"Jurassic World,” 2015
Nearly every film-goer is familiar with this film series
based on the books written by right-winger Michael Crichton. But like the Bourne series written by another
right-winger, Robert Ludlum, which was turned into an anti-CIA screed, this
series has also turned the politics on its head. Even the last Bond film, “Quantum of Solace’
nailed oil corporations polluting jungles.
What gives with the writers in Hollywood?
Theme Park Bucks |
Many events in the film are unreal, but that is
normal for American films. Escaping
children do not follow watercourses to the ocean but wander back into the jungle; velociraptors somehow regain affinity
for their human trainer in a fight-to-the-death battle sequence; corporate
executives shed their high heels and kill; no one can shoot the giant eyes out of a
giant Tyrannosaurus Rex hybrid with all those guns. OK.
But the delight is in the details. “De-extinction” – which is now Whole Earth
Catalog founder Stewart Brand’s “TED” talk interest - shows itself to be just a
gimmick. After all, thousands of species
are dying presently in a ‘6th Extinction’ so who is going to waste
time recreating a wooly mammoth except some capitalist corporation? Not a word about those present species going
down from the ‘de-extinctionists.’ A
laughably large swimming dinosaur eats a giant shark while being watched by
thousands in a re-creation of the giant Sea World aquarium. This should put the punch-line on the decline
of Sea World attendance and its stock price due to its mistreatment of sea life
like Orca whales. Many cell phones were
initially bought for emergencies. Here
the sound quality is so bad on one that its useless, which is familiar to
anyone with a cell phone. Several key people in the film point out that the
dinosaurs (read animals) and humans are in a ‘relationship’ – not something on
a spreadsheet. Or that the dinosaurs are
independent entities, not machines or things.
A raging overweight private military contractor wants to use the
velociraptors as combat accessories to take out military enemies – an absurd idea that he pursues to the end. Then
there is the efficient Asian scientist cooking up a strange combination of
genes to create a new monster with ‘bigger teeth’ to increase corporate profits
and goose park attendance. Read Dr.
Frankenstein. And there is the
billionaire know-it-all CEO who confidently tries to pilot a copter he has just
learned how to fly into the thick of things.
Hedonistic voyeurism at the human control of these prehistoric beasts is turned into its opposite - a bloody chaos created by capital's hubris. The hybrid monster dinosaur is the logical conclusion of capital's inability to think about anything but profits. It is the dialectic turned.
Hedonistic voyeurism at the human control of these prehistoric beasts is turned into its opposite - a bloody chaos created by capital's hubris. The hybrid monster dinosaur is the logical conclusion of capital's inability to think about anything but profits. It is the dialectic turned.
The most negative aspect of the film is the over-controlling operations
executive, played by a power-suited redhead with an always-ringing cell
phone. A woman was chosen for this role,
only to be straightened out by the courageous ‘man’s man’ raptor trainer with
the Triumph motorcycle. This is a
conventional ‘delicate weak woman in the woods’ narrative and the most stupid
thing about the film. And no, she
doesn’t get dirt on her outfit, her face, nor is her hair mussed or her
delicate necklace even torn off in the midst of all the chaos. The award for most obvious product placement
goes to Mercedes – every vehicle on this island is a Mercedes Benz except the
Triumph motorcycle, which only aficionados will recognize. Evidently Triumph did not pay the filmmakers
any money. Capital makes money while
skewering itself. What did Lenin say
about ropes? And is this even a rope?
What is implicit but not commented on is the throng of
well-heeled and clueless people (us, the viewers or tourists evidently…) who
paid money to come to this isolated island and participate in this
monstrosity. The film is a virtual zoo
for the viewers too, but only virtual.
Yet more and more people are seeing that real zoos, circuses and
aquariums or their more covert cousins, ‘nature centers’ for wolves and bears,
are just jails for animals. It’s almost
the same principle as taking a tour of a maximum security prison for humans.
And I saw it at the Riverview Theater
Red Frog
August 26, 2015
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