SPOILER ALERT! The plot will be discussed!
Fences (2016), written by acclaimed playwright August Wilson, and directed by Denzel Washington, uses the title of the story to convey various meanings. The main character, Troy Maxson (Washington), was an aspiring baseball player. (Could the name referencing the epic by Homer suggest Troy feels like the besieged city?) A batter in that sport “swings for the fences” in the hope of hitting a home run. That means the player exhibits the hope of accomplishment. Actual fences are barriers erected for physical safety, but they can also be psychological shields that protect an individual emotionally. They may imply the desire to prevent others from escaping the control of the of one in power. Wilson richly employs the metaphor in various ways.The film takes place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the scene of many of Wilson’s plays. It begins in 1956. Troy is a trash collector, and he works with his friend, Jim Bono (Stephen McKinley Henderson). The two talk about Troy’s complaint that there are no Black trash truck drivers, and Blacks always have to haul the refuse into the vehicle. Troy sees it as a racial issue, which it is in general because of social deprivation. We later learn that specific to Troy’s situation, he can’t read and does not have a driver’s license.The conversation turns to Troy having bought some drinks for a woman who is not his wife, Rose (Viola Davis, an Oscar winner for Best Supporting Actress for this role). The character’s name reminds one of Spring, and rebirth, and she tries to get Troy to emerge from the dead past in which he likes to dwell. Bono implies that his friend is not just being polite, as Troy argues, when a man buys several drinks for a woman. Troy gets Bono to admit that he has never known Troy to cheat on his wife. However, no knowledge of a fact doesn’t make it untrue, as we subsequently discover.They share a pint of whiskey (we find that Troy drinks
too much, since Bono teases him about hogging the bottle). They engage is some crude
sexual humor about a large woman from Florida. Troy says the woman’s girth
“cushions the ride” like “Goodyear” tires. Even if that type of joke might be
offensive to some, it fits the characters Wilson portrays. They are at Troy’s
house and Rose comes out of the house and appropriately asks what they are
“getting into.” She seems to have radar when it comes to her husband’s state of
mind. She offers her own sense of humor. Troy says that when they first met, he
told her he wanted to be her man, but didn’t want to get married. She said if
he wasn’t the “marrying kind” then he should “move out of the way, so the
marrying kind could find” her. Bono
shows the deprived plight of African American families when he talks about how
difficult it used to be to get a home without an outhouse, and he thought
indoor plumbing was reserved for white folks.
Rose tells her husband that his excessive drinking will
kill him. Troy says that Death visited him once when he had pneumonia, but he
beat Death in a wrestling match. He personifies the loss of life so he can feel
like he is in a contest between two men in which he can compete. He also talks
about confronting the Devil, and Rose comments that anything that Troy doesn’t understand,
he calls it the Devil. It’s as if Troy paints himself as a bigger-than-life
Sisyphus-like character, constantly battling overpowering forces.
Lyons (Russell Hornsby), Troy’s older son from a prior relationship, arrives with his guitar. Troy sees him as another person who is not practical, only wanting to pursue his music. Lyons sees music as the reason for living; he says he needs a reason to exist, and music gives him that reason. Lyons asks for money, which is the only reason Troy says he is there. Lyons says his girl, Bonnie, is working and he’ll pay back the money. Troy says he can get Lyons a job picking up trash, but Lyons wants something better than that for his life. Many parents want their children to have jobs that are better than how they make a living. However, Troy represents those parents who feel their children look down upon the work that they do. Troy feels that he must carry the weight of dreamers on his labor-inflicted back, and thus, he begrudges the dreams of his offspring. He says that Lyons’s mother did a poor job of raising him. Lyons counters by saying that Troy was not around, so he doesn’t know how he was raised. He basically is indicting Troy’s hypocritical action since he talks about being responsible but abdicated his responsibility toward his son. Rose gets the complaining Troy to come up with the ten dollars Lyons asked for.
It's the weekend and Rose sings a hymn as she hangs laundry
to dry. The words of the song ask Jesus to be a “fence” around her. Here is
where the title of the story involves the wish for protection. Rose talks about
playing the “numbers,” an illegal form of gambling before state-run lotteries
came into being. Troy calls the betting foolish. He again expresses his
contempt for seeking a dream-like impractical way to escape the plight of the
deprived.
Troy continues this rant by saying Cory wanted to
escape working on a fence on his property by going to football practice. Here,
the fence could be a metaphor for Troy trying to keep his son from escaping
Troy’s control over him, and thus, depriving Cory the luxury of holding onto
his aspirations. Rose tells her husband that he’s “off,” complaining about
everything. She takes the saying about getting up on the wrong side of bed and wittily
refreshes it by telling Troy to go back to bed and get up on the other side.
Troy says he is going to work on the fence, but he goes
to the local tavern and comes back drunk. He says he is going to fix things around
the house but escapes into his drinking instead. At the same time that he rants
about Cory not doing his chores, the boy is actually home ready to take care of
his responsibilities. Troy is always on the offensive about the way he sees the
world vexing him. What follows is a universal exchange between the self-indulgent
but life-enjoying child and the practical adult. Cory says his father should buy
a TV. Troy points out that the money that would buy a TV must go to fixing the
roof. Troy humorously says what good is the TV if the roof leaks water onto
Cory’s brand-new television.
As the two work on the wood for the fence, Cory talks about the Pittsburgh Pirates. Troy, always wearing that chip on his shoulder, says that Roberto Clemente isn’t allowed to play all the time because he is a man of color. Cory corrects his father’s limited perspective by telling him Clemente plays a great deal. Troy adds that the baseball leagues play mediocre white men while Black players must be great to get a chance. Cory, trying to add fairness to the argument, mentions exceptional white and Black ballplayers, including Hank Aaron. Troy dismisses the great Aaron by saying any player can do well once he gets his timing, and says that Troy had hits off the great Negro League pitcher Satchel Paige. Troy appears to need to compensate for a lack of success by knocking down the accomplishments of others.
From baseball the two move on to Cory’s football
aspirations, of which Troy again says his son has unachievable dreams. Cory
quit his weekday job at the grocery store, but will continue to work weekends.
The owner will hold his job until after the football season. Cory can go to
college because of his football abilities and good grades. That’s not enough
for Troy, who still views his boy’s hopes as a longshot because Troy interprets
his failure at sports as being due to a continuing systemic racist system that
will also affect Cory. He demands that Cory try to get his job back, or find a
new one, and give up his dream of playing college sports. Troy tells his son to
learn a trade so he will not have to haul trash like his dad. He wants his son
to succeed, but in a pragmatic sense.
A dejected Cory, trying to comprehend why his father is denying him a chance at happiness, asks if Troy likes him. Troy reduces even family relationships to practical transactions. He says there is no “law” that says he must like Cory. He has a duty to take care of him because he is his son. He said having him did not include in the bargain liking him. He tells a now seething Cory that his son should stop worrying about being liked and focus on who “is doin’ right by you.” Troy’s reducing family relationships to a pragmatic contract involving duties not only leaves no room for liking someone but also excludes love, the real glue that binds a family together.
Rose again tries to break through the “fence” of
Troy’s self-delusion that the only reason that he didn’t succeed in sports was
because of racism, and not his age. She tries to tell him that he is enclosed
himself in the bitterness of the past and doesn’t want to see that things have
changed, implying that there are more opportunities in sports for African
Americans at the time the story takes place.
Bono takes Troy aside and tells him he has learned a
great deal from Troy and he knows whether or not someone’s telling the truth. He
says that he doesn’t want to see Rose hurt. Troy here admits to his
extramarital affair and says that he can’t shake this other woman loose. Troy
is breaking his marital vows, and Bono reminds his friend that he should
practice what he preaches about accepting responsibility.
After what Bono said, Troy is feeling guilty and he decides to confess to Rose. But there is more to the story than what Bono knows; he tells Rose he is going to be a “daddy” again. Rose gets hit with both barrels at once concerning Troy’s infidelity. Rose almost falls to the floor from the emotional wounds that Troy has inflicted on her. She runs outside toward the existing metal fence, as if trying to flee the barrier that she thought protected her. She drops the rose that Gabriel gave her, possibly signifying the relinquishing of hope for the future that her name suggested. He tries to defend himself by using extensive baseball metaphors, using the tools he knows. He says that he was born with two strikes against him, most likely being Black and poor. However, he avoided that third strike by getting married, having a family and a job. But, he says the other woman gives him an escape from the pressure of his work and family responsibilities, and he says he can’t give up that feeling of freedom. Rose says that it’s her job to alive pressure, and he shouldn’t be looking for someone outside the family. In baseball language, that would mean the relief pitcher should be someone on the same team. He says that he feels like he has been standing still. Her angry response is, “Well, I’ve been standing with you!” She has been supporting him and has given up moving on by committing to her life with Troy. Just like his boys, Troy has tried to kill Rose’s wants and dreams. She says she buried her desires “inside” her husband, hoping happiness would grow there, but she found she planted her hopes on rocky soil. She calls him out on his selfishness since he always talks about what he has sacrificed and forgets how much he has taken, most likely implying how much he has deprived her of her wishes. He becomes angry about being accused of taking and not giving back, and grabs Rose’s arm. As she cries out that he is hurting her, Cory comes outside and slams Troy into the fence, threatening that barrier of authority between father and son. Troy says that Cory now has two strikes against him, and he implies there will be violent retribution against his son if he gets that third strike.We get a montage of images that show time passing as the weather turns cold with snow falling. Troy continues to build the fence alone; Cory works out in the basement as he keeps his dream alive of playing football; Rose seeks refuge in the embrace of fellow females at her church; Gabriel visits the grave of his mother who died young. The family members are isolated from each other. At least until Rose shows up at Troy’s workplace and tells her husband they must talk. He says it's been six months since she hasn’t wanted to have a conversation with him. She wants him to come straight home after work, implying he should not visit his lady friend, Alberta. After some evading, Troy says he just wants to stop at the hospital because Alberta may be having the baby early. Rose’s face reflects her anguish and criticizes Troy for signing papers that would send Gabriel to an institution (something he said he wouldn’t do) and would award him half of his brother’s disability check. Yet, he would not sign the agreement to have Cory play football at a college. Troy can’t read, so it’s possible he is truthful when he says he didn’t know anything about what Rose reports, which again stresses how his lack of an education has hindered him. Most likely out of guilt Troy feeds his brother at the asylum, like a nurturing father giving food to a baby.
Rose answers the phone in the middle of the night. She
reports to Troy that Alberta gave birth to a girl, but she died during
childbirth. When Rose asks about what’s to be done next, Troy reverts to his
usual complaint about being burdened by life. After Rose leaves him alone, Troy
rants at Death, saying he’s going to finish the fence, to keep Death at a safe
distance until it’s his time, and then they will battle. He tells Death not to
come at him through others, like Alberta. We again have a mythological level to
the tale, as Troy addresses primal forces. It is as if he is delivering a
dramatic soliloquy, like Shakespeare’s King Lear. However, Troy’s speech shows
how he is an egotist, as if everything revolves around him.
A short time has passed as Troy comes home to find Cory
leave the yard as soon as he sees his father. Rose leaves to bring a cake to
the church and left Troy some dinner. He goes to the local bar and talks to
Bono who he hasn’t seen for a while because Troy is now driving in a white
neighborhood. Troy is losing his family and his friend due to his actions. He
sings about his dead dog, again seeking solace in the past. Cory stops at a
Marine recruiting office, so we know Troy has lost his son even though he tried
to keep him inside his fence.
The next scene takes place several years later, and
Troy’s daughter, Raynell (Saniyya Sidney - Could her name suggest a “ray” of sunshine and the hope for a better
future?), is a youngster taking care of a garden outside. The greenery may
represent the influence of Rose, the person with the regenerative name. Bono is
there with Lyons. They are dressed up in black, as is Rose. We know they are
going to Troy’s funeral. Cory shows up looking impressive in his Marine
uniform, wearing a corporal’s stripes, and has been in the service for six
years. He has been away since his father kicked him out, since Raynell doesn’t
know that he is her half-brother. Lyons tells Cory that he is finishing up a
three-year prison sentence for cashing other people’s checks (his father was a thief
when he was young), and the penitentiary let him out for his dad’s funeral. He
reminds the bitter Cory that Troy used to say, “you got to take the crookeds
with the straights.” He recounts how his father would strike out and then hit
the ball out of the stadium, and after the game two hundred people wanted to
shake his hand. Despite his shortcomings, Lyons is saying that Troy was a force
of nature. Lyons still plays music, keeping what feeds him emotionally in his
life. Troy’s sons may not have played baseball, but they played music and
football, and refuse to give into defeat.
In the kitchen are pictures of John F. Kennedy, Martin
Luther King, Jr., and Jesus, individuals that inspire and keep Rose going. She
tells Cory outside that Troy was swinging his bat at the ball tied to the tree
when he fell over and died. He went down swinging, as he said he would when
Death came for him. Cory tells Rose that he has to say “no” to his father just once
and will not go to the funeral. Rose is outraged and says that is not how she
brought him up, and he must put his animosity aside. She says her words with
the baseball hanging between them and the fence Troy built in the background.
These images show how Troy’s legacy of placing boundaries between people continues
to divide lives despite Rose’s wish to bring the family together.
Cory says that his father was like a “shadow,” suggesting
it was like a black plague that infested his life. Rose says that Cory can’t
escape his father’s influence, but he must deal with it. Troy was a man of
contradictions, but she believes he wanted to do more good than harm. Her words
show that conflict between wanting to help but not knowing how to deliver it. She
says that sometimes when he touched someone, he “bruised” them, and when he
held her, she might feel him “cut” her, both in an emotional sense. He most
likely wanted Cory to be far from what Troy was in his failures, but also to be
like him in his strength.
She says that Troy was a bigger than life character
who filled up the house and all the “empty” spaces in her. But, she admits that
didn’t leave much room for her own individuality to thrive. She does take
responsibility for choosing Troy, and she has turned the negative events that
brought Raynell into the world into a positive. The girl is a symbol of
rebirth, giving Rose a new energy, which refueled Rose, who is a life force
herself.
Raynell and Cory sing Troy’s song about his dog, Blue. After they are done, she hugs him. The institution let Gabriel out for the funeral of his brother, and he shows up with a trumpet, living up to the angel whose name he carries. He blows one clear note, and the sun shines through the clouds, which Gabriel takes as opening the gates of heaven for Troy. Raynell holds Gabriel’s hand. Troy’s child is able to accomplish what he couldn’t do in life, which is to bring the family together.
The next film is Stand by Me.
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