietzsche’s Superior
man also known as The Superman and Sigmund Freud’s Ego and the Id. Using these
philosophers and their ideas it is fantastic example of how Jason Statham (Jake
Green) transforms Ray Liotta the anti-protagonist (Dorothy Macha) from a
superior being to nothing.
Friedrich Nietzsche believes when
we are born we are genetically subjected to becoming superior; that the idea of
wishing success for other people rather than your own is a lie, every person
has the need of becoming the greatest and seeing others in pain gives us slight
joy and seeing pity is a sign of weakness. That men and woman should have their
own moral values and decide how to live their own life. The constant thrive of
overcoming ourselves and that every person should become a "ubermensch”
meaning a superior being or superman. That a God did once exists but now is
dead and now we are the Gods. To become a God a man or woman has to discover
the perfect form of themselves and they must fight to achieve this and only in
this journey of inner perfection and self-righteousness that we can truly
become the masters of the universe.
“My idea is that
every specific body strives to become master over all space and to extend its
force and to thrust back all that resists its extension. But it continually
encounters similar efforts on the part of other bodies and ends by coming to an
arrangement with those of them that are sufficiently related to it: thus they
then conspire together for power. And the process goes on” Friedrich Nietzsche
- The Will to Power 1910
Sigmund Freud’s “Ego and the Id”
tells us that subconsciously we tell ourselves to forget and this is our ego’s
way of coping with past or present traumas. I’d like to think that
subconsciously we see our ego as a protector. That our ego shows no bounds that
to point blame is our ego’s way of protecting ourselves. Our ego cannot
comprehend that there is something greater than our own values, which is why
people will do whatever it takes to protect our own interest. So to protect our
ego the ego itself will create an external enemy for us to blame and in doing
this actually creating a real enemy. No matter what that thought in your mind
says your ego will always have someone to blame.
“The poor ego has a
still harder time of it; it has to serve three harsh masters, and it has to do
its best to reconcile the claims and demands of all three...The three tyrants
are the external world, the superego, and the id."
New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis 1932
New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis 1932
One of the most powerful scenes
in Revolver is when Macha faces Green right after Green finally sees his on
internal enemy known as the ego and finally kills his ego freeing him. But as
the lift doors open we see a very distraught Macha pointing a gun at Green.
However even though Macha has a gun and can kill Green at any moment his presentation
of what he is wearing is that he is just simply naked. A symbol of being half
naked or completely naked is vulnerability despite the fact holding a gun which
is a fantastic juxtaposition of power. In the end Jack Green and the audience
no longer fear Macha completely destroying his ego. From the transformation of
a big time corrupt casino boss to a man crying and whimpering constantly “Fear
Me” is one of the most beautifully constructed transformation to a villains
defeat.