Sociohistorical Context
Annie Hall is a document of its time.
Released in the 1970s, it comes dressed in
its historical period and geographic setting. As such, the film
is an artifact that records the intellectual climate of New York City
in the late 1970s. Nearly all of its jokes
rely on knowledge of then-current cultural events and figures, as
well as prevalent cultural stereotypes. To watch Annie Hall is
to be plucked from your seat in the twenty-first century and dropped
onto a street corner in Manhattan in 1977.
The immersion is at once delightful and bewildering, and viewers
too young to remember the 1970s are likely
to miss out on some laughs without knowledge of how Freud, Fellini,
and others factored into the cultural landscape of the time. In
a sense, Annie Hall is educational, and its name-dropping
is often tongue-in-cheek, simultaneously giving glory to and making
fun of the pretentious Manhattan intelligentsia that both attracts
and repels Alvy Singer.
Freud's ideas exert a great influence on Annie
Hall and its depiction of relationships. Psychoanalysis
as a form of self-help was at its peak in the 1970s,
and in New York City, nearly ubiquitous. In both narration and dialogue,
Alvy uses his knowledge and experience of psychoanalysis to guide
him through current relationships and reevaluate past ones. These
experiences inform the story's disjointed retelling, in which one
scene is followed by an indirectly related scene, entirely out of
sequence and in a stream-of-consciousness fashion. The narration
jumps from the present to Alvy's childhood to midway through his
relationship with Annie to their first meeting and so on, making
for a jagged chronology that could conceivably follow the course
of a session between Alvy and his analyst. But while Alvy treats
his psychoanalysis sessions with reverence, an ever-present chuckle
runs throughout the film at any mention of the technique. Alvy recognizes
the failings of psychoanalysis but clings to it nevertheless.
Similarly, Alvy clearly is part of the New York intelligentsia,
yet he claims to find that group self-important, elitist, and cold,
constantly pointing out the absurdities of its set of social rules.
His love-hate attitude is revealed in the film's preface-like opening,
in which Alvy paraphrases Allen's idol, Groucho Marx, who himself
was paraphrasing Sigmund Freud: I would never want to belong to
any club that would have someone like me for a member. Alvy is
eager to be accepted into the artistic, intellectual crowd but finds
this same crowd insufferable. To Alvy, Annie is a refreshing alternative
to his usual New York scene. He is fascinated by her Wisconsin background
and her frequent use of the word neat but pokes
fun at her at the same time. And while Alvy falls in love with and
celebrates Annie's otherness, he attempts to indoctrinate her into
the very scene he wants to escape. He mocks Sylvia Plath, whose
poem collection Ariel he finds in Annie's apartment,
and suggests Annie instead read theory-heavy books about deatha
concept that profoundly affects the way he views life. He advises
her to go back to school, and then gets upset when she establishes
a relationship with a professor. He encourages her to improve herself
and continue singing, but when she does begin to succeed, he becomes
controlling and unsupportive. Annie Hall is a Pygmalion-like
story, with Alvy shaping Annie in his image until she finds the
self-confidence and independence to strike out on her own. Even
then, he criticizes her choice of residence. Annie Hall is
a constant paradox, reflecting Allen's ability to make fun of intelligentsia
in intelligent fashion without letting his protagonist off the hook.