I never understood how people in the Purge universe would be just be fine for the rest of the year if they saw their loved ones die violently, is PTSD just not a thing? Surely the blood feuds alone would impact society. I know "A horror movie from 2013 had dumb worldbuilding" is a lukewarm take but still lmao.
thesis of the movies is straight up "this is bad, look at this bad idea which is bad; crime is constructed & precipitated by the ruling class, who also don't respect democracy" :agony-minion:
Americans coming out of Star Wars convinced that their lot fucking about with massive carrier fleets and having used actual doomsday weapons to force everyone else to live in terror of them are somehow the rebellion.
I think those type are at least honest about them being the sith, take r/EmpireDidNothingWrong. I am unsure if this is a good or bad thing.
On the good side, CHUDs trying to "no u" is insufferably annoying, but on the bad side. It also begs the question, are some CHUDs find inspiration from the villains because studios are making villains in media too cool?
I've generally interpreted the point as trying to deconstruct and de-glamorize the idea of superheros, the people shown as choosing to become superheroes do so not just out of a sense of justice but also severe personal and emotional problems that they compensate for through taking the role of a vigilante doing self-justified violence to others, mostly against relatively regular criminals or people who also are taking on roles to dodge their personal issues.
Of course also theres the Comedian who openly indulges in the violence and power granted over others for his own enjoyment and pleasure, and quite naturally just signs up to work for the feds so he can be officially sanctioned to do exactly the same shit but to foreigners and political enemies.
The ones that do actually have superhuman abilities end up either becoming inhuman and detached or catching the biggest great man theory brain worm and orchestrating global atrocities to achieve a momentary state of confused peace, then getting ben shapiro owned by a single guy going "how long is this gonna last if no more aliens show up lmao" and having a breakdown.
Theres also like a theme of the importance of everyday kindness and being human and connecting to each other, rather than hiding behind a mask or becoming inhuman supermen, I guess.
Counterpoint: it was worse than the book because it depicts police racism as an anomaly and relic of the past and arguably normalizes eugenics since Ozy's daughter is also a super genius for no reason
I never understood how people in the Purge universe would be just be fine for the rest of the year if they saw their loved ones die violently, is PTSD just not a thing? Surely the blood feuds alone would impact society. I know "A horror movie from 2013 had dumb worldbuilding" is a lukewarm take but still lmao.
thesis of the movies is straight up "this is bad, look at this bad idea which is bad; crime is constructed & precipitated by the ruling class, who also don't respect democracy" :agony-minion:
you can always count on the majority of Americans to miss the point. hell, we have directors film adaptations that show they have obviously missed the point of the original work
Americans coming out of Star Wars convinced that their lot fucking about with massive carrier fleets and having used actual doomsday weapons to force everyone else to live in terror of them are somehow the rebellion.
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I think those type are at least honest about them being the sith, take r/EmpireDidNothingWrong. I am unsure if this is a good or bad thing.
On the good side, CHUDs trying to "no u" is insufferably annoying, but on the bad side. It also begs the question, are some CHUDs find inspiration from the villains because studios are making villains in media too cool?
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I've generally interpreted the point as trying to deconstruct and de-glamorize the idea of superheros, the people shown as choosing to become superheroes do so not just out of a sense of justice but also severe personal and emotional problems that they compensate for through taking the role of a vigilante doing self-justified violence to others, mostly against relatively regular criminals or people who also are taking on roles to dodge their personal issues.
Of course also theres the Comedian who openly indulges in the violence and power granted over others for his own enjoyment and pleasure, and quite naturally just signs up to work for the feds so he can be officially sanctioned to do exactly the same shit but to foreigners and political enemies.
The ones that do actually have superhuman abilities end up either becoming inhuman and detached or catching the biggest great man theory brain worm and orchestrating global atrocities to achieve a momentary state of confused peace, then getting ben shapiro owned by a single guy going "how long is this gonna last if no more aliens show up lmao" and having a breakdown.
Theres also like a theme of the importance of everyday kindness and being human and connecting to each other, rather than hiding behind a mask or becoming inhuman supermen, I guess.
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Counterpoint: it was worse than the book because it depicts police racism as an anomaly and relic of the past and arguably normalizes eugenics since Ozy's daughter is also a super genius for no reason
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YOUR POST: "movie"
MY BRAIN :galaxy-brain: : ah yes, show :gigachad:
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