May 2, 2018
Raoul Peck: I Am Not Your Negro director on his new film The Young Karl Marx and why The Communist Manifesto is 'more relevant than ever'
The award-winning director's new film explores the friendship between Marx and Engels – but he insists it's no period piece
Kaleem Aftab @aftabamon
On 5 May, it will be 200 years to the day since the birth of Karl Marx. To coincide with the anniversary a new film by Raoul Peck, The Young Karl Marx, looks at how Marx and his collaborator on The Communist Manifesto, Friedrich Engels, came to meet and form such a strong bond in Germany in 1844.
The Young Karl Marx is a kindred spirit to Walter Salles’ The Motorcycle Diaries, about another Communist icon, Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara, in that it’s as interested in the youthful antics and personal shenanigans of the protagonists as it is the work that would make them remembered in history.
Director Peck claimed the Best Documentary Film BAFTA this year for his incredible I Am Not Your Negro, a look at the battles that black people have had to fight for equality in America told entirely through the words of the novelist James Baldwin.
Born in Haiti in 1953, Peck’s parents fled the country with him and his two younger brothers when he was just eight years old. They escaped the Duvalier dictatorship and Peck grew up in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Stefan Konarske as Friedrich Engels and August Diehl as Karl Marx in 'The Young Karl Marx' (Velvet Film )
Peck attended schools in New York, where his mother worked at the UN, and in France, earning a baccalaureate before studying engineering and economics at Berlin’s Humboldt University, where he became enamoured with the work of Marx.
“All I am today is because of the structure that I got when I was young studying the work of Marx,” says the director. “At that time, in the 1970s and 1980s, you needed to confront yourself with those books, because it’s your past, it’s your present, it’s part of your general knowledge to understand the society that you are living in and in which you are an actor.”
I Am Not Your Negro captures the searing brilliance of James Baldwin
Peck is an impressively built man, who looks much younger than his 64 years, but he also has the vernacular of an academic. He talks like he’s delivering a lecture, which he often is. Peck is the President of La FĂ©mis, the prestigious Paris film school. He speaks with that mastery of his subject matter that can at times be unnerving but is always enthralling.
He argues that to understand society “Marx is the key.” He’s a man who backs up his analysis with numbers, with history, and with philosophy.
The film starts in 1843 at a time when Europe was dominated by absolute monarchies. It credits the industrial revolution in England as transforming the world’s order, in which a new proletarian class are creating workers’ organisations founded on the Communist notion that all men are brothers.
Vicky Krieps, August Diehl and Stefan Konarske in 'The Young Karl Marx' (Velvet Film )
The film posits that two young Germans, Marx and Engels, will disrupt this notion and transform the struggle and future of the world.
“Marx never wrote any utopia,” says Peck, disparaging the commonly held perception. “In the film you see the people who wrote this utopia were [Pierre-Joseph] Proudhon and [Wilhelm] Weitling. Marx told them, both of them: ‘Let's stick to reality, let's develop something from reality.’ Marx never prophesied anything, except sometimes just as a joke or as a conversation.”
Peck argues that that today, Marx’s writing is more relevant than ever: “You sum up the articles and it is exactly the description of the 2008 crisis. It's like the children's book of the history of capitalism and you can trace it until today. So what other proof do you need?”
Peck’s driving ambition was to make a film that would explain the socio-political context of the friendship between Marx (played by August Diehl) and Engels (Stefan Konarske). It starts with Engels witnessing revolts at his dad’s factory in Manchester, the Ermens and Engel Mill. At the same time, Marx is undertaking a more philosophical interpretation of the changes in society, whilst struggling with his journalistic deadlines.
Stefan Konarske and August Diehl in 'The Young Karl Marx' (Velvet Film )
Their spouses are also key characters. Marx’s wife Jenny (played by Phantom Thread star Vicky Krieps) and Engel’s spouse Mary Burns (Hannah Steele) are both as rebellious as their beaus.
He argues that this is not a period film, despite the era and the costumes. “I didn’t make a film about the past. I’m not interested in the past in that way.”
“I wanted to go back to that moment of creation in the film… to go back to the fundamentals, because the book he left is the most important [thing],” states Peck. “How do we utilise this instrument to analyse society at a precise moment?”
And it’s this desire to connect to the present that has led to him make a movie that at times seems like an overly theoretical political analysis, and in other moments like a fun bromance, capturing the hijinks of ordinary young men.
“I hope that young people will recognise themselves in the film,” he says. “For me that would be the best thing. Because that's what it's about: How do I see or find a way to fight back [against] whatever is happening right now?”
What does need to be fought against right now? His response, unsurprisingly, includes President Trump and the widening gap between rich and poor.
James Baldwin in 'I Am Not Your Negro' (Magnolia Pictures)
I ask Peck how Marx ties in with the arguments that we see Baldwin making in I Am Not Your Negro. “When Baldwin says in my film ‘White is a metaphor for power,’ it’s another way of saying 'Chase Manhattan Bank'. That’s Marx’s analysis. So there are some similar perspectives in the way to see society.
"Race is just one emanation of capitalism – like the whole thing about the refugees today. It's not about the colour of the refugees – it's about capitalism doing its job, separating people, dividing, and maintaining the status quo of those who want to protect their privilege.”
Peck believes that people can do more to change society, especially in the west where a kind of lethargy has crept in.
His childhood experiences have taught him that human rights and democracy are something that must constantly be fought for: “Democracy is not something that is fixed once and for all. I came from a country that had a dictatorship and I fought a lot for the restoration of democracy. I know the price of being able to vote.
“In the west, people use voting as a consumer good,” he adds, “you can sit down on your couch and watch a reality show. This is not democracy. Democracy is to be an active citizen, to question every day what you do in your job.”
'The Young Karl Marx' is out 4 March
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