I just finished watch Q: Into the Storm and really want some more slop.

def recommend q into the storm btw, tho it does make Q seem even more cringe than it already was

  • Tiocfaidhcaisarla [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    I was listening to a podcast and the (stupid) host brought it up, and had taken away that the mass killings were against those merely accused of being communists (which I don't doubt plenty were) but the implication he made was that communism was a boogeyman, no one's willingly a communist, you dumbass, yada yada. Does the documentary deal with that better, and his interpretation just :brainworms: ?

    • Fartbutt420 [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      The film does a real tight focus, in that it largely follows a group of low-rent gangsters selling forged movie tickets who became one of the more notorious death squad during the years of the progroms. These guys are old men now, never suffered any consequences, and are still considered heroes - happily bragging about the people they killed, re-enacting how they executed people while mugging to the camera. The film deals with the self-conscious amnesia of a country unable or unwilling to confront its trauma, the horror of your neighbours being the people who murdered your family, the performativity of violence. It doesn't do a deep dive into the broader ideology of the events - for that I'd recommend The Jakarta Method, which gives a more thorough context.

      • Tiocfaidhcaisarla [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        2 years ago

        Damn, I knew it was a rough watch but that...

        My first real introduction to the genocide was in Vijay Prashad's The Darker Nations, which I recommend anytime it's relevant. I mean to read the Jakarta Method someday, and I'll probably have to watch this too, though I can see how with that focus ideological motivations are lost. The bad guys stay winning