Jerome Bixby’s The Man
from Earth (2007)
from Falling Sky Entertainment
from Falling Sky Entertainment
Directed by Richard Schenkman
John Oldman David Lee
Smith
Harry John
Billingsley
Will Gruber Richard
Riehle
Edith Ellen
Crawford
Dan Tony
Todd
Sandy Annika
Peterson
Art William
Katt
Linda Alexis
Thorpe
Jerome Bixby wrote Star
Trek and Twilight Zone episodes,
so it is no surprise that Jerome Bixby’s
The Man from Earth combines philosophical meanderings, a science fiction
concept of a biological wonder, namely a fourteen thousand year old man, and a
seasoned cast, including John Billingsley, Richard Riehle, Ellen Crawford, and
Tony Todd. What did surprise me is how long it took for me to “suspend my
disbelief.” I was willing to put aside the historical coincidences, that John
Oldman, the Upper Paleolithic man who showed no signs of aging past thirty-five,
had known Van Gogh and Christopher Columbus alike. But I was put off by one of
those misconceptions that my contemporaries have with the medieval world. I groaned
out loud when John Oldman described Columbus’ fear of a flat earth, as if that
late medieval/early modern captain actually DIDN’T know the world was a sphere.
Actually, the going theory of the late middle ages was that the earth was a
somewhat squashed sphere, something like a balloon with hand pressure applied
around its “equator,” squashing it ever so slightly into an elongated
near-sphere. I said to myself “If this fellow really did live in medieval
Europe, he would not have worried over a flat earth.” He would have been more
afraid of the effects of bathing. Flat-earth talk was something like our
stories of the boogey man today, frightening to children . . . and adults not
quite in touch with reality.
How surprising, then, that fifteen minutes into the film I was
totally engrossed. Maybe it was the film’s fresh approach to some of the important
questions of life, including the function of aging, of learning, of religion.
Maybe it was Oldman’s initially oblique way of dealing with his life during the
past fourteen thousand years, asking his friends what they would assume about
life for a “caveman” or Phoenician Sailor, or medieval man in France. No, it
was his amazingly plausible interpretation of the “prehistoric origin of the vampire myth,” saying
that because he never aged while community members around him grew old, they “thought
I was stealing their lives away to stay young.” I was hooked.
And I really started paying attention to how the film
explored the workings of memory, the role of personal experience in our
understanding of the past, and contemporary, academic expectations of cold,
hard evidence of veracity. Ah, evidence! When asked about ancient artifacts,
whether he had any as proof that he had lived in Paleolithic times, Oldman
declares that he has carried nothing with him from the distant past, for why
would anybody carry through time simple tools that can be fashioned anywhere, tools
constantly being replaced by new ones, better ones. Just because a
twenty-first–century museum places a hunk of flint chipped into a knife gingerly
in a dust-free, climate-controlled glass case doesn’t mean the user of that
knife didn’t toss the knife away when he found a really fine piece of flint . .
. or when in his travels he came across a settled band of humans with the first
metal forge.
The difference in perspective is an intriguing part of the Jerome Bixby’s The Man from Earth. But
the nuances of the film is set into a deceptively simple plot: a professor of
history has decided to leave tenure behind, and his colleagues gather to wish
him well . . . and find out why he would do such an irrational thing as abandon
an intellectually—and economically—secure position. In the course of the “farewell
party” plot, which is essentially a free-flowing conversation in the course of
an evening, Oldman reveals that he has to move on periodically, before those
around him notice that he doesn’t age as they do. In his first few hundred
years of his life, it seems, he learned the hard way what can happen to
relationships when one who is blessed (or cursed) with eternal youth is
confronted by old friends or spouse or even children. A painful situation,
according to Oldman, and sometimes dangerous, for having a body that does not
age doesn’t mean that the body can’t be killed by neighbors bearing torches and
pitchforks . . . or wooden stakes.
In the course of the film Oldman reveals that he has sat at
the feet of the Buddha and attempted to bring the message of Siddhartha Gautama
to West Asia, to the Roman Empire around two thousand years ago, taking the name
of one Jeshua bin Miriam. He tells this part of the story almost comically, to
the horror of his colleagues, especially a particularly Christian colleague,
Edith. He bullets out a report of his time with the Buddha and the next five
hundred years, culminating in an attempt to bring the Buddha’s message of peace
to war-torn Judea: “Guy met the Buddha. Liked what he heard. . . . was Etruscan
. . . didn’t like what they became, a giant killing machine . . . they weren’t
really apostles . . . they didn’t do any teaching, Peter learned a little more
about fishing . . . crucifixion . . . he blocked the pain . . . slowed his body
processes . . . they thought he was dead . . . . he attempted to go away
undetected . . . tried to explain . . . they were ecstatic.” And so it came to
pass that a major religious figure was “born,” with “a lot of fairy tales mixed
in.” Oldman cries out that he never intended the Judeo-Roman world to mistake
him for a savior, as if anyone could “save our souls that we had never lost in
the first place,” that old story of a woman and a snake and an apple being a gross
distortion of the human condition. “Cookies and wine . . . that’s not what I
had in mind,” Oldman says ruefully.
And as Oldman’s rueful—or as the character Edith would say,
sacrilegious—meditation on his experiment in influencing human behavior
unfolded, I was struck with a deeper more provocative message than the “Christ”
story as the misunderstanding of desperate people in a desperate time. This interpretation
of the central figure of Christianity is not new to me.
But neither is the concept that captivated me. It’s just
that the film really drives home a very basic lie, the lie of the importance of
individual human experience. I was overwhelmed in a visceral way with the
implications for what is known as individuality and for that equally potent concept
called “naming.” My reaction begins not with Oldman’s rendition of the slice of
his life called “Jeshua” but the out-of-hand by most of his colleagues. The
shared cultural experience of the past two thousand years presses upon them.
And this is no surprise. They can’t help but reject the story of Oldman as the
Christ. He gives his name as Jeshua. They re-name him “kook.” What is one individual
human’s version of a story the face of a version known by billions. How can an
individual maintain—no, how can an individual develop in the first place—a
schema of reality that is isolated from the the names and narratives of the
collective hive, the Borg, call it what you will.
John Oldman is the only individual in the room . . . and
even he is conditioned by the collective, the “hive mind.” The evidence against
individual experience, that mis-empowered narrative of a mis-named person, is richly
developed in the exchange over the identity of Jeshua/John, and in answers that
Oldman gives about about how he handles the loss of loved ones, about illnesses
he has had . . . about whether he really is a vampire of sorts. Oldman keeps
reminding his colleagues that what he knows about life in different periods of
pre-history and historical periods comes in large part from the findings of
current research. For example, he knows he had illnesses thousands of years
ago, but the names for those illnesses are fairly recent inventions.
The lie—or is it a mere trick—of taking individual
experience as the core of identity is blatantly exposed as Oldman explains how
he knows he was a Cro-Magnon man, in the way he fields questions about his
anthropological name, his identity as Cro-Magnon. This issue of understanding
as a function of naming is brought into focus when he says, “I was a Cro-Magnon, I think . . . when the
Cro-Magnon was first identified, when anthropology gave them a name, I had
mine.” The idea of knowledge being an act of naming takes me back to the Garden
of Eden and Adam asserting his dominance over creation by naming it. There’s
power in naming . . . but even more power in the collective social body to set
the parameters of identity.
Oldman has to be a “caveman, liar, or nut,” for these are
the names we assign to truly individual experience. And even Oldman sees
himself as an aberration. He is, after all, the product of his times.
If Oldman—and philosophers, linguists, social scientists,
etc. etc. etc.—are right that we know ourselves and our environment only in
relation to socially-constructed reality of a particular time and place, then
the act of remembering the past is strongly conditioned by how we are schooled to know the past. It is no
wonder that Oldman “remembers” Christoforo Columbo as “Christopher Columbus”
fearing a flat earth. After all, John Oldman is hindered by our contemporary
view of all things old. He is always ever as young as we are!