Categories
Living

Spring again, but when? Groundhog Day and the shifting of the seasons

Groundhog Day sounds like a joke, and it usually is. What kind of holiday is named after a rodent named after a pig? There’s little that’s noble about the groundhog, a nervous, sneaky animal that chews up the wiring in people’s cars and decimates gardens when our backs are turned. To mark a major turn of the annual wheel—the change of the seasons from winter to spring—through the character of a cowardly woodchuck is odd at best, but that’s American pop culture for you.

As it happens, my mother grew up in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, and all three of her sisters still live there. We made regular pilgrimages when I was growing up. It’s a humble town, far less picturesque than it looks in the Bill Murray movie, and there are garish groundhog statues prominently placed around the hollowed-out business district. I remember one of my aunts showing me a tiny groundhog carved on her high school class ring.

I’ve never witnessed the ritual firsthand, but Groundhog Day in Punxsy (as all the locals call it) centers on a hilltop called Gobbler’s Knob. It involves a clandestine society of groundhog handlers, who put the rodent in the hole in the wee hours of the morning and coax it back out, to see its shadow or not, according to a predetermined script. The handlers wear tuxedos and top hats and preside over a gathering of the inebriated. The rest of the year, Punxsutawney Phil lives in the public library, where you can observe him through a big plate-glass window.

All this is so banal it was easily overwhelmed in the national psyche by the aforementioned movie, which managed to upend the whole notion of time that underpins the holiday. Instead of cyclical time that moves in graceful circles, “Groundhog Day” is now synonymous with time that stutters unnaturally, causing distress and confusion.

But cyclical time is really what it’s all about. Just as we’ve pushed the deep pagan roots of Christmas, Easter, and Halloween below the surface, we’ve forgotten that this time of year has been a holiday, a time observed in ritual, for centuries.

The date of Groundhog Day, February 2, nearly coincides with a date that was significant in Ireland even in Neolithic times, when certain tombs were built to align with the sunrise on that date. Later, February 1 came to be celebrated with a Gaelic tradition called Imbolc, which falls halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. In other words, it’s the time when winter is half over and people start to believe spring may actually come again—something well worth marking in a world where winter means meager food and a true battle with cold.

Imbolc, known as St. Brigid’s Day in Christian times, involved special feasts and fires, and the holiday also had an aspect of divination—predicting the weather based on the behavior of animals. German-speaking parts of Europe maintained similar customs around Candlemas, a feast day falling on February 2; in those places, badgers were the animal thought to indicate the early or late arrival of spring. There was an urge across cultures to ritualize a particular moment in the calendar.

These traditions came to America with various groups of European immigrants, but like so many others, they were made shallow, even cartoonish, through the process of assimilation. We don’t send groups of young girls in white dresses door-to-door anymore, singing hymns to Brigid. Instead, our culture offers jokey news reports about the results from Gobbler’s Knob, and we do our part by not believing them.

Thankfully, regardless of whether we pay any attention or not, the seasons are still there, and still real. We can observe them as closely as we choose to, and the world rewards our attention with finer and finer detail.

Nobody who watches the dance of small seasonal changes—the leafing-out of beech trees, the homecoming of hummingbirds —can fail to realize that the steps are changing. Whereas long-ago generations of humans probably derived comfort and security from marking seasons that behaved predictably throughout their lifetimes, we have the strange, unsettling experience of watching the calendar shift before our eyes. Spring comes earlier now, and for some of us that causes profound anxiety. For me, there’s also a sense of loss for those old traditions that connected people to the seasons in a more elegant way.

I try to remind myself that the essential experience of being human on the earth hasn’t changed. We’re still not in charge. Whatever we make of seasonal shifts—a solemn holy day, a little joke, or an impending catastrophe—it’s still the same story: We live on this planet, conditions change, and we try to make sense of it. And then things change again.

Categories
Arts

Cinéma réaliste: Les Misérables is a compelling exploration of modern strife

Despite its name, Ladj Ly’s Les Misérables is not a retelling of Victor Hugo’s famous novel. But there are many ways it closely resembles its namesake. Within the confines of a tight thriller and a runtime of less than two hours, Ly explores questions of justice, crime, redemption, rebellion, collective and individual responsibility, and the socio-political role of architecture in modern-day Paris—including in the same suburb that inspired Hugo’s novel. The particular issues of today are different than the 1832 June Rebellion, but the underlying questions facing humanity remain the same. If an insurrection is morally justified but destined to fail, should it be quashed before it begins? Should we punish lawbreakers or maintain stability? If society is a pot about to boil over, should we struggle to keep the lid on and risk building more pressure, or let it happen and face the consequences?

Though the title invites comparisons, Ly’s Les Misérables is very much its own film, a bold societal and stylistic statement on par with City of God and Do the Right Thing. It’s an incredible mix of crime thriller, day-in-the-life police procedural, and social realist commentary with spectacular flourish, and would be an easy favorite to win Best International Feature Film if Parasite were not also nominated.

Les Misérables

R, 102 minutes

Violet Crown Cinema

The film follows the SCU, a team dedicated to monitoring lower-income, predominantly immigrant communities in Paris led by Chris (Alexis Manenti), whose methods wouldn’t be out of place in the Old West; depending on how you look at it, he’s either highly effective or completely reckless. His partner is Gwada (Djibril Zonga), an officer of African descent who is prepared for the worst but favors containment and cooperation over confrontation. Joining them is Stéphane (Damien Bonnard), nicknamed “Pento” or “Greaser.” During their regular patrol, they must address tensions after a boy named Issa (Issa Perica) steals a lion cub from Roma zookeepers. To stop an all-out confrontation, the SCU has to find Issa and return the cub, but the distrust they’ve created in the past complicates the present, particularly when a series of mistakes by the police threatens Issa’s life.

What follows is best left unspoiled, but is a masterstroke of stylistic and thematic escalation. A situation arises that could have been avoided, but once it arrives, it cannot be defused. The characters can only hope to navigate these events with their lives and their values intact. Some may not appreciate the ending, calling it a cliffhanger, but it is the only honest way to complete the emotional arc of this film. Issa is left with a choice: stand up for himself and risk everything, including the lives around him, or stand down and continue in his unsustainable life. This is where we are as a society: We can either act now to avoid this unwinnable game, or be prepared to lose everything in the blink of an eye, the pull of a trigger, the lighting of a Molotov cocktail.

As a film, Les Misérables is top-to-bottom perfection. The direction is nimble yet grounded, always focused even as the events of the story spiral out of control. The tension stays at a low hum, the characters are deep no matter how secondary to the narrative, and it has a compelling moral core even if it has no definitive answers; attempting to wrap everything up would have been dishonest and manipulative. At the start of the movie, Issa and his friends sing “La Marseillaise” in celebration of a soccer victory, and like that anthem, Les Misérables is a call to fight for what’s right, but also a warning that the solution is not as simple as taking up arms.


Local theater listings

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema 375 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056.

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213.

Violet Crown Cinema 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000.


See it again

Groundhog Day

PG, 103 minutes

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, February 1 and 2