Nines
FAMOUS REAL-LIFE NINES
Actress Loni Anderson, Bruce Babbitt, the cultural aura of Bali,
Annette Bening, Tony Bennett, Tom Berenger, Ernest Borgnine, Matthew
Broderick, Sandra Bullock, George Burns, Actress Kate Capshaw,
Singer Belinda Carlisle, Art Carney, Actor Keith Carradine, Julia
Child, Warren Christopher, Connie Chung, Bill Clinton, Gary Cooper,
Kevin Costner, The Dalai Lama, Actor Jeff Daniels, Oscar de la
Renta,
Clint Eastwood, Dwight Eisenhower, Queen Elizabeth II, Shelley Fabares, Columbo's Peter Falk, Gerald Ford, Actor Dennis Franz, Buckminster Fuller, Annette Funicello, Mahatma Gandhi, Chief Dan George, John Goodman, Tipper Gore, Actor Elliott Gould, Charles Grodin, Woody Harrelson, Gabby Hayes, Patty Hearst, Mariel Hemingway, Buck Henry, Audrey Hepburn, Barbara Hershey, Paul Hogan, Anjelica Huston, Actor Ben Johnson, Shirley Jones, C. G. Jung, Grace Kelly,
Figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, Helmut Kohl, Stan Laurel, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Abraham Lincoln, Andie MacDowell, Mr. Magoo, John Major, Dean Martin, Jerry Mathers, Actor Harry Morgan, Sancho Panza, Slim Pickens, Actor Michael J. Pollard, Dan Quayle, James Earl Ray,
Ronald Reagan, Ralph Richardson, Cal Ripkin, Robbie Robertson, Psychologist Carl Rogers, Roy Rogers, Gena Rowlands, Actress Eva Marie Saint, Jerry Seinfeld, Garry Shandling, Wallace Shawn, Martin Sheen, Actor Tom Skerritt, Ringo Starr, Mary Steenburgen, Gloria Steinem, Actor Daniel Stern, James Stewart, Actor Eric Stoltz, Singer Andy Williams.
INTRODUCTION
Unlike Eights, who mobilize and directly express aggression, Nines
take their underlying emotion of anger and tamp it down. Their
central defensive strategy is to self-efface, to blend with and
accommodate their environment. This tactic requires that Nines
suppress their rough edges and conceal any part of them that might
seem disagreeable. Most Nines resent the consequences of this
strategy - other people overlook them - but this anger comes out
in indirect ways.
Since most Nines have taken on the coloration of their environment, there is a confusing variety to people with this style. Nines can have a wide range of occupations and outwardly appear much different from each other. What they share underneath, however, is a distinct tendency to fall asleep to their real inner needs. Remember when you are trying to identify a Nine that you are looking for the absence of something rather than an obvious definite quality that the person asserts.
Nines have sometimes been described as the "common people" of the Enneagram. When healthy, they possess a deep personal modesty and an elegant simplicity of thought. Awakened Nines are even-tempered, stable, unassuming, nonjudgmental and comfortable with who they are. They often have a cheerful Seven-like outlook, though they live in the present and not the future.
Many Nines have a calm, egoless, focused power that they bring to bear on whatever is important to them. This power is generally rooted in love whether the Nine thinks of it that way or not. Most healthy people with this style have a desire to contribute, to give to others freely, and to administrate their world in a way that benefits everyone they care about.
Nines are natural diplomats and mediators, and can be quite skilled at resolving conflict. Since they seek peace, union and harmony, it is often easy for a Nine to find points of agreement between warring parties. From there a Nine might patiently negotiate settlements that build on small positive steps. Awakened Nines are gently dynamic, suffused with a highly integrated sense of self and implicit mission. Most are also flexible and have the ability to state blunt, difficult truths in useful ways that somehow don't make others defensive.
When less healthy, a Nine's apparent simplicity becomes more like self-concealment. Entranced Nines begin to merge blindly with the wishes of others and the roles their environment wants them to play. In the process, they erase their own needs, priorities and ambitions. A Nine might give away his or her sense of initiative in order to have no opinion and thus keep an apparent peace. The more they absent themselves from their own life, the more passive, unfocused and ambivalent they become.
Entranced Nines tend to see all sides of a situation and identify equally with each outside perspective. They often focus on absurd or irrelevant st mildetails and lose the forest for the trees. They can be overly responsible but underperforming, obsessively complicating simple tasks even as they minimize the consequence of not getting important things done. Going in circles relieves them of the necessity to make decisions and personal choices, to take responsibility for having a self that they think might upset others.
Entranced Nines often have trouble overtly saying "no," but say it in other ways, usually through silent stubbornness and passive aggression. Nines usually blame others explicitly or indirectly for the life they feel they can't really have. Way deep down there's an angry, depressed nihilism in most unhealthy Nines. They have given up on their life and see no reason to stir themselves up to play at what they're convinced is an empty, fruitless game.
When deeply entranced, Nines can sink into depressed self-neglect and a kind of lazy oblivion that is an imitation of death. They may be apathetic, habit-bound, oblivious, or numb. They could talk incessantly about what they know they should do but then never bother to do it. They might try to avoid conflict but accidentally provoke it through bursts of disassociated nastiness. They might be disorderly, chaotic, cluttered and offer weird, ill-formed rationales for their irresponsibility. Deeply entranced Nines can do great damage to others while believing their actions have no consequence. Drug and alcohol addiction can also be problems at this stage.
NINES IN THE MOVIES
Because of the passive nature of the style, Nines often play
sidekicks or confused, indecisive characters or "common man"
roles. When Nines are protagonists they tend to play the audience.
They offer receptive characters with little overt ego with whom
we identify and follow into the circumstances of the story. As
events happen to the Nine they happen to us.
There have been a surprising number of Nine movie stars, most of them male. As in life, they vary tremendously, but Nine performers usually share an unfettered, truthful acting style. Clint Eastwood and the late Audrey Hepburn are both good examples, though, on the surface, they couldn't be more different. Both, however, have been described as modest, unpretentious people who would bring little personal temperament to their work. Audrey Hepburn played to the image-conscious, extroverted side of the Nine style (Grace Kelly did this too). Clint Eastwood is quite introverted and, by contrast, the only movie star in history who doesn't comb his hair.
Eastwood the man is a Nine with an 8 wing and his screen persona is a blend of these two styles. He has flipped back and forth, although his most famous roles have been as Eights. Nearly all of his later films indict violence and explore the dark side of the heroic Eight character that he played for years. In the film Unforgiven, for instance, he is a Nine reluctantly drawn into battle with corrupt Eights.
Eastwood's predecessor in the movies was Gary Cooper, a real-life Nine who almost always played quiet, instinctual heroes. Eastwood has said that he openly modeled his minimal acting style on Cooper's. Other past Nine movie stars include James Stewart, Henry Fonda, Dean Martin and Ronald Reagan.
Lady Nines in movies tend these days to be impressive character actresses - Annette Bening, Barbara Hershey, Anjelica Huston, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Gena Rowlands, Mary Steenburgen. In the past, female Nines played sex objects who were beautiful, seductive yet indefinite, a combination which allowed for maximum audience projection.
Partly because of the receptive nature of the style, many movie Nines are more clearly portrayed in relationship to other characters. Remember when you study this chapter that there are other good examples throughout the Guide. These include Woody Harrelson in White Men Can't Jump, Andie MacDowell in sex, lies and video and Wallace Shawn in My Dinner With Andre.
MOVIE REVIEWS
Antonia And Jane
Sometimes uproarious British comedy about two friends recounting
different versions of their relationship in separate sessions
with the same psychiatrist. Antonia and Jane are about to meet
for an annual dinner and the occasion brings up insecurities in
both of them. Each woman compares herself to her mistaken idea
of the other.
The befuddled shrink struggles gamely, especially with Jane (Imelda Staunton). A hilariously obsessive Nine, Jane talks in rambling sagas and confused, dizzying circles. Here is a sample exchange:
Jane: "This week I asked myself, 'What do I really think about the poet Wordsworth?' But the question presupposes that I know who I really am - which I don't think I do."
Shrink (frowning): "There's no need to overcomplicate things, Jane."
Jane: "Okay, then assuming I do know who I am - which is a really big assumption - part of me thinks that anything I think about Wordsworth is completely beside the point!"
Shrink (lost): "What point?"
Jane (triumphant): "Ah! but is there a point?!"
Jane would be an extroverted Nine with both wings. She's very
actively frustrated and has loud bursts of Eightish temper. Her
antiauthoritarian attitude goes with the 8 wing, but her anger
leads to absurd Niney courses of action and then more muddled
thinking. At one point, Jane gets angry at her parents. In revolt,
she marries an imprisoned drug dealer she barely knows and labels
this act a political statement. Her 1 wing is evident in her receptive
eagerness to please in relationships, plus a certain sweetness
and idealism. Nines with both wings tend to flip back and forth
between Bad Child/Good Child behavior.
The first half of the film takes Jane's point of view, and her image of Antonia is that of a Three. Antonia is beautiful, blond, waspish, and Jane's nightmare image of orderly, privileged success. Overcomplicating Nines sometimes see Threes as everything they are not.
The irony is that Antonia (Saskia Reeves) is actually a Six. Her life is just as confused as Jane's and she envies Jane's passionate disorder compared to her own bourgeois compromises. Antonia's life is coming apart anyway. She suspects her husband is having an affair and then counterphobically starts one herself. Her lover has pathetic, goofy sadomasochistic scenarios he wants her to play out; she tries hard to go along, but it's just too ridiculous. She has antiauthoritarian outbursts too and says at one point, "I've decided that everybody I know is part of a great conspiracy to make my life insupportable."
The Shrink is likely a not-so-bright Seven. She practices spin control and generally counsels with cheery platitudes like, "Try to regard everything as a delightful adventure" or, "Time's up for today. Just remember that whatever happens is a fresh challenge!" When Antonia's marriage really does bust up, the psychiatrist reasons with her, "Howard has left you; that is an existential fact. How you choose to react to that fact is up to you ..." To which Antonia replies, "I'd like to kill him!!!"
Back To The Beach
Adroit, good-natured spoof of those
1960s beach movies. Even if you never saw the originals, this
movie is surprisingly funny and almost surreal. Annette Funicello
plays a Nine with a 1 wing. She's a naïve, oblivious Goody
Two Shoes, both endearing and simplistic. Described as "a
woman who's been in a good mood for the last 22 years," she
sweetly replies: "I just believe everything will turn out
for the best."
While Annette is comic, it's quite true that some Nines are very cheerful. The ability to blank out trouble and difficulty and focus on the good is sometimes well developed. Think of Ronald Reagan, for instance.
Frankie Avalon plays Annette's husband, a nervous, excitable Seven (6 wing). Annette's a Nine in real life and I'm pretty sure Avalon's a Seven.
Carnal Knowledge
This bleak, excellent film plays like
a pathology sheet, a rundown of diseases possible in relations
between men and women. Story follows two college chums through
decades of knotty, heartless love affairs. Their first involvement
is with each other; they are forever talking in disassociated
ways about women. What they say is generally rooted in contempt,
so they wind up sounding like talking tumors.
Jack Nicholson plays his usual persona (Seven with an 8 wing), while Art Garfunkel is generally Niney. Garfunkel's character plays along with the more dynamic Nicholson, but has a streak of Oneish decency that emerges slowly. The story pretty much indicts both of them, though.
The middle third of the picture details Nicholson's live-in involvement with sweet, passive Nine, Ann-Margret. She's a nice person, but unmotivated by her own needs. She would be an intimate subtype for the way she longs for union with and commitment from Nicholson. She wants marriage and children but soon discovers that Nicholson is an unlikely prospect. Instead of dumping him, she goes inert and angry; she quits work, turns slovenly and pines away.
"You're more tired now than when you were working," he observes.
"The reason I sleep all day is because I can't stand my life."
"What life?" he asks.
"I sleep all day! Two years ago I slept 8 hours a day, a year ago it was 12, now it's up to 15, pretty soon it will be 24!"
It does seem as if she's sliding into death, although she has episodes of stubborn overt anger. Nicholson, the Seven, rails against her desire for commitment and especially feels trapped by her dependency ("For God's sake, I'd almost marry you if you'd leave me!"). Entranced Sevens frequently resent anyone acting dependent towards them; their anger is related to their own guilt over being undependable.
Ann-Margret's lazy sink into oblivion is very accurate to the style and subtype. Her character is very similar to Shirley MacLaine's in The Apartment, another intimate subtype.
Cynthia O'Neal has a small role as one of Garfunkel's paramours and she's a bossy, competitive Three.
The Last Picture Show, Texasville
"Ain't nothin' here, it's just
flat and empty." That's a resident of Archer City, Texas,
describing the setting for these two films, a tiny, dust-stripped
town stuck to the earth a mile from the middle of nowhere. The
Last Picture Show is a doleful, somber portrait of lives without
futures. Most of the characters appear haunted or doomed and the
film is partly about how to stay in or leave a place as optionless
as Archer City. This 1971 effort is considered a minor classic
and it's still quite good, if overlong.
Texasville (1991) is a comedy, a kind of mirror image that revisits the same characters decades later and affectionately finds them mired in confusion. It turns out the characters did have futures that weren't quite so bleak, but no one in the town knows quite yet what they're doing. This latter film flopped but it's well-acted and literate if a little talky.
Leads Jeff Bridges and Timothy Bottoms are both Nines, though Bridges is more extroverted within the style while Bottoms is pulled into himself. In the first film, Bridges is cheerful and forward-looking and it's he who gets out of town by joining the military. Bottoms, by contrast, sinks into the deep sleep of his environment, looking increasingly dreamy and forlorn as the film continues. It's like he's slowly freezing to death.
Ben Johnson is on hand as the town's moral force and father figure to the boys. He's intriguing because he sounds like a One, seems like an Eight, yet he's most likely a Nine with strong wings. He has a basically receptive nature with moments of instinctual, almost mythic strength. Cybill Shepherd plays the town's flirtatious beauty, a Three with a 2 wing (intimate subtype). Her mother Ellen Burstyn is a Two with a 3 wing and it's interesting to see how outwardly similar they are yet essentially different. Shepherd's a status-seeking actress while her Mom's a fool for love.
In the sequel, Bridges has returned, gone into the oil business and is now $12,000,000 in debt. This takes the edge off his cheeriness and he tumbles through the film depressed and befuddled ("I don't understand anything any more. Everyone's gone crazy"). Described by newcomer wife Annie Potts (probable Eight) as having a "dour personality that's real reluctant to take a chance," Bridges washes around town in a stream of chaos. He's basically a passive witness to events, allowing situations to develop around him while remaining non-committal ("It's hard to stay exciting for a whole lifetime.")
Bottoms has sunk further into Niney deep freeze, to the point where people now worry about him. There's some indication that he might have brain damage but it's more intrinsic than that. He sees movies in the sky, forgets where he is and talks of suing the town for ruining his life. His sleep has turned into a kind of senility, complete with memory lapses, and he acts like an old man though he's only about forty.
Ben Johnson and Ellen Burstyn are both gone but two minor characters from the first film have acquired Enneagram styles. Randy Quaid plays Bridges's banker, a climbing-the-walls anxious Six. Cloris Leachman has become Bridges's secretary and she's an opinionated One.
Cybill Shepherd's character has actually gone through an interesting transition. She left town too, became a movie actress and has returned to Archer City to grieve the loss of her parents and the death of a young son. She's a Three gone to 9 (see "Threes").
She's still a bit of a role-player - she toys with Bridges and maintains a capricious, mocking air - but she's in the process of acquiring some emotional substance. Her lost child haunts her and she's fascinated with community and family. She's aware of her roles: "I flirt a little, but that's my nature. Actually it's the ghost of my nature" - but in the end she breaks through to some deeper emotional connectedness via her grief. It's almost as though she's moving from her 2 wing to the high side of her 4 wing, getting in touch with sadness and a deeper dimension of feeling.
Little Murders
Dark, sometimes amazing satire of deracinated urban life. This
1971 story features alienated characters living distorted lives
in a city where basic services are in breakdown. Gangs roam the
streets and random shootings and power outages punctuate everyone's
days.
Sound familiar? This film was so prescient that it doesn't seem dated now. The characters are exaggerated, even grotesque, but nearly all have vivid Enneagram styles. The script was written by cartoonist Jules Feiffer and has the depressive, comic Niney flavor of his drawings.
Elliott Gould plays Alfred, a Nine photographer whose chief defense against urban chaos is a stance of indifferent numbness. A self-described "apathist," we first see him passively resisting a gang beating. When future wife Marcia Rodd rescues him, he scolds her: "You shouldn't have done that. They were getting tired and about to let me go!" Rodd is a nice Two with a 3 wing ("Alfred, you've got to let me mold you"), though for much of the film she seems like a busy, administrative Three. She tries to inspire and motivate the slothful Gould:
She: Name something you enjoy.
He: Sleeping.
She: What about sex?
He: It makes me sleep better ...
Over the course of the story Rodd succeeds at bringing Gould partially to life ("I trust you. I really nearly trust you," he says). Nines will sometimes wake up for love, although this film illustrates their worst fear about what might happen should they start to care.
Gould's so nihilistic that he insists their marriage take place at the First Existentialist Church, presided over by hippie minister Donald Sutherland. Latter's ad-libbed marriage ceremony is an ideal specimen of rationalizing Seven logic: " You all know why we are here. Let me state that of the hundreds of marriages I've performed, all but seven have failed. The odds are not good. But nothing can destroy you if you don't see it as destructive. Any step that one takes is useful, is positive. Even the negation of the previous step. If you stay married, fine! If you don't stay married, fine! It's all right. Everything is an answer for someone. For Alfred, today's answer is Patricia. For Patricia, today's answer is Alfred!"
Gould is also welcomed by Rodd's loony family. Father (Vincent Gardenia) is a flaming paranoid Six and mother (Elizabeth Wilson) is a weirdly normal Nine. Lou Jacobi plays a ranting One Judge that Gould and Rodd consult. Director Alan Arkin does a turn as a paranoid Six police detective, convinced that the city's random killings are part of a larger conspiracy to embarrass the police. This film is sometimes brilliant, generally interesting and very unusual.
Mr. And Mrs. Bridge
"I want a divorce and we can discuss
it as soon as you've finished enjoying your beer." That's
Mrs. Bridge (Joanne Woodward) talking to Mr. Bridge in a rare
moment of open, if passive, discontent.
Mrs. Bridge is a ditsy, off-center Nine and Mr. Bridge (Paul Newman) is a thin-lipped, repressive One. The story of their life together is composed of small moments in which they mainly demonstrate their Enneagram styles. Nothing much happens, neither of them changes or grows. If anything, they get worse; that is, more entrenched and trapped within their limits.
Most of the time, Mrs. Bridge is lost to and passive to others. When Mr. Bridge proposes a trip to Paris, she says, "Just tell me what to read first. What do I know? I've never done anything, never been anywhere." Never been anyone, is what she's saying. Throughout the movie she displays a quality of busy, distracted sleep - the sleep of a self forgotten.
Mrs. Bridge's emotions surface in odd uprushes and the Nine style of minimizing conflict is obvious many times. At one point a suicidal Fourish friend (Blythe Danner) pours out her pain and Mrs. Bridge then changes the subject: "When you think about it, we really are awfully lucky ... would you like some tea?" Nines can be alternately sympathetic to others and then callously indifferent. Mrs. Bridge demonstrates how a Nine can do harm with neglectxample of the g.
Late in the film, there's a telling scene. Mrs. Bridge backs her car out of the garage and it stalls in the narrow garage doorway. She can't get it started and realizes that the car doors won't open because they are blocked by the outer door frames on either side. So she sits. All day. She's neither determined nor resourceful - she just waits. This quality of passively tolerating an absurd situation can be very characteristic of sleeping Nines, as we saw in Antonia And Jane.
One other aspect to notice is how Mrs. Bridge is younger than her years; her passivity is a little childlike and even at sixty she seems like someone's younger sister. All her friends are younger too, and her counterphobic Six daughter is more astute about the scope of life than Mrs. Bridge is. Mother never does grow up.
Mr. Bridge, the One, is ramrod straight in both posture and behavior. He's from pioneer stock, tough, stubborn and radiating judgment. He speaks in clipped, measured cadences and his sense of humor is dry as dust. "I must confess I've never been able to find humor in smut," is his response to a colleague's racy joke. When Mrs. Bridge wistfully reminds him of the poems he once wrote for her (connection to 4), he replies, "For better or worse, I turned out to be an attorney and not a poet." This is partly an explanation for why he shows his wife little affection. He has a 9 wing and tends toward being plain and impersonal.
He is also domineering and has strong conflicts with his rebellious Six daughter. There's a hint of repressed incest in his disapproval of his daughter's sexuality and in her power over him. She's got something on him, though the film doesn't elaborate. Newman's character is also generally opposed to the irrationality of the women in his life.
NATIVE AMERICANS
American Indians endured countless
racist portrayals in the early days of American movies. This changed
a little in the 1960s when social paradigms shifted sufficiently
to allow actual Native actors to play heroic or sympathetic roles.
In some of the more recent stories the Indian characters are shown
to be smarter and morally superior to the whites. While these
portraits seem sincere and more accurate the range of roles remains
consistently limited. In terms of the Enneagram, movie Indians
are only ever allowed to play Nines and Eights.
Why this happens I don't know. Part of it is likely an unconscious form of stereotyping - most of the films below have Anglo screenwriters or are adapted from novels written by whites. It could also say something about the cultural Enneagram styles of Native Americans, although there are many different tribes and cultures. This is obviously a minefield because judging groups of people on their social aura is the foundation of bigotry.
Cultures do have Enneagram styles in a certain limited way, however. In white America, Threeish ideals of success and wealth are unconsciously celebrated. In German Switzerland, a culture I know well, there is a group aura of Oneness and people often unconsciously strive to live up to orderly, correct One ideals. This doesn't mean that there are more Ones per capita in Switzerland. The culture does, however, teach individual Swiss how to think and act that way.
Not all but many Native American cultures have a Niney aura. The group style of thinking is holistic, nature-based and deep rooted in the notion that the individual is a small part of a natural order of Being. In the movies, sympathetic Nine Indians are often receptive and dignified. They are in touch with their instincts and possess a sensible simplicity that is unworldly but spiritually intelligent. Many of these characters are medicine men, while others are sidekicks to the white protagonist. Most of the portrayals are rouged with romanticism.
Native American Eights in movies are invariably warrior figures. In the westerns, they fiercely fight off the white invaders. In the present-day stories they are political militants. In most of the films the whites are Threes or represent Three forces and values.
The 1970 comedy-epic Little Big Man started the revisionist
trend with its then-controversial portrait of General George Custer
as a preening egomaniac Three. Dustin Hoffman plays a white boy
raised by Sioux Indians who bounces back and forth between white
and native cultures. He's essentially a Six, a cowardly survivor
who's an unwilling participant in great events.
Chief Dan George is Hoffman's Nine grandfather, Old Lodge Skins. He's a medicine man, something of a seer but also earthy and unpretentious. He's clear-eyed and sarcastic in his appraisal of the invading whites, but ultimately he's accepting rather than bitter. The Dalai Lama, a real-life Nine, displays a similar attitude toward the Chinese who have invaded his native Tibet. Real-life Nine Dan George wrote several sweet, thoughtful books that were testaments of his faith and serenity. In Little Big Man his character is based on the real-life Chief Black Elk, who was also very likely a Nine. The film holds up pretty well although it's sometimes pointedly sexist. Faye Dunaway turns up now and then as a cliché Two.
Chief Dan George's other best work was in Clint Eastwood's poetic film, The Outlaw Josey Wales. He has the sidekick role to Eastwood's loner hero, but Dan George steals the movie with offhand Niney comedy. He's clownish but dignified in an uncommonly good western. The late Will Sampson, a Nine in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, makes a brief charismatic appearance as an Eightish warrior chief with whom Eastwood negotiates. Sampson played Nines and Eights exclusively throughout his short career.
The contemporary heir to Dan George and Sampson is Graham Greene, who first came to prominence in 1990's Dances With Wolves. He gives a touching, funny performance as the Nine spiritual leader of the Lakota Sioux, a tribe that adopts another Nine, disenfranchised white soldier Kevin Costner. Greene is receptive, smart, moral (1 wing) and another holistic thinker.
Rodney A. Grant plays the Eightish warrior role in Dances although he could be a counterphobic Six. He's fierce and hotheaded, but gradually grows loyal and protective of blood brother Costner. The Nine/Eight contrast is also evident in the movie's portrayal of different tribes. The Sioux as a whole have a Nine aura while their enemies, the Pawnees, are uniformly Eightish. Actor Wes Studi plays an aggressive Eight Pawnee and we'll see more of him.
Dances is very romantic and has peculiar paradoxes - Costner, for instance, "improves" the Sioux way of life by introducing them to rifles. The Pawnees were none too happy about their savage portrayal, either. The movie is otherwise well-crafted, moving, and extremely honorable.
Graham Greene plays a modern version of his Dances role on Northern Exposure, the TV show which is out on video. He is the shaman/mentor to series regular Ed (Darren Burrows), a young Indian Nine. Greene also played a dignified Nine in the movie Ishi, The Last Of His Tribe.
The actor jumps Enneagram styles in a muddled amateur drama called Clearcut. Here he plays a nasty militant Eight who kidnaps a rich Eight lumberman in revenge for a crooked land deal that steals timber from Greene's tribal reservation. Along for the ride is the tribe's ineffectual white lawyer, a nervous-wreck Six. The stupid, buffoonish lumberman is meant to be an Evil White and the screenplay is larded with trumped-up polemics. Film is generally kind of lame.
Greene, however, has charisma galore and the courage to be a solidly unsympathetic warrior. The character is avenging his people, but he's thoroughly narcissistic and clearly enjoys sadism. He may have good politics but he's also a sociopathic and a nasty piece of work. Floyd Red Crow Westerman plays the requisite Nine medicine man, an enigmatic background figure who spiritually supports Greene's militancy.
Far more effective politically and dramatically is the intense, riveting Thunderheart. Story puts Threeish FBI Agent Val Kilmer onto a South Dakota Indian reservation to investigate a murder that looks politically motivated. All signs point toward a militant faction led by an Eight, played by real-life activist John Trudell. Kilmer also investigates a Nine medicine man in the background and clashes with tribal cop Greene. Latter is playing a Niney sidekick role but within that restraint he's a feisty, smart-assed Eight. Throughout the film he's astute, sassy, and bitterly funny.
This movie didn't do that well, which is a genuine mystery as it casts quite a subliminal spell. The FBI agent has a gradual spiritual conversion that undoes his Threeish efficiency and emotional hardness. Kilmer underplays this beautifully and the Nine medicine man is at the heart of the unfolding. Nonactor Chief Ted Thin Elk is another natural actor like Dan George was. His medicine man has a patient, lucid presence and he directs the unwitting Kilmer both spiritually and politically throughout the story.
Thunderheart's true villains have thoroughly Threeish aims. Sam Shepard plays Kilmer's Eight supervisor and Sheila Tousey is an Indian activist and seems a One. This is an engrossing thriller with tight intricate plotting.
Also cinematically intense is 1992's The Last Of The Mohicans featuring real-life activist Russell Means in the title role. Means is an Eight in real life but plays a Nine with an 8 wing in this film. His character is receptive and wise but a man of action when necessary. The film's Eight warrior slot is capably filled by Wes Studi as Magua, a renegade avenger who has declared personal war on the invading whites. He's as rough and ruthless as Graham Greene in Clearcut and for basically the same reasons. Studi went on to play the title role in Geronimo: An American Legend. Studi played him as an Eight and, indeed, the real Geronimo was an Eight with a 9 wing.
The negative white forces in Mohicans are mostly represented by British Ones. At the center of the action is a love story between vague, indefinite Daniel Day-Lewis and vague, indefinite Madeleine Stowe. The performers are both real-life Fives and if you look closely it shows.
Finally there's the contemporary road comedy Powwow Highway which puts the two Indian roles together in the same car. A. Martinez plays an enraged militant Eight and Gary Farmer is the mystical, receptive Nine. Their styles are in constant comic contrast as they travel south from a Wyoming reservation to rescue Martinez's jailed, framed-up sister.
Martinez is prone to explosive rhetoric about Indian treatment by the whites but he's so angry that it's self-defeating. He's chronically eruptible and can't get out of his own way. He fights with everyone on real or imagined political grounds. The film endorses his spirit more than his methods.
Farmer's spaced-out, spiritually faithful character is a lovely guy and the road trip is part of a vision quest. He christens his battered Oldsmobile his "pony," and sets out to seek the spirits of his ancestors. Things keep working out well for Farmer, to Martinez's amazement and scorn. Even though Farmer's asleep in his own world, he handles each situation with comic ease and aplomb. By story's end, both characters are together in purpose and, in a way, represent the integration of faith and action.
Many of the friends' exchanges run like this:
Martinez: "Do me a favor. When the heat comes down don't start with the old legends and all that mystical horseshit. It will only make things worse."
Farmer: "Stop worrying. Trust the powers."
Farmer is a self-preservation Nine with a huge appetite for food. Film is offbeat, undemanding and enjoyable. Look for Graham Greene again in a cameo.
There are other movies where these same Enneagram dyrios to renamics
are played out with white actors. In the absorbing, evocative
Emerald Forest, Eightish Powers Boothe finds his long-lost
blond son (Charley Boorman), who's been raised in a Brazilian
jungle by natives. The boy is a Nine and so is his adopted father,
a medicine man. Their enemies are Threeish progress and another
tribe called "The Fierce People" who all act like Eights.
Boorman's Nine tribe is called "The Invisible People"(!)
The Emerald Forest has flaws, but it's as different a movie as you'll ever see and Charley Boorman gives a striking performance. 1985 film was a bit ahead of its time, as its real subject is the destruction of rainforests.
Paris, Texas
Harry Dean Stanton plays an amnesiac who wanders out of the Mexican
desert after several years missing. Reunited with his brother
in Los Angeles, he begins to reconstruct himself and to form a
relationship with the young son he barely knows.
He's in what psychologists call a "fugue state" - a sort of shocked inner oblivion where he wanders, lost in a vague symbology. He's also a Nine - tender-hearted, good-natured, passive/dependent, asleep. Over the course of the story, he slowly (mostly) awakens and deals with the long-repressed incident that led him to block out his memory. Amnesia is a defensive tendency for Nines under the best of circumstances, so it's a logical response to Stanton's trauma.
In the end he tries to do the right thing by everyone but only partly succeeds. He finds his missing wife but can't forgive her for her part in what happened. His resolution of the past is both right and wrong at the same time.
Dean Stockwell plays Stanton's brother, an exasperated but compassionate One. Stockwell's wife, French actress Aurore Clement, is a real nice Two.
Paris, Texas seems to be long and slow but I was surprised by its narrative tension. It has subtle, delicate performances and great music by Ry Cooder. A movie for anyone who's ever felt dispossessed.
The Whales Of August
Small-scaled old folks movie with Lillian
Gish and Bette Davis as elderly sisters living at a beachfront
home in Maine. Film is slow sometimes, but also poignant and Gish
is especially good. She's a self-preservation Nine who lives each
day in small, cheerful increments. Gish stays busy with projects,
paints landscapes and makes toys. She has principles and opinions
(1 wing), finds the good in most events, and plays the calming
peacemaker to her cranky sister. At this role she is mostly passive
but she can get openly annoyed.
Davis is something of a Four, although she also sounds like a One. She finds fault with everything and is suspectible to plunges of melancholy ("I'm alright - just a touch of November in my bones"). She often blocks the forward-looking Gish's plans -"We're too old to be considering new things"- and makes comments like, "Everything dies sooner or later." To which Gish sweetly replies, "So you always say, dear."
Gish knows Davis is exasperating but you can almost see her deciding to cope with it. What the sisters have is reminiscent of a Four/Seven dynamic, where the will to find fault competes with the will to affirm the positive. Gish brings an unforced grace to her role, but adds enough irritation to keep the character believable.
Vincent Price drops in for tea and he seems a sunny Seven. Ann Southern also has a small role and she's a likely Two. Harry Carey Jr. plays the cantankerous plumber and he's a New England Yankee One.
OTHER MOVIE NINES
Rosanna Arquette, Desperately Seeking
Susan; Peggy Ashcroft, A Passage To India; Lionel Barrymore, Dinner
At Eight; Jeff Bridges, Starman; Richard Burton, Beckett; James
Caan, Brian's Song; Sean Connery, The Russia House; Tom Cruise,
Risky Business; John Cullum ("Holling"), Northern Exposure;
Willem Dafoe, Light Sleeper; Rebecca DeMornay, The Trip To Bountiful;
Jeff Daniels, Terms Of Endearment, Something Wild, Arachno-phobia; Brandon de Wilde, Hud; Sam Elliott, Lifeguard; Richard Farns-worth, The Grey Fox; Lou Ferrigno, Pumping Iron; Albert Finney, Rich In Love; Peter Fonda, Easy Rider; Morgan Freeman, Driving Miss Daisy, Unforgiven; Anna Galiena, The Hairdresser's Husband; Pamela Gidley, Liebestraum; Jack Gifford, Save The Tiger; Jeff Goldblum, The Tall Guy; Elliott Gould, The Long Goodbye; Spalding Gray, Monster In A Box, Swimming To Cambodia; Charles Grodin, Midnight Run; John Heard, The Trip To Bountiful;
Dustin Hoffman, The Graduate; Paul Hogan, Crocodile Dundee; Bob Hoskins, The Favor, The Watch & The Very Big Fish, Mona Lisa; John Hurt, The Elephant Man; Wilfred Hyde-White, My Fair Lady; Jeremy Irons, Damage; Alex Karras, Victor/Victoria; Kevin Kline, Silverado; Alice Krige, Haunted Summer; Jessica Lange, Tootsie; Kyle MacLachlan, The Hidden; Ann-Margret, A New Life; Ross McElwee, Sherman's March, Time Indefinite; Don McKellar, Highway 61; David Morse, The Indian Runner;
Bill Murray, Tootsie; Jack Nicholson, The King Of Marvin Gardens, Missouri Breaks; Leslie Nielsen, The Naked Gun; Annette O'Toole, Cross My Heart; Al Pacino, Sea Of Love; Sarah Jessica Parker, Honeymoon In Vegas; Mandy Patinkin, Alien Nation; Sean Penn, At Close Range; River Phoenix, My Own Private Idaho, Running On Empty; Michael J. Pollard, Bonnie And Clyde, Little Fauss And Big Halsey; William Powell, Mr. Roberts;
Stephen Rea, The Crying Game; Christopher Reeve, Street Smart; Burt Reynolds, Starting Over; Ralph Richardson, Greystoke; Peter Riegert, Local Hero; Gena Rowlands, Light Of Day, Once Around; Bruno S., The Mystery Of Kaspar Hauser; Michael Sacks ("Billy Pilgrim"), Slaughterhouse Five; Marianne Sägebrecht, Bagdad Café; Peter Sellers, Being There; Tom Skerritt, The Turning Point, Getting Up And Going Home; Charles Martin Smith, Never Cry Wolf; Maureen Stapleton, Nuts;
Mary Steenburgen, Parenthood; Daniel Stern, City Slickers; Eric Stoltz, Mask; David Strathairn, Sneakers, Passion Fish; Donald Suther-land, Ordinary People; Oleg Tabako ("Oblomov"), Oblomov.
FINER DISTINCTION NOTES
Nine With an 8 Wing
Awakened Nines with an 8 wing have
a modest, steady, receptive core. They are charged by the dynamism
of 8 - when focused on goals they often have great force of will.
Get things done, make good leaders. May have an animal magnetism
of which they are only partly aware. Can seem highly centered,
take what they do seriously but remain unimpressed with themselves.
8 wing can bring a strong internal sense of direction. Relatively
fearless and highly intuitive. Generally not intellectual unless
they have it in their background.
When more entranced, they manifest the contradictions
of the two styles expressing them in sequence. Could be passively
amiable like a Nine and then turn horribly blunt like an 8. One
moment they are opinionated or nasty, next moment kindly and supportive.
Often don't hear their voices when angry. Can have a sharp, grating
edge. May be slow to anger and then explode. Or angry but don't
know it; may confuse being assertive with being rude. Placidly
callous - both styles support numbness. Tactless and indiscriminate
and indiscreet. May be unwittingly disloyal, spilling everyone's
secrets. Sexual confusion, sometimes they are driven by lust.
Real-Life Nines With an 8 Wing: Clint Eastwood, Peter Falk,
Gerald Ford, James Garner, John Goodman, Elliott Gould, Woody
Harrelson, Helmut Kohl, Carl Rogers, Gena Rowlands, Gloria Steinem.
Movie Nines With an 8 Wing: Richard Burton, Beckett; Sean Connery, The Russia
House; Clint Eastwood, Tightrope, Unforgiven; Sam Elliott, Lifeguard;
Elliott Gould, The Long Goodbye; Woody Harrelson, White Men Can't
Jump; Bob Hoskins, Mona Lisa; Ann-Margret, A New Life; Al Pacino,
Sea Of Love.
Nine With a 1
Wing
Tend to have been "model children."
Instinctively worked to please their parents by being virtuous,
orderly, and little trouble. When awakened, they have great moral
authority plus good-hearted peacemaking tendencies. Often have
a sense of mission, public or private, that involves working hard
for the welfare of everyone they are committed to. Principled
expression of love. Desire to contribute, do little harm. May
be well-liked, modest, endearing, gentle yet firm. Some have great
grace and composure with bursts of spontaneity and sweetness.
Elegant simplicity.
When entranced, they tend to be self-neglectful. May go passively dead and operate from a dubious, fractured morality. Dutiful to what they shouldn't be. Play the good child, disappear into contexts, settle for being overlooked or just partly recognized. Passive tolerance of absurd or damaging situations. One-sided relationships where the Nine gives too much. Rationalize, minimize, tell themselves they had a great childhood, everything's fine. Placid numbness creeps over them. Intolerance of their own emotions. Gradually deaden their soul.
Real-Life Nines With a 1 Wing: Annette Bening, Tony Bennett, Warren Christopher, Connie Chung, The Dalai Lama, Annette Funi-cello, Mahatma Gandhi, Charles Grodin, Patty Hearst, Audrey Hepburn, Anjelica Huston, Grace Kelly, Nancy Kerrigan, Martin Sheen, James Stewart.
Movie Nines With a 1 Wing: Tom Cruise, Risky Business; Annette Funicello, Back To The Beach; Chief Dan George, Little Big Man; Graham Greene, Dances With Wolves; Audrey Hepburn, Robin And Marian; Eva Marie Saint, Nothing In Common; Wallace Shawn, My Dinner With Andre; Tom Skerritt, The Turning Point; Harry Dean Stanton, Paris, Texas; Donald Sutherland, Ordinary People; Joanne Woodward, Mr. And Mrs. Bridge.
CONNECTING POINTS (Stress and Security)
Nine's Connection to 6
The high side of this connection brings
several qualities, among them courage. Whereas healthy Sixes develop
the courage to do, Nines find the courage to be. Connection helps
them challenge fears and take risks. Expose the inner self they
usually disguise with self-effacement. Can also be especially
loyal friends, faithful and committed to those they love. Connection
brings tenacity and a willingness to see things through. Realistic,
more able to acknowledge what can go wrong.
More entranced, they develop a nervous, agitated quality. Can overanticipate new events, start to doubt themselves. Obsessive worry distracts them from the need to take useful action or see the obvious. Go scatterbrained. Nine's laziness is reinforced by 6's tendency to procrastinate. Nines put off what is specifically important to their well-being.
Dependency often an issue - will hand over responsibility, then blame others for making the decisions that the Nine won't make. Cowardice, may wimp out on agreements. 8 wing and this connection can make for antiauthority attitudes.
Movie Nines who demonstrate this connection: Jeff Goldblum, The Tall Guy; Andie MacDowell, sex, lies and video; Wallace Shawn, My Dinner With Andre; Imelda Staunton, Antonia And Jane; Donald Sutherland, Ordinary People; Joanne Woodward, Mr. And Mrs. Bridge.
Nine's Connection to 3
High side brings a kind of clarity
of the heart. Can suddenly see clearly and prioritize on their
own behalf. Take decisive deliberate steps towards goals important
to them personally. Steady persistence: when focused, Nines are
unstoppable. Connection brings energy and industry and helps with
appropriate social presentation. Willing to dress up and voluntarily
play roles in the service of goals.
Unhealthy connection brings tendencies towards role-playing, vanity and hyperactivity. Can allow themselves to go false and be defined by a milieu. Play out roles based on the expectations of others. May get caught in vanity and take pleasure in being mistaken for an image. Can have a prince or princess-like quality, act a little entitled. Proud of what others praise, but secretly know it isn't who they really are. Underneath the image, a Nine may feel indefinite and numbly unworthy. Can be fascinated by phoniness in others, want to break through or tear it down. Their unfocused hyperactivity is a busy, active form of sleep.
Movie Nines who demonstrate this connection: Richard Burton, Beckett;
John Cleese, A Fish Called Wanda; Tom Cruise, Risky Business;
Willem Dafoe, Light Sleeper; Jeff Daniels, Terms Of Endearment;
Sam Elliott, Lifeguard; Jeremy Irons, Damage; Andie MacDowell,
sex, lies and video; Peter Riegert, Local Hero; Imelda Staunton,
Antonia And Jane; Donald Sutherland, Ordinary People.
SUBTYPE THEMES
Self-Preservation
Preoccupied with physical comfort,
maintaining habits and satisfying appetites. The image of the
lazy couch potato goes with this subtype. Strategy for getting
along is to ask as little of life as possible. Can have a love
of the minimal and enjoy the repetition of known routines. Distract
themselves with pleasant domestic activities. Live conservatively.
Consume food and drink for anaesthesia. May have large appetites,
drug addictions, be physically slow moving.
Many good movie examples including Gary Farmer, Powwow Highway; Albert Finney, Rich In Love; Lillian Gish, The Whales Of August; Elliott Gould, Little Murders; William Hurt, The Accidental Tourist; Wallace Shawn, My Dinner With Andre.
Intimate
Focused on an ideal of romantic union.
Get lost in one relationship or in the yearning to have one. High
expectations of partner. Sometimes sound melancholy like a Four.
Prone to jealousy. May settle on someone and then grow critical
and have a wandering eye. Can also deny their partner's flaws
and idealize them to stay in union.
Another scenario involves multiple relationships, searching from one person to the next. Sometimes the Nine can't decide between two people. Triangulation. Paradoxically, this subtype can be fickle because they are so easily disappointed.
Good movie examples include: Andie MacDowell, sex, lies and video; Ann-Margret, Carnal Knowledge; Shirley MacLaine, The Apartment; Joanne Woodward, Mr. And Mrs. Bridge.
Social
Social Nines tend to gravitate toward
groups and then have conflicts about joining or staying apart.
Can enjoy group energy and interests but may be also aware of
the group's expectations. These the Nine will both play along
with and resist.
When immersed in a group, social Nines can lose themselves, trying to become all things to all people. Gregarious but may start to resist being too heavily influenced, to compensate for their sense of lost identity. Can sometimes resent how the group doesn't really see them. May fixate on what others think of them. Or resent the group and make fun of it. Some social Nines stay basically uninvolved but hang out at the group's edge. Frequently there's lots of activity. May get caught up in roles - a stronger connection to 3 goes with this subtype.
Movie examples include: Jeff Bridges, Texasville;
Sean Connery, The Russia House; Tom Cruise, Risky Business; Imelda
Staunton, Antonia And Jane. Bill Clinton would be a real-life
social Nine.
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