P
For Pissed Off
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V
versus W: No Betta Vendetta. by
Jon Dunmore © 12 Apr 2006.
"
an expression
of a mood, and it is a warning. The mood it expresses is that of near despair
about the future of man, and the warning is that unless the course of history
changes, men all over the world will lose their most human qualities, will become
soulless automatons, and will not even be aware of it." - Eric Fromm, Afterword
to George Orwell's 1984.
Conjuring icons
and tableaus from humanity's last four millennia (including Guy Fawkes, The Phantom
of the Opera, Shakespeare, Huxley's Brave New World, Batman, Harlan Ellison's
"Repent Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman, Nazism, The Man With
No Name, and a thousand other quasi-plagiarisms), V For Vendetta is a confluence
of electric ideas and wolfen imagery that will burn itself into the cortexes of
this politically-tepid generation as Orwell's 1984 was burned into previous
generations. It
may even make them do what today's society would rather they didn't: think. Whereas
1984, published in 1949, heralded the pessimism of a far-flung future,
where civil liberties were nonexistent, where government held tyrannical sway
over citizens' very thoughts, manufacturing fear through canards and strong-arming
via automaton Thought Police, the horror of Vendetta's vision is that it
reflects not a distant future, but the PRESENT. Sure,
it is clothed in a fiction; of a Britain gone Beyond Big Brother, where pseudo-police
called Finger Men are given carte blanche to do with suspects as they please,
including cold-blooded murder and rape; where the government can manufacture a
virus, release it into the public, and then use the cure as election leverage,
and where elected officials have stakes in the company that sells the cure - but
how is this any different from a President and his cronies profiteering from a
manufactured war that costs millions of lives, holding stakes in all the weapons
and oil conglomerates involved? Just
as superheroes were originally created in reaction to their social climate (Zorro,
to fight the tyranny of the Spanish Californian governor; Superman, as escapist
vision after the Great Depression; Captain America, to give Hitler a good old
American Right Hook every so often - all three of these icons also evoked by this
film), Vendetta's hero, simply known as "V," is a superhero for OUR
times, fighting for the same ideals as his predecessors, ramped up to 2000s ferocity. Wearing
a permanent Guy Fawkes facemask, V (Hugo Weaving) takes his cue from Fawkes' Gunpowder
Plot of 1605 (to assassinate King James I by blowing up the Houses of Parliament),
motivated by the same premise - to overthrow a corrupt government. Fawkes was
foiled on November 5 (hence the rhyme, "Remember, remember, the fifth of
November
"). V is also the only surviving guinea pig from the manufacture
of the lethal government virus, which necessitated his facemask and Bat-Zorro
outfit. Hence his vendetta - against all his captors, now occupying political
positions. Departing
from the storyline and ideologies of Alan Moore's and David Lloyd's graphic novel
from which it was lifted (Moore and Lloyd reportedly not too rapt with the changes),
writers Andy and Larry Wachowski script Vendetta in a society of 2020,
but quite easily evoke a society likely in existence today: there is nary a doubt
that this is George W. Bush's dystopian America. To take the edge off the scythe,
the British government stands as allegory for the U.S. government, America having
been nullified as a world power in a recent war. On
the November 5th night we meet V, he rescues Evey (Natalie Portman), just before
he blows the Old Bailey courts, to the strains of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture,
promising in a pirated television broadcast to do the same to the Houses of Parliament
next year. Upon
V's first appearance as the suavely lethal, black-caped vigilante, loquacious
to a fault, my heart actually beat faster - at last!: a character intelligent,
articulate and adept at weaponry - who is not the British Bad Guy. At long last,
a truly knowledgeable and literate protagonist wins the day, not some disheveled
cop or loudmouth devil-brat who teaches his parents how to love again. A Hero
whose abode is piled high with books, where art and learning - not a big screen
tv or sports memorabilia - are given pride of place (thank American Sitcom Husbands
for the shiftless male idiom); where ornate statuary and a baby grand piano reflect
traditionalism and sophistication - without the snide implication that knowledge
equals nerd equals Frasier. WAR
IS PEACE. FREEDOM IS SLAVERY. IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH - Orwell, 1984. The
credo that George W. Bush stakes his christian pocketbook on. And Orwell thought
he was writing of a fictional future society. In Vendetta, the doublethink
is the same, media programs spewing absolute lies in their spin reportage
of subversive events. (How is this any different to force-feeding creationism
to schoolchildren; to reporting that America won the War In Iraq?) In
the most ironic casting since Moses became the head of the NRA, John Hurt (who
played the failed rebel Winston Smith, in the film version of 1984) overlords
this totalitarian social order as Supreme Chancellor Sutler, whose every ranting
breath from wall-sized TV monitors is channeled into policy through his armed
regimes of thoughtless drogues. (How is this any different to a President who
can sign a bill against torture and then use torture whenever he feels like it;
who can progress a war effort without the legal approval of congress?) A
small coterie of officials report to the Chancellor, for weekly doses of intimidation,
among them, Finch (Stephen Rea), doing the "disheveled cop who finds his
conscience" routine, and Creedy (Tim Pigott-Smith) as the cop who doesn't
have one. "A
building is a symbol - the more people who place their faith in that symbol the
greater the statement in destroying it." As
well as the World Trade Center, the christian-corrupted Ten Commandments are evoked,
the first two abjuring false gods and graven images. Did the World Trade
Center attacks leave such a deep scar because of society's failing in affording
mere physical edifices such nationalistic import? Even after business resumed
through other avenues and families recovered from loss of their beloveds, the
ire is still raised whenever "9-11" is mentioned disparagingly. Like
right now. (To the idiots who will obviously read into this line of thought an
advocacy of Al-Qaeda policy, please visit me so I can beat you with my shoe for
your willful stupidity.) Yet
for all the puling and faux-empathy, the exploitation is rampant - lest we forget
the mini-flag-makers and magnetic ribbon purveyors and - most venal of all - Hollywood:
at least two 2006 movies brazenly depict, in garish newspeak (read as nationalistic
tunnel vision), 9-11 subject matter, whilst the propaganda-drenched TV movies
all make their unscrupulous bid for their fifteen minutes of Nielsen glory (the
most ironic featuring the comedian Timothy Bottoms, perfectly cast as Bush Jnr.,
as not only is the poor guy a dead ringer for W, his insipid acting is perfectly
congruent with the insipid leadership and public persona of the real thing). In
the real world, insurgent media opens two possibilities: either the government
the media rails against is NOT as corrupt or as criminally organized as it is
portrayed (if it were, the insurgent media would be quashed) - OR, the government
IS that corrupt, but are so insulated from due process of expulsion that they
have nothing to fear. The
awful truth is that it is a little of both. Anyone who thinks otherwise has the
mind of a thirteen-year-old girl. Coincidentally,
it is when Evey is dressed as a schoolgirl for a pervert bishop - how could something
so wrong be so right?! - that she displays just such a naiveté and tries
to betray V. It is only after a terror-filled interlude that she allies with him
wholeheartedly. Natalie
Portman, who seems to have a proclivity for morally-ambiguous super killers -
Leon, Darth Vader, and now V - effectively wipes away the stain of Star Wars
with this performance. I am in love again. Hugo Weaving, eternally hidden behind
V's mask, lets his unseen elocution fly daggers, and is doubly commended for the
fact that he is so clearly understood even without the benefit of seeing his moving
lips. There
are those who accuse Vendetta of advocating terrorism. Semantics! Guerilla
tactics by allies are "covert ops," or "freedom fighting,"
whilst the same tactics, if used by the enemy, are decried as "terrorism."
Use your semantics to define the Chancellor's acts of viral terror and disinformation,
inflicted on a wide scale, killing millions; how would your semantics describe
a manufactured war, taking countless lives to pad the pockets of the wealthy upper
class? How
haughty for the stinking super-rich to classify any acts which diminish their
unethical, blood-red wealth as "terrorist" acts. Note that "terrorists"
- on both sides - never sabotage or create anarchy to specifically harm lower
classes. It's always about making statements that will make the rich and powerful
take notice; the lower classes happen to be in the way. For
years it has been my contention that when
all civil, legal and righteous methods to dislodge a dishonest government fail,
situations will degenerate to visceral animal backbiting and pipe-hitting, as
it does in the film: there is a scene where a young girl is shot in the back by
a Finger Man who believes himself immune to retribution by holding up his badge
- which proves impotent against a horde of citizens wielding pipes. Hard, pipe-hittin'
niggas indeed
The
Wachowski Brothers and director, James McTeigue are all Matrix vets, yet
where they intimated a widespread delusion and occluded reality in that series,
they lost themselves in the folds of their own mind-lobes with their vacuous,
insular proselytizing and specious, Möbius-strip philosophizing, not to mention
the overblown, mostly unnecessary effects. In Vendetta, they have found
their stride, close-reining the efx and preachiness, rather concentrating on the
IDEAS. "Behind
this mask, there is an Idea. And Ideas are bulletproof."
The movie conjectures that a country's citizenry, for the most part, will
unite in a putsch against their corrupt government - unfortunately, this
is not the case, as evidenced in the United States of Bushtopia, where there is
an even distribution of citizens across the spectrum, from those who would kiss
the government's feet in denial, no matter what crimes were perpetrated against
them, to the picketers, lobbyists and congresspersons who actively work to dethrone
heinous governing bodies. Watch
any episode of Real Time with Bill Maher and the occasional guest Republican
will stand their ground like a braying ass, defending their pedestrian President
against incompetence and duplicity against all evidence to the contrary. If there
is one unquestioning drogue like that, there are thousands. An Idea being bulletproof
unfortunately works both ways. Like
every superhero, V is a fantasy unfulfilled - he is the omniscient super being
who will do the hard pipe-hittin' when that critical mass is attained. When all
sense is shunted aside - when malfeasance and misfeasance are the norm; when failure
to act reaches life-threatening proportions (the infamous seven minute incognizance
during My Pet Goat after being informed the country was under attack; Hurricane
Katrina inaction); when ignorance is lauded for political agenda (creationism;
prayer in place of progress; global warming study censored because the contracted
scientists did not report what the government wanted to hear); when news reportage
allows sham and glam to take precedence over substance (Michael Jackson's insanity
and Britney Spears' ugly pregnant belly overshadowing immigration policies and
homosexual rights, which in turn overshadow the national deficit and war crimes,
which in turn overshadow the government's clandestine business affiliations with
their supposed enemies); when civil rights have become civil wrongs - the SENSELESS
methods must necessarily be invoked. Some people just don't understand anything
BUT a pipe to the head. "People
should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their
people." Roger
Ebert opines that in an ideal state, both governments and their people should
exist in harmony and that fear in either direction leads to violence. Ebert forgets
that Fear is a euphemism for Respect, and vice versa. When a government believes
it is so untouchable that it loses all respect for the people who voted for it,
and starts instigating policy that furthers only the goals of government itself,
rather than the people whom it ostensibly works for - that is when "fear"
should be utilized to re-assert respect. If the only way to remove a corrupt government
is via a government-endorsed method, how would the government ever be removed?
Obviously by another method. Involving pipes. (In a related topic: One of V's
planted bombs illustrates that even the grandest insurgents of the future will
still be courteous enough to include Roger Ebert's Red Digital Readout, so that
the defuser knows how much time he can fuss about with the red and blue wires
before he arbitrarily cuts any old one.) "The
only verdict is vengeance; a vendetta, held as a votive, not in vain, for the
value and veracity of such shall one day vindicate the vigilant and the virtuous." This
film is a cry out to the intelligentsia of the planet to hold fast - in
one way or another, justice is coming in a long black cape... END |



imdb
America: Freedom to Fascism
(topical)
An Inconvenient Truth
(topical)
Fahrenheit 9-11
(topical)
Flight
93
(topical)
Hellboy
(John Hurt)
The
Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring
(Hugo Weaving)
The
Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King
(Hugo Weaving)
Rendition
(topical)
Star
Wars II: Attack Of The Clones
(Natalie Portman)
Star Wars III: Revenge Of The Sith
(Natalie Portman)
The US vs John Lennon
(topical)
United
93
(topical)
World Trade Center
(topical)

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Guy
Fawkes Night
Remember, remember
the fifth of November,
The
Gunpowder Treason
and Plot,
I see no reason
why gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes,
'twas his intent
To blow up the King
and the Parliament.
Three score barrels
of powder below,
Poor old England
to overthrow:
By God's providence
he was catch'd
With a dark lantern
and burning match.
Holloa
boys, holloa boys,
Make the bells ring.
Holloa boys, holloa boys,
God save the King!
Hip hip hoorah!
- Traditional
READ ABOUT POFFY'S VISIT TO GROUND ZERO IN NEW YORK:
Poffy
Gives Zero Respect:
A Small Cucumber in the Big Apple

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