[Dialogue] Anarchism, Hollywood-Style

Harry Wainwright h-wainwright at charter.net
Sun Mar 19 14:04:55 EST 2006


AlterNet

Anarchism, Hollywood-Style

By Anthony Kaufman, AlterNet
Posted on March 17, 2006, Printed on March 19, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/33579/

If Andy and Larry Wachowski's "The Matrix" trilogy turned millions of
Americans on to cyberpunk culture and postmodern theory, then "V for
Vendetta," the brothers' latest project (which opens today), might just do
the same for out-and-out revolution.

Conceived by the Wachowskis and directed by their longtime assistant
director James McTeigue, "Vendetta" is a pop-culture attack on the current
administration's multiple injustices -- a big-budget call to rebellion from
deep inside the belly of conglomerate Time Warner. Warner Bros.' film unit
already got flack from conservatives for releasing "Syriana," "Good Night
and Good Luck" and Palestinian suicide-bomber portrait "Paradise Now," but
just you wait: "V for Vendetta" is a pro-revolutionary action-adventure romp
that makes those films look like "Little House on the Prairie."

In perhaps the most glaring and controversial example of Hollywood's refusal
to toe the Bush party line, "Vendetta's" hero is a terrorist -- a violent
rebel on a mission to destroy his corrupt government in a blaze of
explosives. Is this irresponsible? Does it glamorize terrorism? Perhaps. But
for many progressives, whose anti-war protests have fallen on deaf ears and
whose activism has been squashed by the powers-that-be, "V for Vendetta"
should feel almost cathartic.

Set in the year 2020, "V for Vendetta" takes place in a fascistic London,
some time after "America's war grew worse and worse," as one character
narrates, "when unfamiliar words like 'collateral' and 'rendition' became
frightening." The government is a cross between a full-blown totalitarian
state and the current administration's scare tactics: with constant
surveillance, a citywide "yellow-coded curfew" that instills paranoia and
restricts nighttime movement, and a menacing band of secret police called
"Fingermen" who patrol the streets and harass the citizens.

When we first meet Evey Hammond (Natalie Portman), she's about to pay the
price for violating the city curfew when a mysterious masked stranger saves
her from the authorities with an array of flying swords. Evey's savior is V,
an erudite, Shakespeare-quoting burn victim who has literally adopted both
the mask and the mission of long-ago subversive Guy Fawkes, who in 1605
plotted to destroy Parliament with 36 barrels of gunpowder. With the help of
the young, pretty Evey (the daughter of "activist" parents abducted and
killed by the government), V plans to carry out Fawkes' dreams of violent
insurrection. "Blowing up a building," he tells her, "can change the world."

If there's any question about the film's political targets, "Vendetta" opens
with a ridiculously racist and homophobic screed by Prothero, the Bill
O'Reilly-like "Voice of London" who speaks on what appears to be the
country's only television channel. "The former United States is the world's
biggest leper colony," he spits. "And it wasn't because of the immigrants,
the Muslims or the homosexuals, or the war that they started. No," he says.
"It's because they're Godless!"

In contrast to Edward R. Murrow's famous signoff of "Good night and good
luck," the nasty Prothero ends his ultraconservative broadcasts with the
jingoistic "England prevails."

This isn't subtle stuff. In a blatant nod to George Orwell's "1984,"
"Vendetta's" U.K. is ruled by Chancellor Sutler, a vituperative, "deeply
religious conservative" seen Big Brother-like on a large television screen
(and played by John Hurt, "1984's" ill-fated everyman). Sutler's ruling
philosophy is the politics of fear. "We will show him what terror really
looks like," he screams after V's arrival onto the scene.

Sutler's reign also involves media spin and propaganda, a la the Newspeak of
"1984." When events begin to spiral out of control, Sutler declares that the
government must make the people realize "why they need us," followed by
panic-inducing reports of everything from civil war to avian flu. Sound
familiar?

Like any classic comic superhero myth, "Vendetta" also provides an origin
story for V, which is gradually glimpsed in flashbacks and a police
investigation into his past. And not unlike the secret nuclear-testing that
spawned Godzilla, or the class oppression that cultivated so many angry
inner-city zombies (see "Land of the Dead"), V's transformation into a
vengeful killer was the result of a crass abuse of state power involving
(spoiler alert) a government plan to create a biological weapon with the
help of a nefarious pharmaceutical company. If the political notion of
"blowback" ever needed a poster child, V would be it.

And "V for Vendetta" isn't just about political revolt -- it's also about
sexual revolution. After being captured and placed in an interrogation cell,
Evey reads letters from a fellow prisoner, Valerie, a young woman who came
out of the closet and embraced a forbidden lesbian love affair that landed
her and her lover in similarly brutal confines. Another sympathetic
character conceals his homosexual identity. And however ruthless V may be,
he too is sexually ambiguous -- an effete hero who hides behind a mask,
loves "The Count of Monte Cristo," melancholy music, cooking and dancing ("A
revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having," he tells Evey,
paraphrasing the slogan of anarchist Emma Goldman as he yearns for a whirl).

The movie's sexual politics are also brought to the fore in a quotation
heard over the end-credit music: "This is no simple reform," a woman says.
"It really is a revolution. Sex and race, because they are easy and visible
differences, have been the primary ways of organizing human beings into
superior and inferior groups and into the cheap labor in which this system
still depends." The voice belongs to feminist powerhouse Gloria Steinem.

Above all, "Vendetta" should be enjoyed as the first true anarchist movie
Hollywood has ever made. Film historians speak fondly of the paranoid cycle
of American cinema in the 1960s and '70s ("The Manchurian Candidate," "Three
Days of the Condor," "The Parallax View") or the countercultural anti-heroic
outlaws of "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Badlands," but nowhere in mainstream U.S.
cinema -- and certainly not post-9/11 -- has there been a pop-culture
phenomenon that advocates not only overthrowing a corrupt government, but
blowing it up. As the film's tagline states, "People should not be afraid of
their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people." 

Anthony Kaufman <http://blogs.indiewire.com/anthony>  has written about
films and the film industry for the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune and
Utne magazine. 

C 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/33579/

 

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