We Want You To Watch, National Theatre | reviews, news & interviews
We Want You To Watch, National Theatre
We Want You To Watch, National Theatre
Theatrical attack on pornography is well-intentioned, but disappointingly superficial
“We’re completely pro sex.” Rashdash, who collaborated with Alice Birch on this anarchic challenge to pornography, are not objecting on prudish grounds – their concern is the corrosive impact of degrading, dehumanising material. We are all affected, and we all need to seek a solution.
The potential of this rallying cry is never quite fulfilled by their 75-minute piece. The militant yet weirdly naïve central pair (Abbi Greenland and Helen Goalen, pictured below with Bettrys Jones) adopts extreme positions to illustrate the scope of the problem, but in focussing on the difficulty of articulating a response, the play itself is short-changed. Broad, absurdist sketches reference hot-button topics without delving into complexities. We don’t need (or expect) a magic solution, and the creators consider this a starting point for rigorous discussion, but it’s maddening to see urgent ideas abandoned for shock-jock indulgences like The Queen (Helena Lymbery) boogieing to Beyoncé.
Ah, yes – Her Maj. The otherworldly avengers tie her to a chair to persuade her to sign a decree banning pornography. When that doesn’t work, it’s onto the nuclear option: asking an American hacker (Jones) to shut down the entire Internet. Is a dystopian void preferable to a world in which a milkman (Lloyd Everitt) can casually watch Rape That Bitch 4 over breakfast – addictive, desensitising viewing that may have inspired the horrifying mutilation and murder of a female student? “Violent porn feeds violent people.”
Or does it? Everitt’s accused claims he can separate sexist torture porn and loving respect for real women – he just likes the validation of someone else sharing his fantasies. In the most effective segment, that compartmentalisation is challenged. An innocent boy (Adam Charteris, pictured below) gets his first view of sex from a nasty porn video on a mobile passed round the playground, and his romantic relationships are tainted by this early conditioning. Misogynistic porn isn’t just a problem for women.
Yet the issue gets short shrift in a breathless evening. Feminist or ethical porn is completely dismissed, the industry’s complex global commerciality reduced to nameless suits, and – aside from referencing our right not to be constantly objectified – the pervasive effect on wider gender politics of porn’s female oppression, whether openly abusive or subtler prioritising of the male gaze, is left unexplored. While Birch’s text tends towards bluntly didactic, the movement, though impressively athletic, can be too vague. One exception is the physical mimicking of cold, brutal porn, utterly devoid of emotion and sensuality: Greenland shaking Goalen like a rag doll, slapping her, abusing her and shoving her to the ground. It’s in stark contrast to game Lymbery’s demonstration of the life-affirming joy of sex.
Caroline Steinbeis’s vivid production, featuring Oliver Townsend’s severe factory scaffolding and Ben and Max Ringham’s unsettling soundscape, can’t quite disguise the spectacle’s comparative emptiness. Well-intentioned, but nothing revelatory to contribute to a vital conversation.
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