Tonight I watched No Such Thing. Proof positive a silly script with good heart and a good actress can actually make a half-decent movie.
Lady Kenshin wrote:O_o] Well, it's quite enjoyable to watch a movie that gives good food for thought and then discuss it. Sometimes even the most silly and ridiculous entertainment conceals astute intelligence and sharp wit (witness Charlie Chaplin and the Monty Python films, which discuss serious issues in the context of comedy). So where some people see 'mindless entertainment', I tend to see a message of some kind, whether positive or negative. But please, don't misread me, I'm writing to discuss the movie because I enjoy to do so, just as I enjoy watching movies in general. I am not the kind of critic who likes to destroy a work, I write so that I can show its significance and value. I take movies seriously because I love them.
Fish and Chips (post: 1325490) wrote:Unfortunately, this begins to fall under the Devil's Proof for both of us. None of the party's leadership was alive at the time of the revolution, and it is only after calling urgently and having no contact that the general decided to err on the side of caution. If Creedy had managed to escape and given orders shouted over telephones, maybe they would have opened fire, or maybe they wouldn't have. We can't know because the opportunity didn't appear. I could easily draw connections to the Burma army to support my side, but that would be equally moot.
This is also where inconsistant characterization shows up. Prior to this scene, the movie went out of its way to establish just how horrible the government is. We have an fiercely dogmatic leader, his amoral second in command, a drug addicted loudmouthed propaganda pundit, and a pedophiliac priest for no real reason except that it was on the news I suppose (let's go back to the subtlety thing). However, the opening scene also shows us policemen-level government employees threatening to rape Evey. Now either she just had cinematically bad luck (quite possible), or this sort of thing is common around curfew. This isn't even going into all the soldiers necessary to man the experimental prision facilities and break in and black bag everyone the government doesn't like. The film goes into strenuous effort to convince us how awful the government is, but one of their top generals has the presence of mind and crisis of morality to order a cease fire? And none of the possibly fiercely patriotic commanders under him thought to circumvent his orders?
It's a fairly stark situtation. Either the corrupt government's influence perpetuates through the government and the media and science divisions and the general police, but the army is an untouched bastion of moral showmanship, or (my stance) that if there's one thing the Evil Empire is good at doing, it's following orders, and with no orders to follow, ceases to function.
You also bring up another complaint I have with the movie, that we have no indication what follows November 5th. Secured under the new regime? There isn't one. The old regime is dead, and the revolutionary leader is dead. What happens next? The film would apparently have you believe that everything is alright, and that democracy or utopia even will simply come about in the dictatorships absence. Pardon me for being a history major, but I don't find that likely.
Even in the most corrupt and oppressive governments, there are basically two strata of people, the honest citizens, and the people that bully them while claiming to act on their behalf. After all, is not the very rhetoric of totalitarianism rooted in the appeal to a strong collective
ethos? Indeed, it is an appeal so strong it subordinates the individual to the collective. Owing to this, in such a State there is always the lingering hope that the former strata of people will do the right thing if they can gain the power to do so, because the nation has not yet departed from the moral and symbolic order entirely, but only misconstrued its nature. This is why the film answers the regime's demands for the cleansing of the land with the cleansing rain of God, although it comes in a much different way than they expected. On that note, we'll get to the bullies one by one.
Admittedly, the list of adversaries are something of a laundry list from issues of the day, but they do serve nicely to lampoon Neoconservative hubris. To me, the reason for the two policemen's efforts to rape Evey is rather obvious: she is a woman claiming power and authority over them, they are the agents of the patriarchal order, and they must subdue and humiliate her to 'put her in her place'. Rape, after all, is not so much about sex as it is about power, and in light of the sad ubiquity of rape and domestic violence, it really doesn't take much of a stretch of the imagination. In terms of the black bag operations, we would assume they aren't just assigned to just any old cop or soldier, but to specific individuals who are both able and willing to carry them out. And beyond the simple fact that secret government experiments make good science fiction, it may be possible to keep the average guard aware of only a small part of what's really going on. He may, for example, be aware that he is guarding very sick prisoners in a cell, but unaware that they have been infected by the government for tests in biological warfare. As far as our pill-popping PR pundit goes, I thought that element was an apt commentary on the psychology of his character. He acts like a tough English bulldog, but inside he has a deep well of anxieties that he must keep hidden from the world or lose his reputation. So what about our openly two-faced lecherous Anglican priest with the huge Lolita complex, who has gone far beyond having a mid-life crisis of faith? Whether functioning at safe or dangerous levels, I think the eroticization of minors has a lot to do with the longing for the lost happiness of childhood (notably, a time before his collusion with abuse of power and ensuing loss of faith). Aside from distancing its conception of God from the paternalistic mode of faith embodied by the Christian Right (a crucial move for audience acceptance and narrative coherency), I think the role this plays in the film is to comment upon distorted views of sexuality widespread throughout much of the Church. Unfortunately, owing to the ambiguities of their relation to the divine and symbolic orders, the Church historically has had a difficult time dealing with the sexualities of clergymen (equally unfortunately, I can't really comment meaningfully on the sexualities of clergywomen), and so has created an environment rife for the development of serious psychosexual problems. Over against this tendency, the film insists that the clergy must be allowed legitimate means of expressing their sexuality, or they will express it in ways that are illegitimate and distorted in secret. Indeed, the voyeuristic thrill of watching the clergy go wild and crazy in the movies is a sign that we know a lot about what they are against, but have no idea what they are for.
Now, about the ending, in light of the people congregating
en masse around one of London's civic centers with civic intentions signaled by their lack of arms, the
misse-en-scene effectively signals that the conditions are ripe for the formation of a new social contract. Far from the kind of political and moral chaos that often follows these types of regime changes (for example, the turbulent year of four emperors following the death of the tyrant Nero), the film is not unjustified in suggesting that a free and just social order will be formed in the wake of the collapse of the old regime. And why not? The film's theistic ontology of a cleansing 'God in the rain' suggests that the hand of providence has been at work bringing about the events we are now witnessing. And where divine providence and human free will work toward the same end, some truly marvelous things can be brought about. Or would you rather the film accuse God of powerlessness too see things through even when the conditions are ripe?