“The Bikeriders” a film by Jeff Nichols, 2023
This is a somewhat real story of a working-class subculture
in the 1960s in Chicago, of guys who liked to ride and work on motorcycles,
drink, fight, break traffic laws and hang-out.
It is also how motorcycle clubs turned into criminal gangs in the
1970s. The Chicago ‘Vandals’ are really
a fictional name for the very real Outlaws, who are now one of 4 big international MC gangs. This is an origin story as
told through interviews with one of the women connected to the group.
It features the ‘wild’ and handsome Benny, who lives for
his bike and the group. The club is led
by Johnny, played by Tom Hardy, an older guy who works, but was inspired to
form the group by the movie The Wild Ones
with Brando. Benny is a James Dean knock-off, so that tells you the role of
film in culture. The story is told
through interviews by the rather straight Kathy, who falls in love with Benny
and marries him quickly. That is the set-up.
The men in the group are a varied bunch – good mechanics where
some work, some don’t and are mostly older men.
They ride Harley’s and Indians.
One member from Romania or Hungary dislikes ‘pinkos,’ who he describes
as college students wearing sweaters and glasses, and who later burn draft
cards. He is rejected by the military
because of his surly attitude. There is
no hint of illegality in what they do except fist fights, running red lights,
and other trivial nonsense. They stick
with each other and will resort to violence if one of their members is hurt by
an outsider. They do burn down a bar
after hard-head Benny is savagely beaten and injured there.
There is a contrast between the non-motorcyclists and these bikers. Kathy’s proletarian boyfriend gets angry after she spends a late night drinking with Benny. In anger he later drives off in his pickup truck and leaves her. The two men who beat Benny because he won’t take off his club jacket in the bar probably had jobs. One club member is killed in an accident and Johnny is spit on by the mother at the funeral. So the club is a transitional group as seen by non-club members, to thuggery and crime of some sort. But they are not there yet.
The Vietnam War is going on and military vets begin
returning to the U.S. in the late 1960s and early '70s. Some want to join the Vandals and these ‘new guys’ are a
different breed from the original members. They are more violent and rougher
than the originals, who are not that inclined to violence and are ultimately
kinder to women. They new guys threaten
to kill one older member who wants to quit and become a motorcycle cop. After
Johnny solves that problem with unorthodox violence, Benny bails due to the increasingly violent climate. Other chapters begin to form and younger
punks want to join. Johnny rejects one young thug who would abandon his
comrades for membership and that delinquent later challenges Johnny for
leadership of the Vandals. “Knives or fists?” says Johnny. The kid says ‘knives.’ They later meet
somewhere on Fullerton in an empty lot. Johnny gets out his knife and approaches and
the kid shoots him dead.
This is the moment where the fictional Chicago Vandals
become the real Outlaws, a criminal gang involved in drugs, protection, gun
running, murder and the like. This is
when proletarianism is abandoned for lumpenism. In dialectics, this is when quantity turns into 'quality.' “That” is the difference between a real gang and a club, a topic this
blog has followed over the role of actual gangs in any revolutionary struggle.
A somewhat romantic portrait of the early Outlaws where life imitates film. When Benny hears of Johnny’s death, he weeps for the first time in his life, unlike a ‘real’ man and he gives up on motorcycling. The film is absent any material understanding of how Benny and some others survive financially – for him probably on the wages of his wife Kathy. The interviewer was a photographer who created a picture book out of this. Nichols has done other films – in particular “Mud” and “Loving.” Worth watching if you are a biker like me, with a female viewpoint of sorts, but the romanticism is also evident.
Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search
box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms: “The
Outlaws,” “Shop Class as Soulcraft,” “Mayans M.C.,” “Spring is Here and the
Time is Right for Riding in the Streets,” “Gang Politics,” “James-Younger Gang,”
“Peaky Blinders,” “City on a Hill,” “Razorblade Tears,” “Fear City,” “Get
Gotti,” “How to Become a Mob Boss,” “Athena,” “Drug War Capitalism.”
The Cultural Marxist
October 24, 2024
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