Happy days |
Then there’s the initial focus on the adorable
poppet of a daughter and the assertion that it was only when Iain Cunningham had
his own child that he became determined to unravel the mystery surrounding his
mother, Irene. I have a problem with the notion that only when you become a
parent do you acquire empathy with, compassion for or curiosity about your own
parents.
‘And watching my own child grow through her early
years helped me see the impact my loss had on me. A three-year-old has a huge
capacity for love.’
This implies he's more concerned with how the
loss of his mother affected the child he was, although it's probable she only existed as a vague idea in his head as he was very young when she died, than what caused her disappearance. His father did what he thought was best for both of them at the time, he remarried and his wife, June, became to all intents and
purposes, Iain’s mother so let's hear it for June, may she rest in peace.
With these misgivings, it’s remarkable how soon and
how easily the film won me round. Here's the trailer.
Iain and his father |
Iain starts his brave undertaking by interrogating his relatives, encountering
some initial reluctance particularly on the part of his father. Undeterred, he
sets about knocking on doors, following clues and meeting his mother’s friends,
who share many fond and sometimes quite detailed recollections of Irene and
their collective past, for instance, of her sitting on a gate singing ‘King of
the Road’ by Roger Miller. Their memories bring her alive. It appears she was
well loved and one friend in particular, Lynn, is demonstrably glad of the
chance to reminisce about the best friend who no one ever mentions now, who she
lost so long ago. There’s a very real sense of sadness and confusion
over what happened and why.
The extreme close-ups on the interviewees’ faces
mirror and exacerbate for the viewer the discomfort they feel in talking about
an awkward subject.
Gradually we come to realise that Irene was
hospitalised after the birth of her son, then allowed out for a while (when the
gloriously happy picture was taken) then rehospitalised when her illness
recurred. There’s an unspoken consensus that it was some physical complication
during childbirth that led to Irene’s death, a heavy burden for a child to
carry and so a very good reason to keep a secret. Iain gains some insight when
he finds his baby book in amongst some old boxes of photos. There are strange
scrawlings about God, baby, etc., not exactly the pride and joy a new mother might
express. This suggests that there was something awry with Irene’s thought
processes.
Lynn and Irene |
Even when Irene is at home, she doesn’t feel the
same, saying ‘I’m not Irene, you know, I’m Irene’s ghost.’ And there’s no doubt
that to her family she must have seemed like a different person.
As was common in those days, any hint of mental
instability was hushed up. It turns out that Irene suffered from post-partum
psychosis (as it is called today) that led her to behave in a way that would
have been quite frightening to all who knew her.
When the psychosis returned, she was readmitted to hospital and died soon after. Her death certificate
records the cause of death as ‘cardiac arrest’. No one seems to question –
maybe it’s too difficult (and certainly too late) to consider – whether the
electric shock treatment she was given affected her heart.
So Iain’s persistence pays off and the film’s slow reveal helps us to
comprehend the true horror of what happened to Irene.
It’s quite probable that Iain’s father felt guilt, fear,
confusion and helplessness when faced with something that no one really had any
idea about (not even the doctors), that even today carries a stigma, that
people felt could (and should) not be talked about.
Symptoms of post-partum psychosis usually start suddenly within
the first two weeks after giving birth. More rarely, they can develop
several weeks after the baby is born and include hallucinations, delusions, mania,
depression, loss of inhibitions, paranoia, restlessness, confusion, out of
character behaviour.
BFI London Film Festival 2018 |
Irene's Ghost is profoundly affecting. Many of us were in
tears by the end. And you can't say better than that. Art should move you. I
hope that the producer, Rebecca Mark-Lawson is able to procure a wider release as this sensitive film raises awareness about a devastating condition that is still
not in common parlance. It deserves to be seen by as many people as possible.