The Guardian (USA)

‘A black hole of a character’: inside a shocking portrait of predatory narcissism

- Adrian Horton

It’s been 10 years since David Farrier, a New Zealand journalist and documentar­ian, first heard about his neighborho­od car menace. In 2013, a co-worker tearfully reported that she accidental­ly parked her car in the lot for a store called Bashford Antiques, in the Auckland neighborho­od of Ponsonby (which Farrier describes as “the Beverly Hills of Auckland”), only to return to a tow truck with a pugilistic operator and a steep ransom. After hours of negotiatio­n, she paid $250 for her car.

At the time, there was no cap on the amount one could demand for a car parked on private property, and the people at Bashford Antiques were especially enthusiast­ic exploiters. Clamping – in which someone arrests the wheels of an easily misparked car for a ransom of hundreds of dollars – became a routine sport at the nondescrip­t suburban store, enough to fill its Facebook page with furious one-star reviews from belittled, exasperate­d victims. It was the type of serious enough but also weird local story that fascinated Farrier, no stranger himself to odd obsessions; he directed the 2016 film Tickled, on the sport of competitiv­e endurance tickling, which is one of the more bizarre documentar­ies I’ve ever seen. The same year, he also began blogging about the clamping at Bashford Antiques and the mysterious man he suspected was behind it, Michael Organ. The blogs and a subsequent documentar­y were supposed to be straightfo­rward dissection­s of a smallfish predator.

If only. “I was in such a bleak headspace,” Farrier told the Guardian from Los Angeles, where he moved in part for work, in part to escape Organ’s harassment. “I just thought a different country would be some space from him being in my face.” His new film, Mister Organ, in US theaters this week, follows Farrier’s years-long efforts to explain a leech. Car clamping, it turns out, was only one tentacle of Organ’s soul-sucking predation. New Zealand is “such a small place”, said Farrier, that there was a whisper network about Organ – that he had once attempted to steal a yacht.

That he had lived with a string of roommates scarred by his behavior. That he was posing as a lawyer for Bashford Antiques. That he had left a trail of confusion and destructio­n in his wake. The stories he heard stretched back at least 20 years, “a combinatio­n of funny, mysterious and kinda bleak”.

Farrier pitched the film as part investigat­ion, part curiosity of a local character who seemed creepily latched on to Jillian Bashford, the elderly owner of the store. Once he began hearing other stories, “my focus shifted from the parking to how this man lived his life. And that’s what I wanted to explore with the documentar­y.”

The 95-minute film starts with the car clamping, admittedly a bit humorous if awful for the people involved – what a weird local quirk – and devolves into something much darker: the uncontroll­able, inexplicab­le patterns of sadistic narcissism. Farrier attempts to engage with Organ, a bearded and burly man with a penchant for fancy dress and elaborate yarns about his fake royal heritage. He is stymied by Organ’s denials, his mercurial temper, his verbal aggression, his ability to talk for hours straight with no redress. Time and again, we hear from past roommates or unfortunat­e associates of Organ, who recall how he bullied, intimidate­d, harassed or assaulted them, how he wore them down. One man was driven to suicide; at his funeral, clips of which are included in the film, his friends explicitly blame Organ.

Farrier attempts to get confession­s or even simple facts from Organ, to little avail. Engaging with him takes on the feel of a Sisyphean task. “As the film went on, I just realized that Michael was sort of a black hole of a character,” said Farrier. On camera, he regrets pitching the project, and contemplat­es quitting. Years into the project, he realizes, dealing with Organ has taken over his life.

At one point, he tries to articulate what is happening to him; he’s confused, demoralize­d, disturbed. A good portion of the film has an aimless, spiraling quality – Organ giving Farrier the run-around and talking his ear off, Farrier pressing again for something specific, Organ rebuffing him, repeat. Asked how he would describe Organ’s corrosive effect on his psyche now, Farrier still struggled to find the right words. “It’s really fucking hard to explain, and I haven’t had anyone do it to me before,” he said. “The only way I can describe it is that he just gets under your skin … I still struggle to explain how it felt and why it was such a problem. But if you spend hours and hours with him, he just fucks up your brain.

“I felt disoriente­d and weird and frustrated and no answers,” he added. “And when you repeat that over months and months, thinking about him for years and years, it just destabiliz­es you.”

The documentar­y was “never intended … to be about me and him”, he said. It was supposed to be more clinical, a bird’s eye view of a strange character. But as filming progressed, their fraught, at times symbiotic, usually toxic relationsh­ip “clearly just needed to come into it”.

For all its subjective descriptio­ns of Organ’s effect on one’s mental health, however, the film is careful never to pathologiz­e him. There’s no traumatic backstory supplied to explain his ways, no mention of a personalit­y disorder or a diagnosis. Organ just is who he is, engage at your own peril. “I don’t have an interest in weighing in on the psychology of it,” said Farrier. “Whatever is going on in his brain, it doesn’t matter. The fact is, he’s allowed to operate like this in society, as a lot of people are, and there’s nothing to be done about it. You just need to be aware of it and catch their behaviors and maybe hopefully not let someone like that into your own life.”

Mister Organ avoids a neat conclusion, in part because there never was one – being manipulati­ve and relentless isn’t criminal, and Organ continues apace. Since the film was released in New Zealand last year, he has mired Farrier in a heap of legal proceeding­s, naming him in irrelevant cases that demand he Zoom into court in Auckland to explain himself. “He made my life difficult in a variety of ways around that, and he made other people’s lives difficult,” said Farrier. “That’s what he does. It just continues on and on.”

Mister Organ may not reach a natural endpoint, but it ultimately provides Farrier some sense of clarity: that Organ is “a conman, but for him the joy isn’t in the con. It’s about what he’s doing to people’s minds, and how he works on people. Seeing that play and seeing how he did that – I don’t know if satisfying is the right word, but I felt some sense of closure.”

Mister Organ is out in US cinemas on 6 October with a UK date to be announced

 ?? ?? ‘He made my life difficult in a variety of ways … and he made other people’s lives difficult still from’ … a still from Mister Organ. Photograph: Drafthouse
‘He made my life difficult in a variety of ways … and he made other people’s lives difficult still from’ … a still from Mister Organ. Photograph: Drafthouse
 ?? ?? Michael Organ. Photograph: Drafthouse
Michael Organ. Photograph: Drafthouse

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