Friday, May 9, 2014

Heathers



Heathers genuinely surprised me! I thought it was going to be a Clueless clone but i was very mistaken. It seems so strange that a movie like this exists to a post columbine kid. This movie is brutal in it's satire and it's style is impeccable. The color coordinated outfits and lighting give the film an awesome theatrical style. The reading mentions how the film creates it's own slang. I think it's interesting as someone who never directly experienced the 80`s I recognized terms like "fuck me gently with a chainsaw." It got me thinking about how the decade is colored by popular perception. When I think about the 80's all I can think is shoulder pads, the word "RAD" and The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Heathers feels like a movie from the future that is        mocking 80's sensibility and style except for the school violence.

The school shooting/ bombing aspect of the film was interesting because of it's flippant treatment. Now, that would all be treated very seriously and the film would be a tragedy about poor Veronica who got pushed too far and became a monster, probably a lot of stark colors and handheld camera work. There would be outraged mothers groups and local politicians spewing about it for two weeks and everybody would forget. The film is a mean spirited, cynical and the reading put it;s finger on it by calling the film nihilistic and I greatly enjoyed it. This movie spits on all that preoccupies our news cycle today and it gave me a great big laugh. This film's moral code resides strictly in the grey, the idea that in school if you die everybody whitewashes you down to saint was an awesome angle of attack because it's true. People tend to forget what a person was truly like once they are in the ground, it's the great revisionism of life.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Wall Street




This being my first time seeing Wall Street I was dubious as to how much I would like it, but was pleasantly surprised by it. I think the film is a very telling story of the modern "American Dream." Gekko in many circles would be viewed as a hero, a good American capitalist who has the guts to do what it takes to succeed. In many ways Gekko is the perfect conservative hero. He is staunchly individual forcing others to conform to him not the other way around and he like the heroes of beloved gangster movies gives us a rush a vicarious thrill.

I think the reading nailed it when talking about breaching one's ethics and testing one's moral flexibility when starting one's career. Bud must break into the business, Gekko sees his obsession and tests his limits with spy jobs  and information gathering along with social engineering. Gekko pulls the strings and Bud dances hoping to one day pull those strings himself as the reading offers up the idea of balancing early ethical breaches with responsible behavior later. Another thing that interested me was how the film showed you why Gekko can do what does. In many shots you see stock tickers flying by and the zoo at the exchange, and it makes you realize how detached the normal person is from their economy. The world of Wall Street is filled with it's own jargon and it comes off as gibberish and Gekko knows that. He can exploit the knowledge gap between workers and management and his world to his benefit.

This detachment from the economic process really points out Gekko's 1 percent speech and makes his brilliant outmaneuvering of the Teldar management all them ore impressive. He can speak in Wall Street terms and move crowds with fiery rhetoric. He is great satire on the chasers of the "Dream" and the image purported by our society on what it takes to make it. Gekko carries all the trademarks of the devil and it's impossible to not wonder what he'll do next.

Our discussion in class about how Gekko creates and sells nothing also ties into this detachment from the economic process. Gekko is an information broker hiding behind jargon and double talk. Like the law the Wall Street economy is nebulous and inaccessible to most people allowing as history has shown for an elite few to blindside the national and global economy  and crash it.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Hollywood Satire



I really liked Hollywood Shuffle as someone who is moving to L.A with the intent to break into making films not as an actor but from a production standpoint, I really understood Bobby's trepidation. I think the film did a great job of illustrating the issues that Hollywood films sometimes use as tropes especially the matter of race and satire. The reading makes several good points on how satire is a double edged weapon that both points up the absurdity of an outsiders prejudice but also casts a light on the insiders as well. What came to mind immediately was the Chapelle Show and the moral jam Dave Chapelle found himself in, in the mid 00's. Dave halted the show because he felt he couldn't tell if he was enforcing or dismantling racial stereotypes with his satire. I think satire is tough thing because it is audience dependent, take for example Spinal Tap a total satire of heavy metal but not everyone caught on immediately thinking Reiner just followed around a crap band.

Hollywood Shuffle is interesting because it's satire is two fold. We are aware of the film we are watching there is no dip into subjective time, the movie is very filmic with it's jarring asides to dreams and fantasies. We see things as Bobby would, and in my opinion it helps the film overall, the film points out the absurdity of black stereotypes not only in film but in reality. But we are really watching two movies, Hollywood Shuffle and the Blaxploitation film Bobby is cast in. It is here on two "screens" that the satire gels. The film reveals it's mechanisms to us in the studio and Bobby sees that it's all illusory bullshit. What caught my eye was the scene in the studio when Bobby watches the two white actors mid scene. His expression is not one of jealousy but of pity, he is seeing that maybe it's not all it's cracked up to be, that those other actors are suckers.

The reading asks about true representation of the black experience. I think there is a simple answer in terms of the Hollywood film. No one is represented in a true way, these films for the most part are not concerned with exploring the human experience but elevating it to hyperbole, Hollywood seeks to embellish for dramatic effect. Hollywood is out for money and if that means stereotyping they will do it all day every day. Is this right? No it's not but it puts asses in seats and that's what is insidious about mainstream movie, they simply do not care and the average movie goer loves it. For example and I know this is a dead horse but Transformers 2, Skids and Mudflap are two smaller Autobots who besides being annoying ( like the rest of the movie) are incredibly racist characters. The bots speak incomprehensibly fast jive and behave like wannabe thugs.

Hollywood Shuffle is a great movie and an enlightening one if you are smart enough to catch on. Does it solve the problems with how Hollywood uses it's images in terms of African Americans? No but it does shed light on issues like racial typecasting. In terms of it's ending I think it's a sad ending, Bobby loses his dream, perhaps he could have broken away from stereotypical roles had stayed but instead hel oses his dream and could very well go postal.


Friday, April 18, 2014

The Nam


I really liked Platoon. I had only ever seen pieces of it on T.V and I like Oliver Stone. However my favorite Vietnam War movie is definitely Apocalypse Now, Platoon like the reading says is closer to the reality of war. I love the Coppola film but it is a stylized impressionistic work, I think Apocalypse Now is how people of my generation see the Vietnam War. A war characterized by madness and claustrophobia paired with drugs and brutality.

I didn't know that stone himself was a Vietnam Vet but now it makes total sense. I agree with the reading's analysis of how Stone portrayed insane moral conundrums like the village scene. Vietnam was a terrible demonstration of the military's inability to deal with an insurgent force that was highly organized, uniformless soldiers moving within civilian populaces made identification of the enemy impossible. The panic and stress that Stone conveys in that scene is amazing and could only be drawn from real life experience. Stone was unafraid to show soldiers covered in bugs and snakes, he painted an accurate depiction of life in the jungle.

It was fun having never seen the opening of the film to see Willem Defoe paired with Christ imagery. Seeing Elias carrying his M60 like a cross all back lit was really weird. I remember shouting out "Christ imagery!" and for once I was right. The juxtaposition of Defoe and Berenger was really interesting. Berenger was a brutal barbarian akin to someone Kurtz from Apocalypse Now would've recruited. He had the "will" to win the war, through any means necessary. Defoe however was still guided by a kinder code of conduct, that probably saved his soul but not him.

Between Apocalypse Now and Platoon there seems to be a common theme of the primal warrior, chest pounding,trophy taking and drugs. This always interested me, it seems like admission of war's nature as the reading calls it "The ultimate male romance." Much like how Marlowe in Heart of Darkness goes into the jungle and sees human nature in nature and how Kurtz embraces it the soldiers of Vietnam war films remind me of unwilling children put into a place where anything goes and like Bunny says "you only gotta worry about dying..." It's interesting how the atmosphere of the jungle brings out images of primordial living and dying. Vietnam movies feel like a war was being fought out of time, set in a savage landscape unhindered by human contact but fought with high tech weapons, it borders on science fiction.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Bug Hunt

                                  (Drone)
I cannot express how much I love the Alien films and their extended universe. Ridley Scott's original masterpiece and Cameron's fantastic follow up put me on the path to becoming a filmmaker myself. I like to think of myself as a hardcore fan of the Xenomorph as one our culture's most reticent movie monsters. I found the discussion on the motivations and gender of the creatures interesting, however the debate on the gender of Xenos is a flawed one. The Xenomorph behaves much in the same manner as the ant, a hive mentality serving that hive's queen. A little background on the morphology of the Xenomorph helps to explain their "gender." Xenomorph's do not follow human ideas of gender, they are insectile and again like ants a drone (pictured above) is the worker and most common of Xenos. Given enough time a drone will evolve into a queen in order to start a hive. A queen is the only Xeno capable of having and using sex organs. By our standards it would be considered female, they are however constructed to be sexual and to evoke uncomfortable notions of sex from their design by H.R. Giger and their method of reproduction being rape. I think it was interesting how we as an audience sought to put these creatures in our terms of gender when in many ways they supersede our terminology.

These things are inconsequential to the Xenomorph however, they have one drive, one instinct and that is to multiply, forcibly. When Ripley enters the egg chamber and the queen wards off it's Praetorians ( egg chamber guards) it does so instinctually not out of any empathy or concern for her young, When the eggs burn it shrieks because it shares a telepathic and pheremonal bond with all of her brood. The Queen is aware of every being in it's domain. Had Ripley not attacked the eggs she would have been allowed to leave the chamber but would be swarmed by warriors and drones, the lesser Xenomorphs would try to capture and cocoon Newt and Ripley for impregnation via facehugger. Xenomorphs do not want to kill they want to capture, they do not eat people or anything for that matter and do not require air, heat or any other basic tenants for life, blowing them out airlocks is a good solution but not always a fatal one.

The Xenomorph is a force of nature, sometimes called "Destroying Angels" or "Black Cancers" they are a balancing force supposedly created by the Engineers who seed life across star systems. When their creations (humans) grow to powerful the Xenomorph is introduced to that society and wipes it out so the Engineers begin again.

However Ripley as a symbol of the Female action hero is undeniably important. Lt. Ellen Ripley is my favorite movie character and for good reason she is awesome. I disagree with the reading's notion that characters like Sarah Connor and Ripley are men in drag or that their ability to fight and defend themselves somehow invalidates their womanhood. Assuming for a moment that these characters were real and found themselves in the positions they do, would any person not fight back or do all they could to prepare for facing down threats to their existence? I don't think being "Badass" invalidates them or makes them facades. I think the issue comes from our preception of what a hero is. I think Ripley acts heroically to save an innocent life from a terrible fate. Regardless of her gender or sex she does whats necessary, no one walks into a Xeno hive armed with "Harsh Language" you go in with big guns. Historically I can understand why Ripley would confuse people. I think she breaks from Rambo in many ways, she feels far more human than the lumbering mush mouthed Rambo, Ripley can solve problems without murdering a bunch of people or using big guns, see Alien. Also I don't read Ripley as a sexualized or exploited character I take her at face value, a hero facing down an implacable natural force. Besides wearing underwear in a few scenes there isn't much in terms of exploitation a far cry from say Transformers 2.


(Subtle)

Ultimately I think these movies are great examples of not only strong female characters but great films in general. People will look at these characters however they like and see what they want to see, I see a human being fighting for survival while trying to save everyone she can from a terrible fate. The eroticism of hardware and violence in Aliens is no stand up fight it's a bug hunt.






Thursday, April 3, 2014

A Dark Wilderness

Blue Velvet is the second David Lynch film I have seen, the first being Eraserhead. I really enjoyed Blue Velvet as far as one can say they "enjoyed" a Lynch movie. What I like most about his style and the reading really exemplified this was Lynch's Subverted Eden. I love seeing the skin of suburban American living peeled back to show it's rotten musculature. As a jaded suburbanite, I find this exploration of what happens after dark in our safe neighborhoods fascinating.

The Post-Modernity of the film really shines thorough with it's it's anachronistic setting, a kind of 80's/50's melange. Frank Booth plays a great 1950's high school bully who has hit middle age and fallen down an ether soaked rabbit hole. He reminded me of Biff from Back To The Future or the bully from IT. Lynch plays up the 50's incredibly, the joyriding in big American cars while playing with switchblades and weird lounge jazz. But this isn't the fifties, because how we see the fifties is completely constructed from movies and shows. I couldn't for the life of me give you an accurate representation of life in that decade, it's all been revised by Beaver and Greasers. Lynch is presenting us with a dream of what might have been had the world been like those representations of the 50's in actuality. A world where the Hardy Boys get pulled down into a dirty world of sadomasochism, where representations of idyllic youth screw.

Blue Velvet is a cynical journey into the heart of American repression and greed. Jeffery is a good boy, probably an eagle scout, but he wants to know about the world he can't have. Before we know it Jeffery is playing boy detective in his mind but his body belongs to a dark wilderness. The garden of Eden flips at night into an overgrown jungle, filled with predators and truer human beings that Jeffery must learn to cope with as he is the Pinocchio in the situation.

The film expresses duality through illusion. The reading talks about that art's truth lies in it's illusory nature. I believe Lynch subverts that view by presenting his audience with a paradox. The truth is a lie. Nothing in the film is real, it's all a dream, a reference twisted into a dark psycho sexual reflection. Even the heavy handed opening proclaiming the virtue of America, all I could think about were dispossessed suicidal housewives and Silent Spring. Lynch is playing to our disillusionment with what we are sold as the "chosen people."

Friday, March 28, 2014

The Mehkfast Club





   I'll be honest, I pretty much hate the 80's. Aside from some music and some good movies I think the decade seems like a shit time to be young. The Breakfast Club is the marker everyone jumps to when talking about young people in the 80's. I personally don't care much for the movie, it just doesn't resonate with me. However as the reading mentions the idea of cliques coming together and the Neo-Con agenda the film carries it's a perfect demonstration on how the 1980's exploited, broke down and re-sold youth culture and built the blue print for how it is sold now.

    The characters in this movie all have their "image" their sub section of youth culture, jock, bad boy , rich girl etc. They all use their "image" to mask their issues, pretty typical behavior, we all were or knew people similar to these characters. They cling to these masks and for me I found I couldn't trust any of them, even when at their lowest these characters were still liars to me, I couldn't help but to think that it was just too convenient for all of them to have bad home lives, were they exaggerating or out right lying? Like Claire says to Brian "It's because you look up to us." Brian denies it, but that statement has an interesting implication. They are all just trying to maintain face, they are social climbers and if one doesn't corroborate the story of living in grief with their parents they will ostracized from the others. In my eyes they are trying to maintain social status. We get no insight into the lives of these characters except for what they tell us, why should we trust them, we know they are petty people.

    These characters are avatars of sub-culture, basically advertisements. Bender is from a working class family, presumably a metal head or punk from his style of dress, but why? Bender could look totally unassuming, he could still maintain his personality with a different style of dress but no the film bashes us in the head with the stereotype?  Why, because Bender isn't a person none of them are. They are just attitudes in certain clothing. They are cheap simulacrum.

      Their disunity and cruelty ties directly into the Neo-Con agenda. Youth culture is a product, these characters are manifestations of brand names, like "Jock" or "Brain." Neo-Con's believe in strict caste "Rich" "Poor" etc. These brand names can't mix and must adhere to their own roles in order to not confuse the consumer and eventual member of the clique. These characters could probably benefit one another by banding together or trying to at least express some kind of genuine human connection, but Hughes doesn't want to show kids banding together. Displays of unity break from Neo-Con dogma.

      The Breakfast Club annoys me because of it's inhumanity and ultimately a useless experience. I just can't help imagining these kids graduating and never speaking again. Going on with their lives, maybe every once and awhile having a pang of nostalgia for that dim and distant day in detention, then going back about their life.