• _The Forgiven_ (an unplanned Part 3): why has "climate change" been can

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jul 25 20:59:21 2022
    I went to see _The Forgiven_ a second time during a
    week which saw the devastating defeat of the U.S.
    "build back better" bill for clean energy and global
    warming mitigation. The barely habitable Sahara
    desert may be our destiny now. (A heat wave is
    sweeping through Europe as I type.) Desert is the
    ultimate nihilist.

    Which begs the question: where is "climate change"
    at the movies? Why has American cinema "cancelled,"
    "erased" climate change? Here I mean climate
    change as the bash-you-over-the-head theme, a call
    to arms, not as background color. Zombie-as-climate
    change metaphor, i.e., zombie-washing, zombie-face,
    doesn't count. Neither does "snow job."

    A search of wikipedia is frustrating. _A.I._
    remains the most relevant (NYC submerged in the
    ocean) and that was made 20+ years ago. The more
    recent explicit examples: _The Day After Tomorrow_
    (freezing instead of global warming, i.e., snow
    job), _Geostorm_ (scientists try to control
    climate leading to sabotage and disaster), and
    _Snowpiercer_ (about the same, with snow job).
    _Dune_ and _Interstellar_ are cop-outs; these
    commercial films elide the issue for the sake
    of selling tickets. A film which highlights the
    importance of energy technology to fight climate
    change is Christopher Munch's _The 11th Green_!
    It may be the best film not called _A.I._ on that
    list. Frank Herbert understood the central role
    of energy; so did Chris Marker. Why don't the
    current crop of directors? Jessica Chastain's
    Murph should have mastered nuclear fusion in
    _Interstellar_, not the same old quantum gravity
    hocus pocus.

    If you read a lot of amazon user reviews you will
    be struck by the hypersensitivity towards "woke"
    elements (LGBTQ, woman and minorities "replacing"
    white males ...) among the MAGA set. If Hollywood
    is content to offend the lunatic far-right anyway,
    why not feature climate change as well?

    Maybe it is just not a high priority then? Guess
    what, many Republicans feel exactly the same.

    This is decadence.

    Democrats are rightly stunned and confounded
    that the Republican Party was taken over by
    Trump. Yet the Democrat's Party have also been
    completely taken over by its skin-color and
    LGBTQ fundamentalists, to the extent that they
    no longer have the vocabulary to address the
    most pressing issues. The day after the US
    Supreme Court struck down Roe vs. Wade, a NYT
    columnist's headline read "Abortion is a race
    issue" (or something like that) -- instead of
    women's issue, human issue. I didn't have
    the heart to read that drivel. Another op-ed
    piece was about flying the LGBTQ flag on 7/4.

    How have we come to this? Millennia of human
    achievements, war crimes, slavery -- MAGA and
    skin-color/LGBTQ fundamentalism are the end-
    points of human evolution? Didn't we have
    higher aspirations? Arthur C. Clarke (and
    Kubrick) postulated that the human race would
    become so advanced it would shed its corporeal
    form, live as light energy. Frank Herbert,
    always more pessimistic, settled for simple
    survival of the species, and that was a
    Herculean effort already. Now we focus on
    fringe politics while the planet literally
    burns.

    (One might argue that the idea of a progression
    is Western and therefore corrupt. Indeed,
    French Existentialism might have been the last
    universal philosophical framework. The "theories"
    that followed -- structuralism, Foucault, Walter
    Benjamin -- were eclectic (chaotic, anecdotal).
    The cherry-picking of history of the far left
    is all of one piece with this "Western" thought
    process. If you what to see what non-Western
    ideologies look like, look at modern Russian
    and Chinese ones -- all based on ethnic supremacy,
    little room for minorities.)

    Perhaps the best thing about Claire Denis' _Both
    Sides of the Blade_ was Vincent Lindon's speech
    against skin-color determinism! And the newly
    minted NYT columnist Pamela Paul has it exactly
    right.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/03/opinion/the-far-right-and-far-left-agree-on-one-thing-women-dont-count.html
    ---------------------------------------------------

    _The Forgiven is really a thought-provoking film.
    The non-stop conflicts, explicit or hinted at,
    between people belonging to different cultures
    and social classes make the subtext grind at you,
    like stones in your boots. It presents a mirror
    to Western societies, questioning our decadence,
    our relation to the world. But first, Jessica
    Chastain.

    Chastain's character Jo may be the literate and
    refined in the film, but she smugly condescends
    to the servants. She is an American who moved to
    Britain at unspecified times; I suspect Jo might
    even be British in Lawrence Osborne's novel, which
    I haven't read. Her power over the Moroccan staff
    -- Hamid the head servant in particularly -- is
    not just social and economical, but also sexual.
    Spotting him spying on her sleeping with the other
    American guest, she moves his head out of the way
    so that her eyes are free to stare back at Hamid
    -- while having an orgasm. She know he desires
    this gorgeous white woman but will never have her.
    This is the most compromised character Chastain has
    played since _Crimson Peak_. Still, Jo is quite a
    few IQ points below the actress' own intelligence.
    In fact most of the characters have dumb dialogue,
    especially Caleb Landry James' gay lover Dally, who
    is your basic British equivalent of a frat boy, and
    Abbey Lee's party girl gone wild.

    The dignified, acerbic Hamid watches the guests'
    debauchery with disdain (he has an Arabic proverb)
    for every occasion), but is not above keeping the
    dead Driss's father at bay, warning his boss of a
    possible blackmail. The complex Hamid, negotiating
    Western and Arabic cultures, is a central figure.
    His hostility towards the drunk David early on gives
    way to approval at the end -- welcoming him back
    with a long cool drink while everyone else has
    forgotten him. He knows, as John Michael McDonagh's
    characters tend to know, that it matter less what
    insensitive things you say, than what you are
    morally capable of when the chips are down. I myself
    will not be caught dead voicing the things David
    (or the protagonist of _The Guard_) says to taunt
    non-white races. But I'm not sure I would have
    taken that trip with the father of someone I just
    killed, either.

    A nice visual contrast is drawn between Hamid who
    throws away a tray of gourmet croissant, and David
    sharing a one somehow available deep in the desert
    with Said Taghmaoui's Anouar.

    I think John Michael McDonagh should make a film
    about climate change.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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