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  • hypercracker
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    edit-2
    3 months ago

    People have become wise to copaganda shows but all the period dramas about the monarchy or aristocracy are fash. Monarchy isn't le honorable nobles, it's the most regressive right-wing thing imaginable.

    I watched the last game of thrones episode to participate in the "cultural event" and at some point when a bunch of nobles were gathered to decide the kingdom's successor someone suggested democracy. Everybody in attendance laughed but the camera shots were very carefully chosen not to show the good protagonist nobles joining in on the mirth.

    • UlyssesT
      hexagon
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • Des [she/her, they/them]
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        edit-2
        3 months ago

        GOT writers:

        no no we could have had dragon lady launch a Maoist liberation war across the entire world but we had to write that her evil gene kicked in

        so instead you get a photocopy of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

        alright everyone lets get on with the star war

  • Andrzej3K [none/use name]
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    3 months ago

    Zootopia: racially essentialist allegory masquerading as a story about tolerance

    • UlyssesT
      hexagon
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • Andrzej3K [none/use name]
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        3 months ago

        I mean even taken at face value, the whole 'wolves and sheep' theme is just incredibly fascist isn't it lol

        • UlyssesT
          hexagon
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          edit-2
          2 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • Andrzej3K [none/use name]
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            3 months ago

            Tbf it's not a bad film, and I do think it was well-intentioned in its way. It's almost as if the ideological context were irreparably fucked that no matter what you do within that framework, you end up reproducing reactionary politics 🤔

            • UlyssesT
              hexagon
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              edit-2
              2 months ago

              deleted by creator

            • Balefirex [he/him]
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              edit-2
              3 months ago

              I wouldn't call it reactionary. The message of the movie is about overcoming prejudice. Yea there are negative connotations if you try to directly transpose races into the allegory but that's certainly not the intent. Copaganda aspect is still problematic ig but I like b99 too shrug-outta-hecks

              • Andrzej3K [none/use name]
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                3 months ago

                Hmm I think it definitely is intended as that sort of allegory though — otherwise how can the message be about overcoming prejudice? Prejudice against what? And yes, it's well-intentioned as I said, but, come on, in trying to tell a story about tolerance, they end up building this world where 'weak' and 'strong' are biologically distinct groups, and the message of the movie seems to be "yes, this is true, but we should look beyond these obvious facts".

                Tbc, I don't even mean this as a criticism of the film — but these aforementioned aspects do tell us something about the culture at large, I think.

                • Roonerino
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                  edit-2
                  3 months ago

                  deleted by creator

      • DragonBallZinn [he/him]
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        3 months ago

        Sorry to derail, but is there something problematic about ‘DMV bad’ jokes? I just recently heard my uncle who gives off unscratched liberal vibes rant about how the DMV is incompetent and proud of it.

        • UlyssesT
          hexagon
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          edit-2
          2 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • DragonBallZinn [he/him]
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            3 months ago

            Thanks, and that’s usually the message I use with my family lib or chud.

            They complain about an inefficiency? I just say “ehh, we get what we pay for.” I’m not taking a stance so I don’t get chewed out, and I diffuse any attempts to lord over DMV workers.

  • CascadeOfLight [he/him]
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    3 months ago

    This might be a strange one but 'Apocalypse Now' has one thing in particular for me that's completely inexcusable. Mainly that, for a film supposedly based on Heart of Darkness, a book that is very clearly critical of imperialism and racism, it completely inverts its message.

    Like, on the face of it, it's anti-war, and even anti-US in that the US Army is shown as completely dysfunctional, run by cold-blooded psychopaths like the COs at the start who set Martin Sheen off to "terminate with extreme prejudice" or brain-fried madmen like the helicopter commander who just wants to surf, and it's shown how much damage and devastation the US has caused for no tangible gain (but then again, only in a 'why are we even here' type 'oops, the US accidentally stumbled into another war' kind of way).

    But the whole film is from the perspective of the US, the Viet 'Cong' [sic] are never shown to be real people, just a nebulous menace lurking out of sight, and every sequence of the 'madness of war' is dripping with glorification of it. I mean, maybe this is shouldn't be a surprise, because it was written by John Milius, the guy who wrote Conan the Barbarian and fucking Red Dawn, but there's no way the film that contains the Ride of the Valkyries helicopter sequence can be said not to glorify war. It's like if the Starship Troopers film, while still supposedly intending to be a satire, was written by an actual fascist instead.

    So in Heart of Darkness, when Marlow finds Kurtz, he's this emaciated, pathetic figure, who has gone insane in the wilderness of his ivory trading post and turned the area into his personal playground, cowing the local tribes with his guns and putting the heads of 'rebels' on pikes - and okay, the Africans are kind of passive and servile, but given that the novel was written in 1899 and the European colonialist is depicted as this savage, disgusting wretch it has to be given some credit. At best, he's a victim of his own power in a place where that makes him a god, and the natives of that place are his victims.

    But in the film, Kurtz is a larger-than-life dominating presence, whose goal is not to fuck around in his personal kingdom but to keep fighting the war. When Marlow meets him after being captured, Kurtz gives a monologue (video), where he describes seeing a pile of children's arms that have been cut off. In real life, the Belgians committed horrific crimes like this against the Africans, but in Apocalypse now, the children had received vaccines from the US, and because of that their arms were cut off by Vietnamese soldiers. And that serves as the basis for his outright fascist screed about the power of will and shamelessness and the primordial instinct to kill and a bunch of other grade-A John Milius bullshit. And yes, the film presents him as insane, but more than that it presents him as a victim of the brutality of the colonized people resisting their oppressors.

    That's an absolutely fucking unconscionable change to make and turns the whole thing inside-out. The horrific conditions of life for the Africans shown in Heart of Darkness were a paraphrasing of real historical crimes actually committed by real Belgian colonist monsters. Taking inspiration from that novel, but making the colonized people into the perpetrators of that crime is absolutely unforgivable and renders the whole film into true fascist apologia. Literally, utterly unforgivable.

  • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
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    3 months ago

    PCU is an insane movie for trying to launder reactionary sentiments and nihilism as "cool". I also appreciated that the antagonists were the fraternity pricks, who had to exist in secret because they were banned. if only it were actually ever true.

    but shout out to the Jake Busey as "Mersh" cameo (and the whole crew at Jerrytown) for still making me laugh 30 years later and Jon Favreau playing a dumbass trying to buy beer in small town Connecticut while extremely high/unable to handle his shit.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B05QQIqHPAc

    God help me, it still makes me laugh, I think because of the complete commitment of the actors to absurd characters.

  • darkmode [comrade/them]
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    3 months ago

    The Fallout show, like fallout 3 and 4, completely sanitizes the universe. Most of the difficult questions about how a post-nuclear apocalypse world would continue are unanswered. It's just just lol so random it's a video game. I really did not like the writing of the show. I watched about half the first season at my friend's request and couldn't continue as a proud New Vegas neckbeard

    • UlyssesT
      hexagon
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • darkmode [comrade/them]
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        3 months ago

        Later Fallouts further trivialized nuclear warfare to the point of 76 making it into a wacky thing to do to get le epic loot drops from le epic monsters.

        You're right. I think one of the strangest decisions Obsidian made after nailing it as best they could with the base game was make Lonesome road edgy epic Nuke everybody they're all bad. Maybe the fallout show creators are correct: video games are stupid

  • DragonBallZinn [he/him]
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    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Fuck PCU.

    But to contribute I’ll mention one kids movie and one movie for older audiences that both rubbed me the wrong way.

    For kids (and to flaunt my weeb credentials) we have Pokemon: Mewtwo strikes back. Mewtwo is disgusted with the ways humanity treats pokemon so they want to wipe out all life on earth save for them, and the clones they made. It’s a lighter version of PCU of the ubiquitous ‘evil antifascist’. Mewtwo may be sort of right, but they seek revenge instead of justice so that makes the former injustice ok. Also, Mewtwo decided to blame and wipe out all of humanity when they had a golden opportunity to just telekinetically blow up Giovanni, a leader of a corporation dedicated to exploiting pokemon. Thankfully, iirc the Japanese version was better and Mewtwo was more lost and confused like a proto-Zuko. But I still sort of like it because it is one of the first times Pokemon does unpack its own ethics, and Mewtwo continues as a sympathetic character in a later movie.

    My dishonorable mention is idiocracy. We’ve analyzed it a bunch of times, but it could have been a huge warning of the dangers of anti-intellectualism in a way that I wish was touched up on in Fahrenheit 451, but it had to do the “it’s poor people’s fault for trusting the fascist porks they hold so dear!” (Being a reactionary isn’t metaphysical you fucking lib!) it would have been handled a lot better if the “idiots” were revealed to be perfectly intelligent but faked stupidity because they want to be ‘cool’ or were just trying to look macho or something. Plus I think it would have been hilarious if there was a scene where there was a stereotypical jock and cheerleader reading Plato for fun, were caught by the protagonist and begged him not to tell anyone they were “closet geeks”.

    Finally the big one I want to touch up on is the Star Wars prequel and sequels, I think it made a mistake by adding an explanation to the space magic, like power levels from dragon ball but the film expects you to take it seriously. Finally the demonization of anger. Sure, part of the film was showing how the Jedi dogma bit it in the ass, but our last impressions of the Star Wars characters for years should not have been that dogma. Also, I really did not like Kylo’s forced redemption in the sequels. Rey should have just turned him to ash with force lightning in the first film, had all the chuds cry that the character that resembles them got destroyed and had Rey tackle a whole new threat altogether that wasn’t a literal rehash of the old villains. There’s so much of the expanded universe they could draw from.

  • darkmode [comrade/them]
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    edit-2
    3 months ago

    I only have seen a small slice of it but since Succession didn't include any Little Saint James corporate-art scenes to my knowledge I can only imagine that its fascist apologia has been wholly, gleefully swallowed.

    • UlyssesT
      hexagon
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • Adlach@lemmygrad.ml
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        edit-2
        3 months ago

        Succession? No, I think you'd like it. The Roys are all bumbling, incompetent manchildren throughout the entire series. You're just watching them get dunked on the entire time—they never once make a decision shown to have positive consequences.

        I'm sort of confused at it being called fascist apologia. It's not revolutionary, sure, but the worst I can accuse it of is nihilism. The Roys are stand-ins for Bloomberg, Murdoch, Zuckerberg, etc and they're mercilessly mocked by the story. They fail to maintain any sort of meaningful relationships because everything is transactional to a capitalist.

        Maybe it's too sympathetic to Logan, but I dunno. His kids hate him, he exploits young female staffers, and he dies alone.

        • darkmode [comrade/them]
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          edit-2
          3 months ago

          i called it that bc i didn’t actually watch the show beyond maybe like 20 mins . sometimes when you post, you miss

  • LeylaLove [she/her, love/loves]
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    3 months ago

    What's PCU?

    My pick has to be freakonomics or zeitgeist Haven't watched either since I was a kid, but I don't remember either of them having a particularly strong point to make, more just being a string of neolib observations to make libs feel smart. I remember there being elements of social darwinism in both though.

    • UlyssesT
      hexagon
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      deleted by creator

    • DragonBallZinn [he/him]
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      edit-2
      3 months ago

      Imagine if the Turner Diaries and American Pie had a baby. That’s PCU.

      The literal message is “you should be an asshole”

      It’s pure mental masturbation for class traitor filth.

      EDIT: I misused lumpen and should have said ‘class traitor’.

      • m532 [she/her]
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        3 months ago

        lumpen filth

        WTF is wrong with you?

        WTF did the poors do to you that you hate them so much?

        • DragonBallZinn [he/him]
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          3 months ago

          I’m dumb, I thought ‘lumpenproletariat’ meant “reactionary that betrays their class”.