Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

One of the legacies of Pulp Fiction across the way smaller, more independent film is done in America is an emphasis on cleverness. Like a lot of things, Tarantino inherited this from the French New Wave and immediately made it his own, and was talented (or lucky, depending on your opinion) enough to do a good job of it. An emphasis on subtle (and not-so-subtle) allusions to all of pop culture, a bag full of narrative tricks and devices, the kind of cinematography and editing that seemed designed to simply show off, characters who are either too-cool-for-school or sad losers to whom you can feel superior, and a knowing audience (and the baseline cynicism they bring) were suddenly very in vogue – something that was made concrete by the surprise major success of “The Usual Suspects.”

Enter the cleverest of a generation of clever screenwriters, Charlie Kaufman. His movies are the kind of complex brain puzzles that get so lost in its own style that it views the idea of having to have an ending with contempt (Adaptation). He was so good at this, his movies seemed like the possible culmination of the *wink wink* snarky cinema for which the 90s will probably be remembered. So it’s so satisfying to see him be behind a movie that has one of the strongest emotional cores of any movie released this decade: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

In this movie, Jim Carrey stars as a man named Joel Barish, yet another prototypical Kauffman loser stand-in, dating the vibrant but troubled Clementine Kruczynski (Kate Winslet). After a particularly nasty breakup, Clementine goes through a process where all her memories of their relationship are erased from her head. Joel, after learning about this, decides to go through the same procedure, but while his memories are being erased decides he doesn’t want it and tries to fight back. That’s where things get interesting.

For a movie that sounds on its surface to be a sci-fi thriller to turn out to be such a complex reflection on memory, and the way we remember and forget the things that matter the most to us is a very pleasant surprise. The cast is all in top shape. Jim Carrey is able to blend into the movie and serve its goal rather than dominate every scene.

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A group of young technicians who are performing the service while getting stoned and talking about The Clash all provide a perfect balance to the rollercoaster going on in Joel’s head. The cast aside, most of this movie can probably be attributed to esteemed director Michel Gondry. Kaufman penned the story off an initial idea by Gondry – and you can tell the director had a lot to say on this subject matter.

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This movie will force you, as it did me, to sit down and think about the way you remember and forget the emotional parts of your memories. My favorite memories all have colors and tones associated with them, just like this movie. Some parts have virtual spotlights on them, while others blur at the peripheries, something that is accomplished with some really amazing camerawork. When I forget something, it’s not the “remembered/forgotten” binary of most movies (Memento, all Hollywood amnesia thrillers); I lose the little things before losing the big ones. As Joel’s memory fades, he forgets faces on strangers and all the small details that fill out a picture; the borders fade into darkness, grays and whites and then it’s all gone. It’s a remarkable way of handling the subject.

That the ending works so well in this movie may have to be attributed to Gondry. Without giving too much away, it has more in common with the screwball romantic comedy genre of the 40s (think Doris Day) than anything else – and in less capable hands it could have easily been just dismissed as a clever name-drop. Or maybe this was Kaufman’s idea all along and we are seeing the birth of a brand new thing: cleverness for the sake of moving the audience, not pandering to them.

6 thoughts on “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”

  • I've heard some differing opinions on this. Do they end up together at the end or not? I don't think they do. You see them running on the beach at the end, right, if I remember correctly. But isn't that one of his memories? I thought that was the whole point. He realizes that even though he's heartbroken and it's not going to work, he still wants to keep his memories. They learn to move on but still appreciate the good times they had. Everyone else I've talked to seems to think they end up together at the end. There's no hugging. No kissing. The final shot of them they're on opposite sides of the hallway. What do you guys think?

  • I remember it ending in that hallway, which is also the last point chronologically shown in the movie. I think it's a play on all the screwball romantic marriage comedies of the 30s/40s where couples would break up, go on and (try to) lead seperate lives, and then through a series of implausable events (those packages in this movie) end up back together with a newer maturity and awareness that it all may still suck, but it's worth the effort.

    I like the ending because it's the only time you see Joel do something that not cowardly, which is a big step for the man. I think they want to link Joel standing up for something (going after her), with some sort of payoff for that good deed – them ending up together. I think they are going to get back together – more open to the idea of their relationship having major problems, but also realizing that it's probably worth the heartbreak to try it all again.

  • Wait! Joel also "isn't cowardly" when he turns around at the beachhouse as it is falling apart in his mind – which is a big emotional step for him but, adding another layer of tragedy to it all, doesn't add up to much as it is removed from his mind a few seconds later. The hallway is important because he's actually following through on it all (in a scene meant to mirror that beachhouse) in his real life.

  • A brief comment on Mike's last addendum. Saying that Joel turning around and walking back to the house is a big emotional step for him but that it doesn't add up to much is only partially correct. It is true that the memory is taken from his mind, but in that scene Clementine implores him to return to that very beach and meet her in "the future", and that is how the movie begins when we see Joel wake up and decide to not go to work and instead get on the other train "for some reason". So, without that episode of emotional fortitude you would be left with a sadly unfulfilling movie, and Joel would be left with a sad and unfulfilled life. But you don't have to take my word for it.

  • Once again, Hans Blix has the answers! Yeah, I completely forgot about that being the reason for Joel ending up at the beach again.

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