Everything you liked as a kid seems woke and politicized when you were a tiny kid because tiny kids are too dumb to think on purpose.
Iāll say, though, I was old enough to be mad at the James Gunn-written Scooby adaptations because they couldnāt resist doing actual supernatural stuff and lost this angle entirely.
And then those got reappraised as not being garbage when THOSE kids grew up and a lot of the newer stuff went with that angle as well.
You being too dumb to think on purpose doesnāt mean youāre not learning, for better and worse. I used to think that wasnāt the case when I was a kid because I was too dumb.
Well, youād be surprised. Going through uni I definitely got to see a lot of left-of-centre young adults get through semiotics and discouse analysis courses and have an absolute fit at the realization that a bunch of the cool stuff they liked as kids had a clear right-wing bent.
I mean, they all had a lot of time to get attached to Back to the Future and Die Hard before they were forced to think about it too hard. Learning! Twice!
I would lie if I said I wasnāt baiting a little bit, but man, see? Cuts both ways.
Die Hard is extremely obvious. I mean, the whole movie is about this guy finding that his wife suddenly has a job, makes more money than he does and may be attractive to smarter, richer people, but then fate conspires to make his blue collar streetsmarts and prepper attitudes having him save the day for the foppish yuppies. The entire movie ends when they throw the eurotrash rich thief out of a building by literally unshackling Holly from the bonus gift her company job gave her, then wrapping her up in a comfort blanket and taking her home. The movie also finds time to clearly establish that all public servants are idiots except for street level cops.
Back to the Future is subtler, but also pretty straightforward. Kid thinks life with middle class parents in the 80s sucks, goes back to the 50s, which turn out to be as ideal as expected but also somehow cooler in a very 80s kind of way, teaches his dad self-assertion and comes back to the future to find heās now upper class and has a 4x4. Itās a lot less hardcore, but the reagonomics are running underneath the whole thing. Iād take that itās accidental, because the same team went much more leftward in Roger Rabbit, so I think itās just that a lot of the cultural white noise of the mid-80s is baked into the assumptions. And the nostalgia is a massive driving force of conservatism anyway. BTTF is idolizing this āfifteightiesā imagery the same way Grease was to suggest there is a perfect past to return to. Kind of in the way Stranger Things and a bunch of other stuff does to the 80s.
Thatās maybe the most fun part of breaking down BTTF. The iconic slivers of the film set in the 80s are supposed to show it being run down, realistic and disappointingly drab by comparison.
Also, Lybian terrorists stealing plutonium but being so incompetent they get tricked by Doc and defeated by Marty. Thatās a very time-specific one, like Rambo praising the Taliban.
I donāt know, man, Die Hard is pretty far out there.
The Rambo and Rocky sequels are what they are as well. They are almost naive about it in a way that supports ironic appreciation, though.
Dirty Harry tracks, but thatās back in the early 70s. I never went deep enough into the sequels to see if it got really bad down the line.
Iāve heard some stuff about Field of Dreams, but I donāt think Iāve watched that in one sitting.
I donāt know itās often the action stuff. Your Commandos and Death Wishes and so on. Does stuff like Red Dawn and Invasion USA even count as ācryptoā? Those are pretty overt.
If you let me break the time frame I will say that I think The Incredibles flies over peopleās heads as being aggressively conservative. Forrest Gump used to, but I think people got wise to it over time. Another Zemeckis joint, too. Maybe itās Roger Rabbit that was the accident.
The Incredibles flies over peopleās heads as being aggressively conservative.
Superheroes are a metaphor for minorities. Thereās the immigrant experience in constantly moving house, the queer experience in hiding who you are, the neurodivergent experience in being told not to stick out in school.
The villain is a capitalist billionaire who wants to appropriate a minorityās culture without understanding what it means. If youāre an indigenous minority youāve been through that.
Thereās a scene where the mum has a talk with her kids about treating authority figures theyāve been trained not to fear as threats to their lives. That talk is familiar to any black family in the USA.
Thereās a struggle between parents and their children about how to navigate assimilating into the majority culture while retaining their own identity. Many immigrants go through what Dash and Violet did.
Thatās not an invalid read. My problem with it is that the movie doesnāt show the supes as being inherently feared or hated. This isnāt the X-Men, which does work on that front.
Here the supes are suppressed by the government, not a societal issue. They are presented as being accepted in the past, in a world without intervention. Thriving, in fact. They are celebrities and have a whole James Bond-style support system. They didnāt come from a different place with a different culture like Superman or Wonder Woman. Superheroes-as-minorities is a very frequent trope, but The Incredibles isnāt rehashing any of those, theyāre doing the Fantastic 4. Superheroes-as-family. Bit of a different tack.
And when theyāre suppressed they arenāt suppresed into a marginal role in society. They are suppressed into suburban white middle class. Which, incidentally, is presented as less flashy than the life of the one explicitly black character, but that is probably a well-meaning accident.
I do think the concept of cultural appropriation is and has alway been iffy, but beyond that, while I think you can argue that read I donāt think it fits the movie particularly well.
And yes, in the moral space the movie is drawing it is explicitly including those characteristics as part of the exceptionality you are supposed to self-realize. As I told you on the other thread, I donāt think Bird has a Randian āyou should be an asshole if you want toā approach to this. He sees it as moral and ethical and valuable for society when people can self express their exceptional, natural abilities, and I do believe there is an explicit attempt to include those things in the mix. Itās why the slightly token black guy is there in the first place.
I should say I also think itās undermined because the one instance of someone even appearing to have a recognizable trait of those things in the main family, which would be Viās crippling social anxiety, is shown as getting better when she fully expresses her powers and self-realizes, which if a bit of an icky approach.
Everything you liked as a kid seems woke and politicized when you were a tiny kid because tiny kids are too dumb to think on purpose.
Iāll say, though, I was old enough to be mad at the James Gunn-written Scooby adaptations because they couldnāt resist doing actual supernatural stuff and lost this angle entirely.
And then those got reappraised as not being garbage when THOSE kids grew up and a lot of the newer stuff went with that angle as well.
You being too dumb to think on purpose doesnāt mean youāre not learning, for better and worse. I used to think that wasnāt the case when I was a kid because I was too dumb.
ā¦the ākidsā in question being Republicans.
Itās fine, I also respond like this.
Well, youād be surprised. Going through uni I definitely got to see a lot of left-of-centre young adults get through semiotics and discouse analysis courses and have an absolute fit at the realization that a bunch of the cool stuff they liked as kids had a clear right-wing bent.
I mean, they all had a lot of time to get attached to Back to the Future and Die Hard before they were forced to think about it too hard. Learning! Twice!
Interested in hearing about the right wing bent of Bttf and die hard
I would lie if I said I wasnāt baiting a little bit, but man, see? Cuts both ways.
Die Hard is extremely obvious. I mean, the whole movie is about this guy finding that his wife suddenly has a job, makes more money than he does and may be attractive to smarter, richer people, but then fate conspires to make his blue collar streetsmarts and prepper attitudes having him save the day for the foppish yuppies. The entire movie ends when they throw the eurotrash rich thief out of a building by literally unshackling Holly from the bonus gift her company job gave her, then wrapping her up in a comfort blanket and taking her home. The movie also finds time to clearly establish that all public servants are idiots except for street level cops.
Back to the Future is subtler, but also pretty straightforward. Kid thinks life with middle class parents in the 80s sucks, goes back to the 50s, which turn out to be as ideal as expected but also somehow cooler in a very 80s kind of way, teaches his dad self-assertion and comes back to the future to find heās now upper class and has a 4x4. Itās a lot less hardcore, but the reagonomics are running underneath the whole thing. Iād take that itās accidental, because the same team went much more leftward in Roger Rabbit, so I think itās just that a lot of the cultural white noise of the mid-80s is baked into the assumptions. And the nostalgia is a massive driving force of conservatism anyway. BTTF is idolizing this āfifteightiesā imagery the same way Grease was to suggest there is a perfect past to return to. Kind of in the way Stranger Things and a bunch of other stuff does to the 80s.
Thatās maybe the most fun part of breaking down BTTF. The iconic slivers of the film set in the 80s are supposed to show it being run down, realistic and disappointingly drab by comparison.
Also, Lybian terrorists stealing plutonium but being so incompetent they get tricked by Doc and defeated by Marty. Thatās a very time-specific one, like Rambo praising the Taliban.
Dare I ask you to go further?
Whatās an extreme example of a crypto-rightwing-coded-80s-flick?
I donāt know, man, Die Hard is pretty far out there.
The Rambo and Rocky sequels are what they are as well. They are almost naive about it in a way that supports ironic appreciation, though.
Dirty Harry tracks, but thatās back in the early 70s. I never went deep enough into the sequels to see if it got really bad down the line.
Iāve heard some stuff about Field of Dreams, but I donāt think Iāve watched that in one sitting.
I donāt know itās often the action stuff. Your Commandos and Death Wishes and so on. Does stuff like Red Dawn and Invasion USA even count as ācryptoā? Those are pretty overt.
If you let me break the time frame I will say that I think The Incredibles flies over peopleās heads as being aggressively conservative. Forrest Gump used to, but I think people got wise to it over time. Another Zemeckis joint, too. Maybe itās Roger Rabbit that was the accident.
Superheroes are a metaphor for minorities. Thereās the immigrant experience in constantly moving house, the queer experience in hiding who you are, the neurodivergent experience in being told not to stick out in school.
The villain is a capitalist billionaire who wants to appropriate a minorityās culture without understanding what it means. If youāre an indigenous minority youāve been through that.
Thereās a scene where the mum has a talk with her kids about treating authority figures theyāve been trained not to fear as threats to their lives. That talk is familiar to any black family in the USA.
Thereās a struggle between parents and their children about how to navigate assimilating into the majority culture while retaining their own identity. Many immigrants go through what Dash and Violet did.
Thatās not an invalid read. My problem with it is that the movie doesnāt show the supes as being inherently feared or hated. This isnāt the X-Men, which does work on that front.
Here the supes are suppressed by the government, not a societal issue. They are presented as being accepted in the past, in a world without intervention. Thriving, in fact. They are celebrities and have a whole James Bond-style support system. They didnāt come from a different place with a different culture like Superman or Wonder Woman. Superheroes-as-minorities is a very frequent trope, but The Incredibles isnāt rehashing any of those, theyāre doing the Fantastic 4. Superheroes-as-family. Bit of a different tack.
And when theyāre suppressed they arenāt suppresed into a marginal role in society. They are suppressed into suburban white middle class. Which, incidentally, is presented as less flashy than the life of the one explicitly black character, but that is probably a well-meaning accident.
I do think the concept of cultural appropriation is and has alway been iffy, but beyond that, while I think you can argue that read I donāt think it fits the movie particularly well.
And yes, in the moral space the movie is drawing it is explicitly including those characteristics as part of the exceptionality you are supposed to self-realize. As I told you on the other thread, I donāt think Bird has a Randian āyou should be an asshole if you want toā approach to this. He sees it as moral and ethical and valuable for society when people can self express their exceptional, natural abilities, and I do believe there is an explicit attempt to include those things in the mix. Itās why the slightly token black guy is there in the first place.
I should say I also think itās undermined because the one instance of someone even appearing to have a recognizable trait of those things in the main family, which would be Viās crippling social anxiety, is shown as getting better when she fully expresses her powers and self-realizes, which if a bit of an icky approach.