tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3513674784765302680.post5305208907587724129..comments2022-09-08T09:25:15.475-07:00Comments on Cardiff sciSCREEN: Let's Talk About KevinAndyBhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14119289618783573234noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3513674784765302680.post-60852234068266334532011-11-14T04:35:31.852-08:002011-11-14T04:35:31.852-08:00Wow, I really do find all these post-sciscreen ess...Wow, I really do find all these post-sciscreen essays fascinating so thanks to the speakers for taking the time to write these and to the sciscreen team for putting them up on the blog.<br />'Kevin' was the first book that my reading group chose to read (3 1/2 years ago) so apologies if I'm recalling incorrectly. The book differs from the film in, what I feel, a couple of important respects. The book tells the story retrospectively from Eva's point of view (which the film tries to do but I'm not sure that's ever really possible in a cinematic format). On reading the book, you get a strong sense that Eva doesn't want children, that she has Kevin in order to 'test' her own emotions and maternal instincts (a selfish act which doesn't endear you to Eva right at the start). When that doesn't quite go the way she would like, she has a second child in order to appease her sense of self-blame, to demonstrate to herself that she is capable of such parental love and that Kevin was just 'born evil'. She attempts to 'wash her hands of him' which Kevin repays her by 'washing his sister's eye with drain cleaner'. The father's response to this in blaming Eva is the author's way of summing up the father's whole softly softly approach throughout and his inability to see the reality of the situation (as told by Eva). Kevin may appear contemptuous of his mother but he does respect her and he has a sense that she may 'understand' his actions and him better than anyone else and certainly not his father who he repays by taking his life. This is the other way in which the book differs from the film. It's written in a way that you are led to believe that the father is still alive, has custody of the daughter and no longer has anything to do with Kevin at all (which interestingly enough builds a greater sense of contempt for the father in a way that the film doesn't do). Is the question do you think Kevin had a bad parent or bad parents?<br />As well as the standard nature vs nurture debate and the discussion of who's to blame, the biggest thing that divided our reading group was actually the punishment and response to the consequences of what Kevin had done. Some argued that it didn't matter whether it was genetic, environmental or an interaction between the two but that he should simply be permanently 'removed' from society so as not to do it again. The film hints at the potential to see a caring side of Kevin (when he's very ill as a child and when he's pumped with sedating drugs in the prison such that we see remorse). To me, research on the genetic and environmental contributions to such conditions is what will help us as a society understand causation better so that we are better equipped to make decisions on who is a danger to themselves and others and how best to deal with that.Julia Thomasnoreply@blogger.com