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ARCHIVED
TOPIC:
[ Line of Sight ]
DATE:
July 20, 2002
[Author's
Note: This is a term paper I would like to have written
in college. It comes from a conversation I had with my really
smart and really funny friend, Jeff Quick.]
Gilligan's
Island: A Descent Into Madness
Isolation,
malnutrition, exposure, and overall deprivation can lead
to a total mental breakdown. No better evidence exists of
this than the documentary series Gilligan's Island.
When
the series begins (in black and white, a stark and jarring
cinematic technique to show the transition to the more "colorful"
world of madness later on), we see seven castaways shipwrecked
on a desert island in the South Pacific. We learn their
names and get an idea of their personalities--each reacts
differently to the idea of being stranded. In the first
few episodes, they struggle to survive and to get off the
island. They attempt to fix their transmitter, they build
a raft, they secure shelter. In these early scenes, we see
signs of aberrant behavior only infrequently, and some of
them are understandable mistakes or the result of panic
and confusion. They begin to worry about headhunters, but
soon realize that no such headhunters exist. They attempt
to make glue from tree sap to fix their wrecked boat. They
stop calling each other by name, but instead use strangely
distant titles like "Skipper" and "Professor."
Then things quickly begin to degenerate.
Perhaps
the last vestige of sanity begins to slip away, however,
when the castaways stumble upon the remnants of a Japanese
outpost from World War II. At that point, their joint hallucination
begins, because one by one, they begin to believe that a
Japanese soldier remains on the island with them. They fight
against this foe, who clearly represents the island itself
as well as the oppression and fear of isolation for the
castaways. Their battle against the illusory foe reflects
their struggle for sanity. In the end, though, it is a losing
battle.
Soon
enough, the delusions set in with great fervor, each one
seemingly taken right from tawdry headlines or pulp fiction.
They all jointly see a young "jungle boy." They
believe that a surfer has come to the island on a "reverse
tsunami." A note here should be made about the character
known most often as "the Professor." This man
clearly lost his grip on reality far sooner than the rest.
His "scientific" explanations for the group's
hallucinations only serve to feed their delusions. This
pathological liar's actions clearly account for the entire
group's quick descent into madness. The fact that the other
castaways believe he can make a lie detector out of bamboo
but cannot fix their smashed transmitter shows either their
willingness to fall into a fantasy world or their extreme
lack of scientific knowledge -- perhaps both.
In an
interesting examination of the growing insanity of each
individual castaway, one episode "revisits" the
point of their mental breakdown -- the appearance of the
Japanese WW II soldier. Interestingly enough, we see the
delusion from the point of view of each individual, and
the details differ wildly. This suggests that, while they
all share a basic delusion, the details of the hallucinations
and experiences diverge substantially. We can assume that
what we see each week is the perception of one figure. Taking
the show's name into account, it seems reasonable that this
figure is indeed Gilligan. Clearly he is the catalyst for
most of group's joint hallucinations, for he experiences
most of the delusions first (he sees the meteor that supposedly
ages the castaways fall to the island, he discovers the
island is "sinking," and so on). Gilligan shows
all the signs of a truly deranged mental patient.
We
are also allowed to see a number of Gilligan's fever-mad,
malnutrition-driven dreams, in which he views himself as
a pirate, a cowboy, a spy, Jack the Giant-Killer, a Central
American dictator, and so on. These comprise a fascinating
look into the mind of someone with both delusions of grandeur
and a massive inferiority complex.
Understandably,
many of the fantasies that grip the minds of the poor castaways
involve escaping their island prison. Their delusions include
airplanes flying overhead, ships in the distance, and even
absurdities such as telephone lines washing up on shore
and setting signal flares to alert space vehicles overhead.
Things
only get worse from here. The documentary filmmaker's decision
to switch to color provides us a clear transition to demonstrate
that now that castaways' lives have become entirely delusional.
The headhunters they feared early on (whom they determined
did not exist) show up--multiple times. Even though the
previously agreed that the island harbored no major animal
life, they begin to interact with various gorillas, a monkey,
a wild boar, a lion, and ultimately, a giant spider in a
cave.
Perhaps
understanding the false reality of their madness and the
harsh, true reality around them, the castaways experience
a surprising number of hallucinations involving multiple
versions of themselves. No fewer than three doubles (identical
versions of Mr. Howell, Ginger, and Gilligan -- notably
twice) "come to the island." Or at least, they
come to the shared delusion. Similarly, the castaways imagine
themselves switching minds or switching identities (usually
through hypnosis) or simply imagining that they are something
they are not.
One
clue that shows definitively how early on their psychological
break begins is the portrayal of the radio the group has
with them on the island. In an early, mostly delusion-free
episode, the radio is lost. Later on, it is found--in the
mouth of a fish who supposedly swallowed it. Like the proverbial
Jonah, the radio is rescued from its captivity inside a
sea creature. This is a fate the mentally crushed castaways
know they will never share. The radio henceforth becomes
the starting point of many delusions: the fact that the
Howells are not actually married, or the notion that one
of the SS Minnow passengers is a murderer. It also
feeds preexisting delusions: that Harold H. Hecuba is the
smash of Broadway with the castaway's production of "Hamlet,"
or that world-famous pilot Wrongway Feldman, who "comes
to the island" twice, returns to civilization unable
to remember how to get back. When someone on the island
turns the radio on, it always plays the news exactly when
the castaways wish it to, covering topics they wish to hear
about. The announcer even pauses to let the insane listeners
make comments. Clearly, the radio, if it exists at all,
never actually functioned past the first one or two episodes.
It's all in their sunstroke-addled minds.
In the
end, however, we begin to realize that many of the final
episodes may be the psychotic outpouring of just one person--a
young male fixated on comic-book-style fiction. The other
castaways become mere caricatures, exhibiting only one facet
of a personality. They themselves begin to resemble hallucinations,
or manifestations of an individual with multiple personality
disorder. As we watch through Gilligan's eyes, we see how
sad things have become for the hopeless first mate, and
we worry about what has happened to the other castaways.
A robot
"comes to the island." It is followed by a Mars
probe, a missile, a NASA space capsule, Russian cosmonauts,
two different Russian spies, a mad scientist able to control
and switch people's minds from body to body, Zsa Zsa Gabor,
a Beatles-esque rock band, gangsters, radioactive seeds
that grant superpowers, a magic amulet that grants wishes,
and so on. These are clearly just Gilligan's delusions.
One can imagine, in fact -- at the end -- Gilligan lying
on the beach by the lagoon, dehydrated and suffering badly
from exposure. The last castaway alive, he imagines fevered
scenarios of rescue, after which he turns the island into
a resort where the Harlem Globetrotters come to play.
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