On
the album, "the Thin Ice" begins with the wails of young Pink newly
born intotheworld. Although "In the Flesh?" can be interpreted as both
the start of Pink's story as an adult as well as the start of Pink's
physical life, "the Thin Ice" is the first "true" flashback of the album.
The song abandons the present story (Pink as an adult) and begins to
acquaint the listener/viewer with the events of Pink's early life starting
with his birth. However, the song itself is not a traditional flashback
(a recollection of past events) as it is an instructional lullaby of
sorts sung by either Pink's mother, Life itself, or perhaps both. While
the song may first appear as a simple little tune, it is as multifaceted
and both musically and lyrically schizophrenic as are most of the songs
in the Floyd catalogue.
After being bombarded by the pounding music and assaulting
sounds of the destructive war from "In the Flesh?," the listener is
immediately lulled by the soothing chords of "the Thin Ice's" wispy
piano and synthesizers. Gilmour's soft, almost feminine voice in the
first half further creates this feeling of peace and comfort. Whether
singing as Pink's mom or as Life, Gilmour's maternal reminders that
young Pink is loved by both mother and father instill a sense of hope
in both the listener and Pink, especially after the unsettling instructions
of "In the Flesh?" concerning the disguises of life. This feeling of
peace is further compounded by the introduction of
"Blue"
into the album, an incredibly important color and symbol in the album's
first half. Psychoanalytically speaking, blue is considered to be a
color of purity, innocence, and life. In dream and literary analysis,
the color is often associated with the ocean and sky, both symbols of
life and creation. Evolutionists purport that life arose from the oceans,
an idea that sparked psychoanalysts to view the ocean and water as symbols
of the maternal, of life's origin. The blue sky is similarly procreative
in that it produces the rain which creates and sustains all life on
earth, once again feeding the cycle of water=creation=life. Being that
blue is most often associated with the color of water, the color frequently
takes on the connotations of the water symbolism. Getting back to the
song, young Pink's appellation "Baby Blue" given to him by his mother
/ Life reinforces his emergence into life and his natural innocence.
Yet despite the seemingly straight-forward music and lyrics concerning
birth and innocence, there are little disturbances in the first half
of the song; these little ripples on the water's surface, so to speak,
not only foreshadow the song's second, more acrimonious half but also
the rest of Pink's life to date. Although the inclusion of such words
like "may" and "but" ("and the sea may look warm to you, babe"…"But
oooh babe") may seem casual, they nevertheless plant seeds of doubt
and false-appearances that disrupt the complete peacefulness of the
song's first half. Linguistically speaking, when we as a listener hear
"the sky may look blue," we are trained to listen for a "but" to finish
the concession, something that negates the previous statement as in
"The sky may look blue but it's actually purple" (or something of that
nature). The "but" that continues the concession does come but the rest
of the phrase is cut off with the maternal address of "oooh Baby Blue,"
as if the speaker is hesitant to continue, allowing the caustic voice
of the second half of the song to fill in the missing gaps.
Roger
Waters launches into the second half of the song with all the sarcasm
of onejaded by life. This masochistic Life-voice (I happen to think
that this is Life and/or Experience addressing Pink at this point) does
not bother with word play but rather dives (excuse the pun) straight
into the insignificance and treachery of "modern life." Although the
symbolism of the second half borrows from that of the first, the symbols
negate or possibly redefine the previous connotations of "blue" and
water. As previously mentioned, the symbol of water often carries implications
of life, innocence, and creation. However, changing the form of water
or even the way it's presented drastically changes its meaning. It is
a symbol of both procreation and destruction in that the very thing
that gives you life can also take that life away. The rain that causes
plants to grow can wipe out a mass of living things through one massive
flood. The water that gives man life can drown him. The maternal waters
that foster a new life can change, freeze over, and abort or abandon
the life it has just created. Such is the life into which Pink enters.
What he thought to be a warm, nurturing ocean turned out to be cold
and sterile; the loving mother and the embracing life have become frozen
and unyielding. The "sea may look warm" but it is, in all actuality,
a layer of thin ice covering a frigid, aqueous landscape.
According to psychoanalytic theory, water symbolism also
connotes ideas of the self. While water is often a symbol of a person's
mind, images of deep, unfathomable water are frequently connected with
the unconscious mind, the part of the psyche that houses the majority
of a person's most basic and unrealized self. In this sense, a person's
mind has been compared to an iceberg: he is conscious of the 1/8th of
his persona that juts out from the water and oblivious to the 7/8th
of his personality's submerged base. Accordingly, the upper part of
Pink's psyche is frozen over with thin ice, illustrating (or perhaps
foreshadowing) the rigid and unemotional person he is or
will
become. Yet at the same time it's this very thin layer of ice that keeps
him from slipping into the uncharted depths of his subconscious, an
action that would (and will) lead to insanity as a result of being submerged
in his repressed and unrealized emotions.
Yet it's not just his weight on the ice that causes the
cracks and pitfalls of life to appear. By being born, one is automatically
subject to the "silent reproach of a million tear-stained eyes." With
Life comes the fact that one will be despised, envied, and blamed for
a multitude of things; a plethora of expectations that, whether justifiable
or not, lead to an even greater number of weights to drag one down.
Each expectation adds another burden and brings the fragile ice of our
lives closer to the breaking point, each time bringing us, like Pink,
closer to the seething waters below. However the difference between
Pink's life and the majority of the population is that, as we will see
(or have already seen in "In the Flesh?"), Pink's ice finally cracks
and he is instantly consumed by the waters of his unconscious mind as
a result of all the bricks that he has collected over the years. Correspondingly,
the knowledge that Pink will spiral out of control into an all-consuming
depression and dementia redefines the earlier appearance of "blue" in
the song, transforming the innocent color of Pink's childhood into a
premonition of Pink's depression later in life. In a sense, Pink is
destined for a blue, melancholic existence from the very first utterance
of his childhood nickname, Baby Blue.
True to the disjointed and contradictory maternal/caustic
tone of the song, the images of the movie further explore the effects
of war and Pink's present state. According to Gerald Scarfe on the DVD
commentary, the post-war scenes were directly inspired by the work of
Robert Capa, a World War II photographer famous for unflinching war
photographs, most notably his pictures from the D-Day invasion at Normandy.
Using Capa's photos as a base, Alan Parker captures the absolute brutality
of war while focusing on the human subtleties of the individuals who
make up an army. One of my favorite examples of this macrocosm / microcosm
effect takes place at the beginning of the song. As the haunting piano
chords creep in, the scene switches from a pool of collective blood
of soldiers to a landscape desolated by war. When Gilmour begins with
"Mama loves her baby," the scene switches from the desolated landscape
to a shot of a man pulling a blanket over the exposed arm of another
wounded man being carried off on a stretcher. The scene of nurturing
counteracts the previous and subsequent shots of devastation and ruin,
reflecting the contradiction between comfort and pain in the lyrics
of the first half of the song. The final war shot (towards the end of
the song's first half) shows the soldiers marching single file from
screen left to right, walking from daylight into a consuming mist that
blurs them from sight. The scene appropriately
fades
into a shot of Pink's hotel room and the rock star's current state of
an all-consuming depression and dementia, being erased of all identity
much like the soldiers marching one by one into the unrelenting mist.
Fading between the two scenes offers another comparison
paralleling the destruction and desolation of war to the emptiness and
personal devastation of Pink's life. Although it might seem flippant
to compare the gravity of war with the triviality of one man's life,
war itself is spawned from personal instabilities (eg. Hitler's own
obsessions) and is little more than "glorified" killing over property
and "moral right." And so the violence of war is no different than that
in an individual's life, a violence instilled from the earliest of ages
as apparent by the cartoon cat and mouse in "Tom & Jerry" battling
on the television in Pink's hotel room.
Just as Gilmour's soothing voice contrasted with the images
of war's bloody aftermath, the slow, composed shot through Pink's hotel
room contrasts with Waters' scathing singing while offering a bit of
calm before the storm of the guitar solo. Interestingly, as the shot
proceeds from inside the room to the patio area, the viewer finds Pink
floating on the surface of a crystal blue pool, recalling the "blue"
and "water" symbolism mentioned above. With the onslaught of the blistering
guitar solo, the water stylistically turns from blue to red while Pink
thrashes around, drowning on thoughts of the war and his father. As
with the color blue, red can signify a variety of different things,
most of which, if not all, arguably apply to the song. Red is usually
a symbol of raw emotions: passion, anger, frustration, lust, insecurity.
It's fairly easy to see how all of these fit within the scope of Pink's
mind as both a child and an adult. These feelings created out of a loss
of his father and every other "brick" are just as resonant in his current
state of mind as they are in his past, if not more. As he grows, these
repressed feelings begin to boil to surface more and more, resulting
in his infamous "fits" made popular in songs/scenes like "One of My
Turns." The fit in "the Thin Ice" is far from that in "One of My Turns"
but nonetheless important in that it indicates the indomitable nature
of one's confined feelings. Repressed emotion will only lie in the subconscious
for a certain period of time before erupting onto the surface. The pool
scene in "the Thin Ice" is just one tiny crack, one minor eruption of
the very emotions that will ultimately cost Pink his sanity.
Just
as the water carries with it ideas of creation and life, so too does
the color red, evoking ideas of life-giving blood. Therefore the red
water of the pool takes on a womb-like quality, recalling Pink's violent
issue into the world (ripped from the tranquil womb, born to a fatherless
family, etc.). The blood red may also signify the birth / continual
life given to Pink's dementia and his final "birth" into madness. Simultaneously,
red also conveys ideas of death similar to the creative / destructive
nature of water. The loss of blood can take one's life just as quickly
as any number of blood-related problems. As memories of his father and
the war bombard his mind, Pink frantically flails in the blood-red water
possibly out of a fear of sinking / death. And so the red pool is both
a symbol of the birth of Pink's unbalanced self as well as the death
of his former self. While the transformation doesn't fully take place
until his wall is complete, the process has already started. The origin
of the transformation (cycle of water=origin=life=death) is once again
shown in the quick cuts to memories of the war and more specifically
the absence of Pink's father. It is his "snapshot in the family album"
as shown in this scene and sung about in the next song that provides
Pink with his first brick.
Another interesting aspect of the pool scene in the movie
are the theological undertones of Pink's swimming (or sinking) episode.
Lying in the water, Pink's prostrate form is reminiscent of the classical
depiction of Jesus' crucifixion. The blood-red pool further emphasizes
the Christological sacrifice, seemingly equating Pink with Christ on
some symbolic level. However, I personally don't agree with the idea
that Pink is a Christ figure. Christian theology teaches that Jesus
was a selfless man / deity who devoted himself to the world and absolved
sinners by means of his death on the cross. Furthermore, Christians
believe that Christ arose three days after his crucifixion, thereby
conquering death and reaffirming his disciples' faith in God. Even a
cursory glance shows that none of these distinctly Christ-like features
are evident in Pink. Contrarily, Pink is completely selfish (as we will
see later in the album / movie), building his wall out of a need to
escape rather than aid the world. Furthermore, he dies metaphorically
in "Goodbye Cruel World" in an attempt to elude the external world and
is arguably never fully resurrected (I'll get into that later with my
brief analysis of the song "The Final Cut" off of the album of the same
name). Accordingly, Pink is the antithesis of everything the Scriptural
Christ is; therefore Pink becomes a mock-Christ, an anti-Christ of sorts
(not the literal Anti-Christ in Revelation, but rather someone who is
opposite of Jesus).
In this light, the sacrificial elements inherent in the blood-red pool
become tainted. Pink's "sacrifice" (his building and completion of the
wall) is only made for personal reasons. Pink is the only one covered
by his sacrificial blood in the pool; his sacrifice is in vain. In addition,
the color red in the New Testament is often linked with Judas Iscariot
who, according to tradition, possessed flame-red hair. And so the red
pool emphasizes both Pink's selfish "sacrifice" as well as his past,
present, and future betrayals (as seen later in the album and movie),
the ultimate betrayal being that he completely turns his back on the
world and those who love him by escaping behind his wall.