'Retz' The Trial' review or 'Death as a get-out clause'
'The
Trial', Retz
Shoreditch
Town Hall and beyond
Wednesday
3rd
April 2013
Written
for Culture Wars
Can
a show convince you that you're going to die within the next half
hour or so? Of course it bleeding can't. It seems an utterly bonkers
position in which to put a theatre-goer. The brain just doesn't bend
that way. Yet much of Retz' immersive take on Kafka's 'The Trial'
hinges on us believing in our imminent death. We don't.
It's
deeply frustrating because this company clearly knows a thing or two
about immersive theatre. Some moments wrap right around one and
there's a cleverly choreographed vagueness to this promenade piece
that is classic Kafka. Having been ejected from Shoreditch Town Hall,
we're spat out onto the street and accosted by an officer. He seems
to think we've done something wrong, although he's not sure what.
It's bloody exposing, standing in the street, being questioned by a
man in uniform as everyone else streams past you. Guilt starts to
creep in and it's surprisingly hard to shake off.
This
vague feeling of unease lingers for much of this excellent opening
segment. As one walks through the open streets, in search of a
distant lawyer, it feels like the world is watching. The best bits in
this show are when we're nudged ever so slightly and then left to
stew in our own devices, alone and increasingly paranoid.
But
the show grows ever more explicit and much less scary. It starts to
feel like we're being bullied rather than our senses teased. This
feeling intensifies in the Part 2, when we are placed on trial.
Again, there are a few brilliant moments in here, which plunge us
head first, spluttering, into Kafka's swirling world. As we await our
trial, a diaphanous man prepares us for our fate. He doesn't say
anything but his cool, close gaze whispers unspeakable horrors.
But
for much of the time, we're simply badgered and bullied by a number
of aggressive types, the threat of execution held – ridiculously –
over our heads. It feels silly. It also feels completely out of synch
with Kafka's novel, which doesn't look death in the eye until the
very final moment. The clawing fear in Kafka's novel isn't the fear
of death – it's a fear of entrapment, in which all doors lead
further inwards and never out. The only thing achieved by this
promise of death is the comforting knowledge that the show will soon
be over and we will be released - ALIVE OBVIOUSLY – all too soon
enough.
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