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Although "What Shall We Do Now?" was originally recorded at the same
time as the rest of "the Wall" it was replaced on the album with "Empty
Spaces" because according to Waters' 1979 interview "it's quite long,
and this side was too long, and there was too much of it." Thankfully
he liked the song a great deal and reinstated it in the movie immediately
following "Mother." Even though "What Shall We Do Now?" is in all actuality
an extended version of "Empty Spaces," it differs from "Spaces" in that
it really expands on the theme of transition and examines the various
ways to fill the missing gaps in the wall. Since I've already discussed
the song's music in "Empty Spaces"
(relatively the same in "What Shall We Do Now?"), I'll go straight into
the lyrics.
As Waters said in an interview, "this level of the story is extremely
simplistic." Don't get me wrong, the fact that it might be simplistic
does not make it simple by any means. If anything, "What Shall We Do
Now?" contributes to the multiple themes of "the Wall" while adding
a few of its own. But as a song in itself, the lyrics are fairly and
caustically straightforward. Put simply, it is a list of things that
people use to fill "the waves of hunger," that void in their lives and
the missing gaps in their walls. Arguably, people are trained by society
to "search for more and more applause" in a "sea of faces," or in other
words, they are trained to become someone else so as to be socially
acceptable, thereby garnering more acceptance (social "applause"). It's
the reason why corporate stores such as the Gap are successful; we are
told that in order to fit in, we must adjust to the social norm even
if that norm seems to deviate from the status quo. For an example of
this, look at the success and profitability of punk music (a genre notoriously
known for going against the grain of society) in the early 90's sparked
by radio-friendly bands like Green Day. In our ever-growing materialistic
society, you must become someone else before you are someone; you must
wear a fashionable brand of clothes, drive a stylish car, keep trendy
friends, eat at chic restaurants. Namely, you must adapt yourself to
the latest social trends in order to become your social self. Accordingly,
these things start to become social fetishes. We become obsessed with
the latest trends, defining ourselves by what we see in the media, what
is marketed towards us, and what our peers are doing. In the most ironic
social twist, individuality is supposedly achieved by conformity to
commercialized social norms. We fill our lives and define ourselves
with designer jeans and fancy cars; with how much money is in our bank
accounts and how many sexual partners we've had; with what we eat and
where we sleep. This is the very core of the attack in "What Shall We
Do Now?" a polemic against the foundation of the world's increasing
capitalistic society. It's an attack against conformity, the loss of
individuality, and mostly
against the idea that these material things will complete our lives
and make us truly happy.
Yet all of the things listed in the song aren't necessarily evil. Many
people feel that vegetarianism is the healthiest way to eat and sending
flowers by phone is certainly a far cry from the evils of Hitler and
his Nazi regime. Why are such things attacked, then? As Roger Waters
perfectly states in his 1979 interview, it's about being "obsessed with
the idea of being a vegetarian...adopting somebody else's criteria for
yourself without considering them from a position of really being yourself."
These things are not inherently evil; rather, it's the obsession with
these things, with defining one's self by someone else's standards,
that is the moral decay of modern society. "More, more more!" becomes
the global motto with every passing day and with the accumulation of
it all, walls are being erected higher and more impenetrable. While
the song veers away a bit from the actual story line of "the Wall,"
Pink's applicability to the materialistic obsession perfectly reflects
the walls of many people across the globe. As Pink's fame and fortune
increase, he further buries himself behind a wall of possessions, becoming
more detached from the rest of the world as a result of his personal
accumulation. As one conforms to the current trends, true and personal
communication becomes more and more difficult. After all, how can one
communicate individually if one defines himself or herself as a collection
of commercialized goods? But as the wall of possessions grows, so too
does the obsession to obtain more until finally one is the beast of
his fetish, living each day at the will of his delusion. Even after
we are consumed, we live "with our backs to the wall," insinuating that
rather than looking for a way out from our self-imposed isolation (which
would require us to face the wall), we ignore the growing ramparts and
continually search for the next trend in the hopes of being accepted,
of getting "more and more applause."
The movie sequence for "What Shall We Do Now?" is arguably the most
beautiful and haunting animation of the film. The screaming face image,
the sexualized flowers, the wall of possessions, all spring from Gerald
Scarfe's brilliant interpretation of the song and, at least in my opinion,
fully captures the essence of Waters' social sermon. The sheer artistry
of the animation in the beginning of the song with the male and female
flowers flowing and morphing into lovers before attacking each other
is almost beyond
words. Despite its beauty, many people might have a problem with the
apparent misogyny of the introductory piece. The male and female flowers
sensually dance around each other before performing intercourse, morphing
into free-flowing humanistic figures before changing into monstrous
beings with the male attacking the female. However the female changes
back into a flower and releases all of her glory, shining brightly before
viciously snapping up the male in her lips and flying off as some sort
of bestial dragon. It could be easy for one to view this sequence as
a misogynist attack against dominant females, revealing them to be nothing
more than man-hating beasts. However, I think such a reading is grossly
inaccurate in that it is viewing the sequence out of context. It must
be remembered that this is Pink's story and that, for the most part,
the viewer has been viewing the movie from Pink's point of view. This
animation sequence is no different. Not only was Pink raised by a dominant,
overprotective mother, he has just found out that his wife is cheating
on him. Therefore it shouldn't be a surprise that Pink would feel a
great amount of aggression towards women. He selfishly feels that he
has been abused by them and is continually the victim of their beastly
appetites for male emasculation (although we have seen quite the opposite
in "Mother" in which Pink drives his wife to infidelity by his own lack
of emotion and communication). Furthermore, it was a woman (Mother)
who caused Pink (at least in his mind) to become mentally isolated and
distrust women. Because we view it all through Pink's eyes, we are getting
a very skewed view of relationships between men in women.
As if spawned by this latest personal injury of infidelity, a wall
of materialistic desires bursts onto the screen in the form of high-rise
buildings, televisions, radios, Harley Davidson motorcycles, Mercedes,
Cadillacs, and BMWs. A "sea of faces" greets the wall of possessions
(forming a wall of conformity with their faces), each one a clone of
his or her neighbor similar to the masks worn by the schoolchildren
in "Brick in the wall 2." The wall plunges onward, breaking the peace
of the countryside with the screams of the "the people caught up in
the wall" (Scarfe, DVD). Everything the wall passes is corrupted. Gerald
Scarfe states in the DVD commentary that "in the shadow of the wall,
flowers turn into barbed wire; men turn into monsters." As the wall
passes, an innocent infant grows into a beast and then into a man in
uniform (the Nazi-esque uniform of Pink's fascist regime later in the
movie) who bludgeons another man to death, the innocent's blood splashing
onto the wall. As a result of the lack of communication fostered by
the barriers between people, the wall begets social decay, personal
degradation, and violence. Religion is destroyed as the wall continues
its course straight through a church and "a new god is set up" as the
pieces reform into a casino-like neon building that spews mass-produced
neon bricks (Scarfe, DVD).
The next sequence running through a list of Pink's personal bricks
is another example of Scarfe's amazing artistry. The Pink doll screams
and morphs into a curvaceous female shape (the sexual promiscuity of
"Young Lust" as well as the feminine "betrayal" in "Mother"). The woman
changes into large, feminine dollops of ice cream suggesting the sensual
excesses of Pink's lifestyle. The ice cream then reverts back to the
female shape, next morphing into a submachine gun (foreshadowing Pink's
violent outbursts later in the film) before changing into a syringe
and needle (drugs), a bass guitar (his musical fame, and possibly a self-reference to Roger Waters himself, considering that Waters predominantly played bass in the band), and finally rounds
out the list of personal bricks by turning into a black BMW (expensive
possessions). The song ends with an ambiguous sequence depicting a red
fist rising from the ground and turning into a hammer. After seeing
how the wall perverts everything in its path, one might view the fist
rising from the ground as another perversion of nature similar to the
flowers turning into barbed wire. In the presence of the wall, even
the earth rises up and forms itself into an implement of creation (the
wall is created) and destruction (personal individuality is destroyed).
A much more optimistic reading of this scene might see the fist rising
from the ground as a good omen rather than one of social and personal
decay. By this reading, nature will ultimately reclaim the earth from
the tyranny of humanity's reign. Just as grass eventually grows through
the asphalt of a parking lot or just as the weather erodes and destroys
even the largest of mankind's creations, so to will nature rise up and
destroy the personal and social walls of humankind. Though the fist
is red (conjuring thoughts of bloody strife), it turns into a powerful
tool of reform.
The final scene after the music is over merely reemphasizes (almost
needlessly) what has just been said in the song. The hammer is used
as a tool of destruction to smash a display window through which looters
pilfer a range of consumer products. The fact that
these items (televisions, radios, vacuum cleaners) are luxuries rather
than necessities simply stresses the idea that the capitalistic wall
leads to crime and violence. Society has taught us that we are nothing
without personal possessions and so those who are unable to afford them
are willing to steal in order to be socially acceptable. Interestingly,
as the crooks are hustled into the police wagon, two old women steal
out of the broken display window, insinuating that commercialism turns
everyone into a criminal, even the most unsuspecting. No one is safe
nor truly innocent in a society in which a baby grows into a violent
monster and elderly women pilfer merchandise behind the backs of policemen.
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