Becoming like a plant involves spending time with plants, studying them, mindfully ingesting them, and changing one’s scale—both shrinking and diffusing—to occupy the scale of a plant. A fiction film from Korea, Yim Soon-Rye’s Little Forest (2018), and a documentary from the United States, Lisa Marie Malloy and JP Sniadecki’s A Shape of Things to Come (2020), present creative vocabularies for stories of characters who become-plant. In both movies, the protagonists develop self-sufficient, earth-friendly ways of living and, more or less emphatically, reject the capitalist social order. Each film is supported by beautiful cinematography, arising from the elegant watchfulness of Lee Seung-hoon, and the extraordinary intimacy and trust Malloy and Sniadecki gained with their outlaw character. One of the first recipes Hye Won makes is makgeolli, a milky fermented drink of rice and barley. After she layers the ingredients into a big glass jar with water and a starter, the film takes its time observing the bubbling commerce of grains and microorganisms, one of its first forays into a nonhuman perspective. Makgeolli keeps you warm on a cold night and should be drunk with friends, so Hye Won invites two old high school friends to commune over it. In an early scene of A Shape of Things to Come, the protagonist shoots an animal from a great distance. It turns out to be a wild boar, which he has wounded in the thigh. He takes a pee while he waits for the animal to bleed out, and then waits while it gasps and finally dies. Back at his handcrafted encampment, Sundog carves out the boar’s glistening guts—a treat for his dogs—skins it, and later, as the sun is setting, grills, and eats the meat. Initially, Sundog, vocalizing in chuckles and burbles, seems to have gone completely feral. Then we are surprised to hear him speaking educated English on the phone, and film expands his portrait to include the human community he is part of (there’s a friendly local librarian, a celebratory dance party), and show that he is an extremely active citizen. Still, A Shape of Things to Come suggests that he desires to be claimed back to the pre-cultural world. He is building an alliance with the plants. (In an earlier cut that the filmmakers shared with me, while harvesting with a friend Sundog says, “We think they [the plants]’re working for us, but we’re working for them.”) He harvests opium poppy seed pods and brews laudanum. In the film’s most primeval throughline, Sundog harvests toad venom [Bufo alvarius]: he captures toads and carefully squeezes their glands to squirt the venom onto a sheet of glass. At the end of A Shape of Things to Come, he smokes a toad-venom cigarette, and we witness his dispersal from a human embodiment. He inhales the smoke and settles down under a tree. The camera moves away and allows itself to get lost in a haptic tangle of tree limbs, plants, and vines. The end of the film is an epic sequence by Molloy in the manner of Stan Brakhage’s Mothlight. For several minutes, a colorful riot of petals, leaves, and stamens invades our pupils, as though the point of view of the plants and insects has taken over the world. Doubled in a mirror image, the stamen riot visually approximates the ecstatic state of becoming-plant.
Two Films about Becoming PlantLittle Forest, Film by: Yim Soon-RyeA Shape of Things to Come, Film by: Lisa Marie Malloy and JP Sniadecki[Record]
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Laura U. Marks
Simon Fraser University
laura_marks@sfu.ca