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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

I Spit on Your Grave – Legitimate Rape, Legitimate Revenge


The movie Day of the Woman (1978) is more widely known by its 1980 re-release title –I Spit on Your Grave.   To say that it is an infamous movie is a bit of an understatement. It is listed among Time magazine’s Top Ten Ridiculously Violent Movies[i] and was described by film critic Roger Ebert as “one of the most depressing experiences” of his life.[ii]  It is a relatively simple story and it is simply told – with minimal dialogue, music, or fancy camera work or special effects.  But that simplicity only underscores the intense brutality of the story.  And it is brutal; from start to finish it is scandalously brutal.

The movie follows Jennifer, young woman from New York who has rented a cabin by a lake in the countryside for the summer, where she intends to get away from city life and to focus on her writing.   Jennifer’s arrival is noticed by several men who begin to taunt and torment her.  And then they isolate and rape her.  Repeatedly.  It may be that I Spit on Your Grave has the longest rape sequence in film history – nearly 25 minutes.   We watch (if we can keep from turning away from the screen) as Jennifer is violated over and over again in every conceivable fashion.  And then her attackers leave her for dead.

The second half of the film describes Jennifer’s revenge on her attackers.  She isolates them and kills them – by strangulation, by castration, with an axe, and with an outboard motor. These sequences are as brutal as the first.

Now, I know that many of my friends and co-workers and co-religionists would object that this kind of film is wholly inappropriate for a Christian, for a pastor… but if they are correct then we need to take a pair of scissors to our sacred book of scripture. As I watched I Spit on Your Grave I was reminded of the extravagantly violent story in Judges 19 in which an unnamed concubine is betrayed, gang-raped, tortured, murdered, and dismembered. And all this in the book that churches routinely give to young children and encourage them to read.

The story of the unnamed concubine in Judges 19, like the story of Jennifer in I Spit on Your Grave is a story that we'd perhaps just forget.  But we cannot. “To hear this story is to inhabit a world of unrelenting terror that refuses to let us pass by on the other side.”[iii]  As long as we have leaders making statements about “legitimate rape” and the victims of rape are blamed (she was asking for it, look at the way she was dressed…) and rapists are unprosecuted, we need to continue to tell these stories.

I Spit on Your Grave was written and directed by Meir Zarchi who has said that his inspiration for the film came from his own interaction with a rape victim.  While driving one evening he saw a traumatized young woman wandering along the side of the road. When he stopped to help she told him that she had been raped by two men. Zarchi took the terrified woman to the nearest police station but rather than treating the woman with compassion and understanding, they tied her up in police red tape, forcing her to file a report, asking her  to tell them her name and to repeatedly spell it even though her jaw was broken and she was in desperate need of medical attention.

This is the reality. It is unsatisfying.  And that is part of why we tell stories…

In Zarchi’s film Jennifer doesn't seek help from the police, but instead returns to take her own revenge.  The unnamed concubine in Judges 19 doesn’t get either – help from the police or her own measure of revenge.  She is murdered and dismembered.  But her story is followed by a revenge story that leaves twenty-five thousand dead and leads to the rape (abduction by force) of many of the young women of Shiloh (Judges 20 – 21). 

Rape is followed by Revenge – or at least, the desire for revenge.  And this, I think, horrifies us almost as much as the original offense.   Christians, after all, should forgive and forget, right?  Revenge is wrong.

“Most people assume that revenge is bad, that the desire for revenge is a base, primitive emotion that has no place in Christian society…Unfortunately, we are all apt to dress the concept of forgiveness  in garments that are too refined and delicate to handle the battle of life… Many Christians view the desire for revenge as incompatible with love and forgiveness.   Revenge seems to come from an ugly, bitter heart.  But is that the case?”[iv]

The desire for revenge is, underneath all the darkness and pain, a desire for justice – to see the wrong made right. The problem with revenge is that, like all our desires, it can run unchecked and become a destructive force.  But to ignore the desire for revenge is as harmful as denying the original offense.  I do not believe that victims of rape (or other forms of abuse or violence) should take up arms against their abusers in violent, unrestrained quests for revenge.  But I do believe that we should take their stories and their fears and their desires seriously.  

We must tell their stories.



As an aside - I think that it is interesting and significant that the movie I Spit on Your Grave -where the violence is inflicted upon and revenge is sought by a woman - is derided as exploitative and sadistic and void of artistic merit while the movie Deliverance (1972) -which has a nearly identical story but involves men seeking revenge, is praised and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.   


[iii] Trible, Phyllis Texts of Terror: Literary-Feminist Readings of Biblical Narratives
Fortress Press, Philadelphia PA, 1984. Page 65
[iv] Allender, Dan B., Lampman, Lisa Barnes, ed.  God and the Victim: Theological Reflections on Evil, Victimization,
Justice and Forgiveness, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. Grand Rapids MI, 1999. Page 205

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