Posted by
Hulbstar on Tuesday, August 08, 2006 10:04:38 PM
This weekend my wife and I rented V for Vendetta. What a horrible
choice that was. It was long, boring and preachy. We knew we were
in for ride during the opening scene when the voice of the dictatorship blamed
the collapse of America on acceptance of Muslims and
Homosexuals. As if radical Islam does not currently pose the most
prominent threat to this country and gay marriage one of the most prominent
debates on the structure of society.
V, the hero of the movie, is labeled
a terrorist by the oppressive regime he is resisting. What’s more, V
spent a significant amount of time in a concentration camp that conducted
experiments on humans, including V. The officials that ran the camp are
the main targets of our hero during his quest to start a popular
uprising.
The politics are thick
throughout the movie. The regime owes much too the old Soviet
states. The populace lives in fear of the government, with the threat of
disappearing during any given night hanging over their collective
heads. The movie uses imagery that is supposed to be remind one of Nazi
Germany, giving their dictator a fascist spin. The politics of the film
are clearly left leaning, so it makes sense that the regime is more fascist
then communist. After all, it is easy for the left to refer to
conservatives they don’t like as Nazi’s. Really it doesn’t matter, if you
died at the hands of Stalin, Mao or Hitler, you are just as dead. Still,
the movie creates an evil right wing dictatorship (despite the fact that the
left wing communist are responsible for several million more deaths in the last
century). I can accept this premise if the movie is good, but it
wasn’t. The whole thing was bland and the movie never gave a good enough
reason to care about V or his main accomplice Evey. He was experimented
on, but for what purpose? Does he have some kind of superpower from the
experiments? He was abused and mistreated, but in what manner? No
one, audience or character gets to see beneath V’s mask, furthering the apathy
toward the character.
As boring as the movie was, the real
moral stupidity didn’t start until after the movie. The extra’s feature a
“making of” segment in which the cast members get the opportunity to expound on
the politics of the movie. The first thing that jumped at me was the
comments about terrorism as a tactic. Several different cast members,
Hugo Weaving chief among them, point to V’s use of terror tactics and
equivocates between V and real life terrorists. Wait a second, because
your fictional character uses terror, that means that it’s okay to shoot up a Jewish
Center, and bomb
buildings? This kind of silliness is what concerns me most about our
ability as a free society to combat Islamic fundamentalism. That the star
of the film can recognize no difference between the fictional V- who targets:
government agents, those who torture him and clearly declared targets, wears a
uniform (of sorts), and announces his main target ahead of time- and those who
hide behind and intentionally target civilians says a lot about our current
media culture. Islamic fundamentalist aren’t trying eliminate free states, or impose Sharia, in the eyes of
Hugo Weaving, they are misunderstood freedom fighters.
It would have been so easy to make V
a great freedom fighter, but instead we got morally ambiguous mush.