See here for
essential background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2022/08/cabal-on-paper-mask.html.
I occasionally go through phases in which I feel totally masochistic. This time, in order to stop myself beating my own forehead with a cricket bat I decided to do something I've been plucking up courage to do for a very long time, I've read the book of Paper Mask. The novel A Paper Mask was published in 1987 and penned by the film's screenwriter, a Scotsman called John Collee. The author is surprisingly mainstream, having been behind far superior productions such as Happy Feet and Star Cops. He comes fromEdinburgh
and graduated in medicine from its university. He practiced in Cambridge ,
probably Addenbrooke's, also Bath
and Bristol . This may be why the Harris/Hennessey
character flees to Bristol under
his fake identity. Matthew Harris is very like Ripley, the antihero of a series
of books by Patricia Highsmith. As I've said before, he is not a likeable or
admirable central character. He is a ruthless liar and exploiter; and a coward
whose only emotion is fear, and he only feels it when his own welfare is
threatened. As a doctor, Collee was in the perfect place to do research for his
story. It is quite a short book just 224 pages in the edition I have, see
illustration, and I read it in a couple of days. Of course the most interesting
element of the book for me was how it portrays the hospital porters so I paid
special attention to the first couple of chapters, before Matthew Harris
assumes the identity of Dr Simon Hennessey.
The fictional hospital where the story starts is called West
Harwood . In the opening scene Matthew and Alec are waiting to transfer
a patient from a ward and the former laments about how half of a hospital
porter's life is waiting for other people. The narrative is in Matthew's first
person. He and Alec place bets on what is wrong with the patient. This first
glimpse of portering life, especially the dry humour, is quite accurate,
although it's an exaggeration to say half our time is spent waiting for others;
maybe twenty percent. However, in the next scene I read: "There's not much
pleasure to be derived from endlessly transferring patients from ward to
ward." Firstly, that is not the only role played by a HP and secondly,
most people who expressed a preference said that they did find that duty enjoyable. I was even once told that by an obs
and gynae consultant who had portered during his holidays from medical school
for two months. "I'll never forget it." he said. "It's changed
my life." Harris is a very observant man and during his aforementioned
downtime, he watches the doctors and nurses at work, suturing wounds, inserting
drips, changing dressings and the myriad of other medical tasks; and he begins
to see doctors as "a pretty ordinary bunch" and that medicine was
"ridiculously straightforward". This is a deluded judgement. Doctors
and nurses have to train for years and continuously study hard to learn to do
what they do. Experts always make things look easy to a layman. Harris and the
real Simon Hennessey become acquaintances and Harris feels bitter envy towards
him. When Hennessey dies Harris feels a "rush of pleasure". One thing
psychopaths are acutely aware of is social status. This is why psychopaths
cannot usually endure the HP life; it is too lowly and there are too many
people above them. I have known at least once psycho in my own HPing career,
but he did indeed soon leave portering to go "up the ladder!", albeit
by a more conventional and lawful route than Harris. Harris is unwilling to get
too close to his brother porters because "I'd be infected by their
hopelessness." He notices how in the pubs near hospitals where the staff
congregate (the West Harwood appears to have no social
club), there is subconscious social segregation. The doctors and nurses crowd
round each other in the lounge while the porters congregate by the dartboard. This
is an accurate observation, but, unlike Harris, I never saw it as a bad thing.
Alec is a more developed character in the book than he is in the film. He
actually expresses some of the same sentiments I do: "We're a crucial part
of the system, Matthew. We inject a bit of humour, a bit of goodwill. You can't
put a price on that." Alec is actually a proud and dignified HP! Harris
dismisses his friend's ideals with cold cynicism. "Any fool can wheel
trolleys about." Not true; it takes a special kind of person to do that task
well and stick to it. Harris scornfully rejects Alec's positivity, believing
that it is nothing more than the false aggrandizement of menial labour that is
characteristic of "the Scottish working class." He also refers to
Alec as "a blundering Celtic oaf." Matthew is different to his brother
porters in that his parents were quite middle class. You can tell that by the accent
of the character in the movie. His
mother ran a shop and his sister is a hotel manager in Hong Kong. His mother
cannot "hide her disappointment in me." Harris considers himself a washout;
but he is also, paradoxically, a snob. The plot of the book is more or less the
same as the film, which you would expect seeing as John Collee adapted the
script himself. There are a few deviations though; for example, Christine gets
her own voice in the form of letters to a friend at the start of each chapter. Harris
also first tries to kill Alec by running him over in a car, not pushing him off
a cliff. The finale of the book is far more open-ended. There is a hint, on the
very last page, that Matthew Harris is not going to get away with his chicanery
after all. See: https://www.johncollee.com/novels.
Because the novel is a first person narration, it is
difficult to grasp the author's own opinions on hospital portering. All we know
is the derogatory attitude the Matthew Harris character feels towards us. The
book portrays HP's in a manner that is equally patronizing and insulting;
however I got the impression that this attitude might after all be an
essential element of the theme rather than the author's personal derision. I
feel far more well-disposed towards John Collee now I have read his original
novel. Generally, my opinion of both the book and film is the same, but my
feelings towards the story itself have mellowed slightly.
See here for more background: http://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2012/11/paper-mask-online.html.
I occasionally go through phases in which I feel totally masochistic. This time, in order to stop myself beating my own forehead with a cricket bat I decided to do something I've been plucking up courage to do for a very long time, I've read the book of Paper Mask. The novel A Paper Mask was published in 1987 and penned by the film's screenwriter, a Scotsman called John Collee. The author is surprisingly mainstream, having been behind far superior productions such as Happy Feet and Star Cops. He comes from
See here for more background: http://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2012/11/paper-mask-online.html.
No comments:
Post a Comment