ReportWire

Tag: technosexual

  • Symphorophiliac Is the New Black: Tove Lo Takes J. G. Ballard’s Crash to A Different Level in “Borderline”

    Symphorophiliac Is the New Black: Tove Lo Takes J. G. Ballard’s Crash to A Different Level in “Borderline”

    [ad_1]

    When last we left Tove Lo’s jilted robot lover in the Alaska-directed video for Dirt Femme’s second single, “No One Dies From Love,” Annie 3000 had been cast aside in favor of a newer model (tale as old as time). Specifically, for a more “lifelike” robot named Eva. Annie, who just spent the entirety of the video making a plethora of memories with Tove as her servile robo-lover, never would have imagined she could be tossed out so easily for someone (or something) else. For, as it turns out, the key line in the chorus, “No one dies from love/Guess I’ll be the first” is ultimately from Annie’s perspective, not Tove’s. And, upon seeing her gush over how “real” Eva is, Annie feels the unspoken sting of not being “real enough” for Tove by ripping her “heart” (located at the center of her chest) out in response as the deluge of memories they shared plays back in a painful montage before Annie goes up in flames (foreshadowing for how things will also transpire in “Borderline,” set to appear on the deluxe edition of Dirt Femme).

    The final scene of the video, however, assures us that it’s just as the song says, “No one dies from love.” Instead, one gets repurposed into another useful thing: being a crash test dummy. For this is Annie’s new fate in the aftermath of having her heart broken by Tove. Hence, the state we find her in (side note: her true robot identity isn’t revealed for certain until the last frame) throughout the sequel to “No One Dies From Love”: “Borderline” (always a brave title choice when considering Madonna’s 1983 single of the same name has the monopoly on that word, try as Ariana Grande, Tame Impala, and now, Tove Lo might to make it their own). Co-written with fellow pop powerhouse Dua Lipa around the time Future Nostalgia was being created, Tove was certain to mention that this “is a song about being on the edge of love. The drama you cause inside yourself and with another person if you feel insecure.” To be sure, Annie, by this point, is nothing if not insecure. Though still confident enough to know that she deserves her revenge (as Budd [Michael Madsen] says of Beatrix Kiddo [Uma Thurman] in Kill Bill). And how she gets it is very elaborate indeed.

    This time directed by Nogari, the video starts at the finale, with a vehicle up in flames. To this end, it’s no coincidence that J. G. Ballard’s Crash has seeped into the cultural consciousness of late by way of mainstream pop culture. This includes, most notably, Charli XCX (a regular Tove Lo collaborator) naming her most recent album Crash and featuring herself on the cover all bloodied and perched on the hood of a car (in a bikini, of course) with a cracked windshield—presumably because she deliberately threw herself in front of it. You know, just to feel something and all that jazz in our climate of total dissociation and sociopathy. Which is why an obsession with all-consuming, passion-burning love remains at a premium, particularly in narrative depictions. And when we can’t get something like that from an actual human in the way that we want it, perhaps it’s bound to transfer to…objects. Especially technologically-oriented ones.

    Enter technosexuality. But its precursor was, “naturally,” mechanophilia. For the car was the first major modern technological advancement of the post-Industrial age. Suddenly it was mother, father, sister, brother to so many. Offering shelter and comfort for any occasion: going to the movies, making out, having sex, sleeping, eating…maybe even going to the bathroom (a.k.a. pissing in a cup). Ballard’s tale of mechanosexuals-turned-symphorophiliacs (someone sexually aroused by accidents and disasters, e.g. car crashes) is a dark look at the effects the modern age has had on humankind, and its increasing inability to relate to its own flesh-and-blood ilk. Preferring instead the “no muss, no fuss” coldness of a machine. This, needless to say, also including robots. As Zadie Smith would assess of the novel in a 2014 article for The Guardian, “Crash is an existential book about how everybody uses everything. How everything uses everybody.” That reality has only amplified in the decade since the piece was initially published, not to mention the many decades since Crash was first released.

    One might even say Annie has become the new “nightmare angel of the expressways” in lieu of Crash’s Dr. Robert Vaughan. This much is made clear as we watch her kidnap Tove Lo, who we see in the back of the trunk after Annie has gone through the ringer in terms of being constructed into the perfect crash test dummy that can withstand all manner of impacts (hear the lyrics: “I like to my feel my bones when they crash into my heart/I like the taste of blood when you’re tearin’ me apart)—except unrequited love-oriented ones. It doesn’t take long for Tove to come around to playing along with Annie’s idea of a Thelma and Louise-inspired road trip, possibly because she’s not fully aware it actually is Annie. Her openness to doing whatever only augments after Annie serves her a handy tab of acid that also looks very much like a computer chip (with this in mind, Tove ostensibly speaks from Annie’s viewpoint when she sings, “I like to push it to the edge/As long as you say you’re mine/Borderline”).

    Cut to Tove Lo dancing sensually amid the wreckage of various vehicle parts as she trips blithely in the junkyard not just of “no longer useful” machinery, but also love itself. In another scene, Tove and Annie, in her crash test dummy guise, are backlit by a pair of headlights as Tove licks and kisses the non-person with the sort of tripped-out gusto that only LSD can incite. As Tove puts it in her lyrics, “Lost in the magic with you/A pretty disguise from the truth/Truth is ugly, don’t open your eyes/I can change, I can change with just one more lie.”

    The next day, however, even without the drugs, the reinstated “lavender haze” still seems to be at play as Tove hangs out the window, lovingly caresses the crash test dummy’s face while the latter drives and enjoys a roadside meal with her ex-turned-current boo. But somehow, it all seems part of Annie’s elaborate revenge plan: make Tove fall back in love with her as a different human-shaped object and then crash them into a wall as they’re pursued by a police car (for no apparent reason other than, again, to come across like Thelma and Louise). Sure, maybe Tove thought it had to go down that way in order for them to be together, but what she failed to take into account about Annie’s machinations (no pun intended) is that she knew she was quite literally built to crash and survive. Which she’s now not only done in a harrowing relationship with Tove, but in this actual crash in which she finds herself burned, but still moving. A symphorophiliac in matters of love, thanks to Tove’s original callousness.

    Because perhaps being a symphorophiliac stems, at first, from getting off on watching how easy it is for a relationship to crash and burn—as fragile and delicate (if not more so) as any person prone to a fatal wreck inside a vehicle.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Madonna’s “Take A Bow” Video As Harbinger of Technosexuality and Obsessing Over a Simulacrum of a Person

    Madonna’s “Take A Bow” Video As Harbinger of Technosexuality and Obsessing Over a Simulacrum of a Person

    [ad_1]

    By the time Madonna’s Bedtime Stories album came out in 1994, the postmodern era was well into effect. Indeed, one might say Madonna single-handedly created its peak in the 1980s (Don DeLillo merely wrote in its style). Not just with her own career being birthed at the same time as MTV (where she became more known for her visuals than her music), but with her unapologetic commitment to “synergistic efforts” that were previously balked at by most musicians who felt their job simply ought to be making music. Madonna, in contrast, was the first truly “multimedia” icon. Even if that Pepsi commercial only did air twice in the United States. A truly profligate waste of five million dollars, which Madonna pocketed without looking back.

    In fact, “not looking back” was her modus operandi for a long time. And when the 90s arrived, she was determined to change her musical and aesthetic tack with the new decade. That meant a mélange of house and R&B “flavors,” which started to manifest on 1992’s Erotica before Madonna more noticeably softened her tone (e.g., no more talk of teaching us how to fuck) on Bedtime Stories. That softness being most marked on “Take A Bow,” the second single from the record (following “Secret”). Co-produced by Babyface, the track remained at number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 for seven weeks, and saturated the culture so much that it was played during the season one finale of Friends. To add to the instant classic nature of the song, Madonna filmed a Michael Haussman-directed video for it in Ronda, Spain. And, being Spain, M naturally thought to incorporate bullfighting. Along with a steamy real-life bullfighter named Emilio Muñoz (Madonna never being shy about parading her enthusiasm for Latin men…or women, for that matter).

    Although the internet became available for public use the year before, in 1993, it was still too “germinal” to consider in mainstream pop culture. That’s why Madonna and most others continued to suck firmly on the TV titty—wielding that as the beacon of modern life more than computers/an “online presence” just yet. Accordingly, in the “Take A Bow” video, Madonna taps into the trend-turned-way-of-life that is obsessing over a simulacrum of a person via television. Even though she might have had a love affair with The Bullfighter in actuality, their botched romance has rendered her into little better than an obsessive ex who scrolls through their erstwhile boyfriend’s social media profiles as we see her watching him on TV and caressing his Screen Face.

    Despite The Bullfighter breaking her heart, she can’t seem to let go of the prototype, as it were, that she fell in love with. The “edition” of him that lured her in the first place. And that’s the trap many fall prey to after a breakup: still romanticizing a relationship by remembering the honeymoon period and wondering where it all went wrong. Why it couldn’t stay as it was in the beginning. But with screens, whether attached to a TV or, now, phones, the simulacrum is able to provide the version of a person that one wants (mainly because the public images and videos that people choose to parade tend to show them at their “best”). Or rather, the version that they want to believe in, for projections can thrive long after being disillusioned in real life by the person in question. So it is that we see Madonna both depressed and aroused in a Ronda hotel room as she touches the screen with her ex on it as lovingly as she would to his actual cheek. Perhaps more lovingly, because he can’t talk back a.k.a. say anything that might break the illusion of his “perfection.”

    The rise of technosexuality in our current landscape was something Madonna foretold as well in this video, slipping under sheets in her lingerie with the TV. Where a pristine version of a person she can project all of her fantasies onto resides. If there is one single image from the twentieth century that embodies the coalescing of (wo)man with machine, it is this. For it is the indelible representation of there no longer being a real distinction between a person and an “apparatus,” with the former having made itself merely an extension of the latter. And since fetishizing the non-real version of people has only ramped up in the twenty-first century, it’s easier than ever to sexualize a simulacrum (see: OnlyFans). This then becomes a fine line between actually wanting to fuck a person versus the very machine they’re being viewed on.

    To that point, Madonna places her crotch near the screen where The Bullfighter goes about his bullfighting pageantry. She wants to fuck him again so badly, that the machine with his image on it becomes an adequate enough substitute. In this fashion, Madonna builds on the so-called sci-fi element of J. G. Ballard’s Crash, which also foretold of the human “fusing” with machinery to the point of seeing it as a viable sexual outlet (this tends to include vibrators, one would posit). To boot, she appears far more satisfied with the simulacrum than the real thing when Haussman finally does cut to a scene of them “consummating” in the flesh toward the end of the video. The tryst is violent and messy—something that would never happen with a screen. Nor would an-all-too-abrupt splooge, as we see The Bullfighter orgasming from Madonna’s perspective beneath him. This shot quickly transitions to him walking away from her as she cries against a wall. Her tangible experience, ruined by his callous, detached approach, was just so upsetting compared to the imagined form of it. For whatever reason (maybe just to feel something), The Bullfighter subsequently walks through a stream of broken glass in response. Pain is pleasure for some people, after all.

    Upon finishing his “glass walk,” the tables are turned on The Bullfighter as he adjusts his head to glance back at the TV where, presently, Madonna’s own image is on it. This reversal infers that it’s his turn, at last, to have no choice but to fetishize the simulacrum—because that was the last time she was ever going to give him any pussy (confirmed by the sequel to this video, “You’ll See”). So he, like her, caresses her Screen Face before the switch is made back to his Screen Face on TV, followed by Haussman panning out to reveal Madonna, once more, leaning against the wall in her room with his bullfighting image still playing on what appears to be a loop. Now, they can both be mere projections that each one can return to whenever they want as a source of pain-pleasure. Because that’s what it is to have access to a simulacrum of a person: constant self-torture thanks to the irresistible option to revisit their onscreen effigy.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link