Shades of Grey(havens)

by Kyra Smith

Kyra Smith ponders about moral ambiguity and moral complexity (and snipes at Battlestar Galactica's Starbuck).
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I had a hard time with Religious Studies when I was at school, not because I was a determined atheist adrift in a Catholic school and not even because it was taught by an ancient nun who would insist on referring to any religions other than Catholicism as mythology but because I kept getting thrown out of the morals and ethics classes for causing trouble. There were, of course, the standard "moral dilemmas" with which we were presented and expected to wrestle you are in a burning building along with your wheelchair bound Grandfather and the man with the cure for cancer in his brain, who do you save? I also remember that majority of the class smarmily went for the man incapable of writing down his research because he was the key to saving millions of lives yadda yadda yadda. And a few, shame-facedly abandoning the popular stance of self-righteous hypocrisy, confessed that they would save their grandfather because they loved him and, although we were told there were no right answers, there was a general feeling that this was the wrong one. I went away, wrote a six page essay on how this was all bullshit, read it out with passion and conviction to the entire class and spent the rest of the week thinking about my sins in the corridor outside.

Although I could probably have been inspired to read a book or two about moral philosophy and become vaguely informed on the subject, instead I have taken the intellectual shortcut of allowing this fifteen year old revelation to colour my thinking ever since. There's a scene in Spiderman (the movie) in which the Green Goblin confronts Spidey with a similar moral decision. Cackling in a villainous manner, he makes our hero choose between a cable car full of piteously screaming children or the love of his life, the beautiful Mary Jane Watson. Cue: tense music. Of course, it's entirely irrelevant anyway because Spidey saves both, thus proving once and for all that however much they may whinge about the demands of their lifestyle, superheroes will always be able to have their cake and eat it. But the choice as set up by the Green Goblin is just as arbitrary as the fire and, therefore, just as meaningless. It doesn't matter who you choose to save because, as far as the vagaries of fate and the interference of supervillains are concerned, saving anybody is a positive result. The only morally wrong decision is pushing Granddad out of his wheelchair and running shrieking from the burning building intent on saving your own worthless hide.

The point of this illustration is not, as it may seem, to draw attention to the negligible development in sophistication between Key Stage 4 and your average Hollywood blockbuster but to introduce, for lack of a better term, the prevalence of "moral shortcutting" in place of genuinely meaningful exploration. In particular, at least in the world of superhero movies and sci/fi fantasy books that I happen to inhabit, I am conscious of the popularity the terms "morally ambiguous" and "morally complex," which tend to be used interchangeably as Good Things, especially when set against their supposed opposite: the accusation of moral simplicity. However, it seems to me that moral ambiguity and moral complexity are very different ideas that arise in very different circumstances.

Moral ambiguity is often the product of uncertainty we ask ourselves how we are supposed to feel about certain actions or events and, because it exists in the gap between the intent of the creator and the response of the audience, it may often (but not always) be a consequence of authorial laziness or incompetence. Moral complexity does not make us uncertain in the same way, but it does make us think and ask questions of ourselves was that decision the correct decision, was that action morally right. To take a specific example, in the early Harry Potter books Snape, petty but not evil, on the side of good but still a singularly unappealing human being, was morally complex. Not hugely sophisticated, it must be admitted, but nevertheless complex. Reading along with my brain turned off expecting predictability I can still recall my surprise when poor, stuttering Professor Quirrell turned out to have the dark Lord quite literally under his hat. In the later books as we find ourselves dithering about whether he's meant to be a good guy or a bad guy he is merely morally ambiguous and, I would argue, less interesting. In essence therefore, ambiguity is not necessarily related to complexity and lack of ambiguity does not always indicate simplicity.

To some extent, this is an artificial and somewhat arbitrary distinction but nevertheless it is one that deserves to be made. The Lord of the Rings is often dismissed as morally simplistic because the bad guy is quite clearly unquestionably malignant and we are never expected to worry ourselves about the fact he may have had a difficult childhood (if he had anything as natural as a childhood). The good guys although they may be corrupted and are prey to mortal error tend to be obviously and recognisably virtuous. But just because we don't have to stop and wonder whether Sauron is really as black as he's painted doesn't mean the book is devoid of moral depth. Certainly there is no ambiguity over who is good and who is bad but there is endless scope for nuance as far as individual action and motivation is concerned. We may never question Sam's inherent goodness but he still cannot accept the possibility of Smeagal's redemption. The questions we ask ourselves are not how we are supposed to respond to this for it is presented as a blemish, albeit an understandable but whether Smeagal does deserve, and is capable of receiving, redemption. Thus it may not be ambiguous, but it is certainly complex.

Moral ambiguity tends to be praised as being depthy and courageous but often creates frustratingly unanswerable questions about authorial intent and your own perception of character and behaviour. Although it is often intellectual interesting to explore the twilight zone between author and reader, convincing yourself that Thackery found himself liking Becky Sharp in spite of himself and that Richardson was as obsessed with raping Clarissa as Lovelace was, it is more emotionally engaging to be in harmony with the creator. It is preferable to stand next to Henry Fielding say and "yes, this Tom Jones character is fun guy to be around, in spite of, and to some extent because of his faults" instead of wading through Mansfield Park wondering what Jane Austen was thinking of by dumping this spineless broken piece of fluff on us and calling her a heroine. As soon as you find yourself sitting back on the sofa, scratching your head and asking yourself "am I meant to think that character is behaving like a complete tit?" you have placed yourself, in been placed, at a remove from the action in which you were previously caught up and you become preoccupied with artificial frameworks. Simply put, you find yourself looking at the internal supports instead of the cathedral and although it's quite interesting to see what's holding the ceiling up (or failing to) it's far preferable to admire the artistry and beauty of the building itself.

To take a personal example, I have always struggled with the character of Brenda in Six Feet Under. I like the actress, which helps, but I'm not quite sure to what extent I'm meant to be condemning her for being shallow, self-deceiving and pretentious and how far I'm meant to be seduced by the fact she's supposed to be cooler, cleverer and more adventurous than me (me being the average audience). There comes point when that stops being connected to the complex layers of character development and starts being bad (or, at least, inconsistent) writing.

Similarly, there's an episode of Battlestar Galactica called You Can't Go Home Again' (Episode 5, Series 1), in which the ever-sassy Starbuck (grr) is hit by enemy fire and stranded on a desert moon with a broken leg, no food and a limited supply of oxygen. Meanwhile the Cylons are closing in on the Fleet as the rest of the squadron search the hostile moon for their missing pilot. Things get increasingly tense as the episode progresses, as Starbuck's air supply dwindles and Adama pours more and more of the fleet resources into the search, leaving the civilian ships spread out, in a poor defensive position and, with the combat air patrol deployed on the search, no protection. Eventually, they calculate Starbuck's oxygen will have run out and yet Commander Adama insists on continuing with the search, based on the groundless hope that she has a reserve supply. Eventually President Roslin intervenes, pointing out that they have used 43% of the fuel reserve and endangered the entire fleet of 45,000(ish) civilians in their fruitless search. They prepare to leave but, fortunately, Starbuck has miraculously managed to jury-rig a crashed Cylon ship and comes after them.

Usually I think very highly of Battlestar Galactica but this episode is a "morally ambiguous" mess. When I was watching it, I had no idea what I was meant to take from it, who I was meant to be questioning, and what questions I was meant to be asking. It seems clear that Adama has let his personal feelings cloud his judgement (again) but it is hard to understand to what extent, or even if, we are meant to condemn him, especially as his behaviour is condoned by his son, Lee, a character (I think) we are expected to like and respect, and the writers seem so obsessed with Starbuck I think it is assumed that we are meant to equally besotted. Until the very end, when the President intervenes, Colonel Tigh is the only opposition, and he is narrow-minded, dogmatic, easily manipulated by his transparently malicious wife and an alcoholic into the bargain. His abilities as a commander, and his strength as a human being, are constantly questioned. A charitable interpretation of the dilemma on which the episode focuses is the struggle between Adama as a military commander and Adama as the protector of defeated humanity. Never leaving a man behind, especially when they are the most qualified pilot you have, is a fine and noble maxim for a military commander. Even from a personal standpoint, prioritising the life of the person you love over the life of a stranger regardless of who that stranger is is (in my opinion) a decision with no particular moral content, especially if the threat to both is arbitrary and external. But when you explicitly have 45,000 people depending on you, limited resources and fleets of humanity-killing robots bearing down upon you, Adama's actions are absolutely ludicrous.

Furthermore, Starbuck's behaviour on the planet strips away what little meaning remains in the episode. I think I'm just generally irritated by Starbuck's unfailing ability to achieve anything but watching her crawl across the dunes with a broken leg, discover a crashed Cylon raider, somehow succeed in extracting additional oxygen from its squidgy organic interior, work out how to fly the thing (would an organic ship even have manual controls?) and chase after Galactica Just In The Nick Of Time made me want to eat my own pancreas. If Commander Adama had squandered all his resources to find an oxygen-deprived Starbuck panting in the lea of a crashed Cylon raider or even if he had insisted on putting everything into search until they calculated Starbuck's oxygen had run out, then Adama's determination to stay until he found her might have maintained some flicker of interest i.e. was it worth it, was his decision correct or fair or right? As it was, however, he behaved in a completely selfish fashion for no real purpose and it only wasn't a complete disaster because Starbuck is blessed by the god of plots.

On the subject of Battlestar Galactica, the portrayal of Cylons tends to be both complex and ambiguous, in other words interesting and frustrating. Now, I've only seen up to halfway through the second series so my comments are likely to be coloured by this but the more you watch Battlestar Galactica and the more regularly you're told that the Cylons have a plan, the more readily it becomes apparent that they really don't. Or, more accurately, that their writers don't. For the most part, the show offers quite a nuanced and complex portrayal of the Cylons, balancing their almost wholesale destruction of the human race and their merciless pursuit of the survivors against Six's human side and her capacity for mercy (also one of her models beat the crap out of Starbuck for which I remain eternally grateful) and the Cylon-FormerlyKnown-As-Boomer who shows great love and loyalty and who, like the crew of Galactica, we have been at least partially used to thinking of in very human terms. Episodes like The Farm', however, in which Starbuck (why is it always Starbuck?) discovers a breeding farm full of reluctant woman hooked up to what are essentially rape-machines, tend to blow this careful portrayal to smithereens. And, although it is easy enough to draw parallels between that and the treatment of the Cylon prisoner on board the Pegasus, nothing quite screams Unremittingly Evil like a rape machine. The Cylons have gone from being complex ("hmmthey did sort of annihilating the human race but they are clearly far more than unfeeling machines") to ambiguous ("so what the hell are the writers trying to say with the Cylons?").

I'm not implying that everything that is morally is dissatisfying but I think there's a danger that something so generally assumed to be worthy can very often be an excuse for sloppy writing and poor planning.
Themes: TV & Movies
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Comments (go to latest)
Guy at 17:19 on 2007-02-14
I loved BSG at first, but... I think very much in line with what you're saying here, I lost my connection with it because of a lack of... I'm not sure what the term is? World integrity? I think I was ranting about a similar thing responding to Dan's RPG article. In order to sustain your attention over a long period of time, I think a TV show has to have a setting that you can really believe in as being... not "real" in the sense of real-world-real but it has to kind of adhere to the conventions of what is... credible within that setting. And when a show does things to shock you or tantalise you or just generally "create an impact", in a way that breaks that world-integrity, I think you just lose your capacity to immerse yourself in that world... because suddenly you're thinking (or I am, anyway) "this is just a bunch of actors going through the motions of some scripted melodrama..." So, yeah, for example I think Futurama has really strong world-integrity, even though it's not in the least "realistic"... whereas BSG starts out trying quite hard to create it and then just throws it all away for no good reason. :( Anyway, somewhat relevantly, for my money the TV show with the highest degree of world-integrity around is The Sopranos, which happens to have at its centre a character who is definitely morally complex, although also fairly unambiguously A Bad Man. I think your point about the difference between complexity and ambiguity is a good one, though... in a way, I think moral ambiguity can be a really interesting and powerful element in drama if it's done well, but typically it's done badly and yes, as you say, just looks like slipshod writing. And including moral ambiguity or complexity as a kind of "checkbox feature" seems really dumb to me, too
Kyra Smith at 22:53 on 2007-02-14
Yes, I went through a very similar process. Until about the 5th episode of Season 2 I was madly enamoured of the show but you're right it's lost something, or it feels like it has. I think perhaps you might have nailed it with world integrity. I was thinking last night that it's almost like there are two 'personalities' at war in BSG - there's the quite low-key, fiercely character-centric show which tends to produce quite claustrophic, quite intense (quite wonderful) television which, despite its episodic format, tends to have big over-arcing character development plots ... and then there's hysterical melodrama which jettisons everything else in favour of cheap shocks and twists. It's like in Resurection Ship they go to all this effort to show what a massive impact being ordered to assassinate Cain has on Starbuck only to completely forget it next week. And there's this episode in which Tyrol builds a new fighter plane - which seems absolutely ludicrous given the general tight time-scale on which the good episodes are written. I was very into The Sopranos for about the first three seasons and then I sort of lost touch with it. Tony Soprano is a great character - there's a fabulous episode in there somewhere in which he's taking his daughter around potential colleges and generally playing the benevolent father - but while he's doing he murders this guy in a particularly brutal way. Here's sa challenging - can you think of any well-portrayed and convincing morally ambiguous characters?
Jen Spencer at 09:18 on 2007-02-15
I see many links with what you're saying about moral ambiguity versus complexity and my thinking on sympathetic characters. Lazy writers will abolish sympathy in a complex character by reducing them to ambiguity. Or they will cheat us of a sympathetic character by making them needlessly complex in a situation where it's a superfluous addition. It is a mighty great shame. :(
Kyra Smith at 09:48 on 2007-02-15
Yes, I'd been thinking about in general terms for a while and your last article inpsired me to write it down coherently. I don't know if you watch BSG but I thought Balter was a really well done, complex and sympathetic character. I thought he was the perfect poster boy for all the merits and flaws of humanity - he's incredibly selfish and self-obsessed, licentious and shallow, self-idulgent and self-deceiving ... and yet capable of amazing acts of empathy, brilliant and valour. He's his own worst enemy but full of potential. And then, having danced him on the edge of sympathy for about 1 and a half seasons, they suddenly made him read a letter from the President and flip out in this depressingly obvious way. I lament his fall.
Arthur B at 14:18 on 2007-02-15
I think the problem with moral ambiguity is that lazy writers find it very, very tempting to indulge in it. It gives the illusion of moral complexity without doing the work
Arthur B at 14:23 on 2007-02-15
Odd, the end of my comment got eaten... what I was going to say was: "because all a writer needs to do to create a `morally ambiguous' character is to have said character act according to no discernible moral compass, and for the writer to not think too hard about what they, as an author, think about that character's actions. The act of writing becomes a matter of simply recording a series of events in competent prose."
Guy at 17:47 on 2007-02-15
In answer to your challenge: this is probably cheating because firstly it's in a book and secondly because it's based on a real person, but John Brown in "Flashman and the Angel of the Lord". I'd argue that he's not at all morally complex, in that his entire personality is built around an incredibly rigid adherence to a few very simple ideas... but he is morally ambiguous because it's very hard (or at least, it was for me) to decide whether you think he's an "angel" or just a infuriatingly vain and self-righteous moron. The ambiguity, I think, comes out of the fact that his virtues are really inseperable from his flaws
Guy at 17:49 on 2007-02-15
This website has a bad habit of eating that latter half of comments. This time I had the foresight to Ctrl-C them before posting. :)
The ambiguity, I think, comes out of the fact that his virtues are really inseperable from his flaws
Guy at 17:49 on 2007-02-15
Fuck! ...inseperable from his flaws
Guy at 17:50 on 2007-02-15
:@:@:@:@:@:@
Rami C at 17:31 on 2007-02-16
Hmmm. Do comments get eaten arbitrarily? Bear in mind that the length of comments is limited, so perhaps they're overrunning and that's why they get cut off?
Kyra Smith at 11:03 on 2007-02-17
Doesn't seem to do it to me, but then the ferret loves me.
Kyra Smith at 11:08 on 2007-02-17
I've read a couple of the Flashman books but not that one, Guy. I might look it out. As far as I recall he was a complete cad and a bounder, but the ambiguity grew out of trying to establish just how lost to all goodness he was.
Guy at 04:27 on 2007-02-18
Re: eaten comments, yes, it does seem to happen more with long comments than short ones, but short comments not entirely immune. See examples above. Aiming for terse. Kyra
Guy at 04:27 on 2007-02-18
:'(
Robinson L at 15:30 on 2009-11-12
Just stumbled upon this one the other day; I really must make a concerted sweep on the archives here sometime.

Anyway, excellent points as usual, I shall have to keep them in mind. I think this distinction might at least partially explain where Dollhouse falls down in its much-touted moral complexity. Very often it isn't complex at all; it is, however, highly ambiguous, because half the time the creators themselves don't seem to know what interpretation of events they're promoting, and because their characterization is so shoddy that another half of the time, the audience is left to puzzle over why the frak Echo, Ballard, Langton or whatever do the things which they do.
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