Mass Murder LOLs

One striking aspect of the Star Wars behemoth is how the bad guys have become hip1.  The triangles and chevrons of the Darth Vader and Stormtrooper mask have become iconic in their way, and adorn T-shirts, rucksacks, pin-badges, and even baby clothes.


It therefore seems natural that one can buy Darth Vader and Stormtrooper outfits for your kids. Continue reading “Mass Murder LOLs”

Rhodes, Political Correctness and the Censorship of History

You’re all aware of the controversy surrounding the Cecil Rhodes statue at Oxford University, right?
To recap: Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902) was the colonialist, businessman and white supremacist whose career in Southern Africa had huge impact on the continent.  The celebrated Rhodes Scholarship programme at Oxford University was established by his estate. As such, there is a statue of him at Oriel College at Oxford.  Some current students are campaigning to have the statue removed on the grounds that Rhodes was a racist and not someone who should be glorified in stone.
This campaign is happening in a milieu of renewed debates about freedom of expression and decency at universities.  I am against ‘no platform’ policies,  and against the abuse of useful innovations such as Safe Spaces and Trigger Warnings as a way to shut down offensive speech. Continue reading “Rhodes, Political Correctness and the Censorship of History”

How We Export The Erosion of Human Rights

Whenever I moan about the British Government interfering with and weakening our human rights protections, one thing I usually note is what a terrible example it sets to other countries around the world.  How can we expect other Governments to respect human rights if we do not respect them ourselves.
Here is a concrete example of this problem in action, courtesy of The Guardian.

China introduces its own ‘snooper’s charter’
Defending the law, the Chinese government pointed to legislation proposed in Western nations, such as Britain’s draft investigatory powers bill, which grants similar powers to the UK government.

There is no need to comment further at this point.

'The Force Awakens' and our Culture of Self-Referentiality


Our media moves at such a furious pace, you have to be quick to your blaster if you want to fire off a ‘hot take’. Wait for others to shoot first, and you’ll find your head slumped on a table in the Cantina of Irrelevance. I fear that writing about Star Wars: The Force Awakens in January 2016 may seem like sad devotion to an ancient religion, but I did want to make a brief note about the film, building on what all the other critics have said. Spoilers ahead.
Many, many writers have noted how the film appears to be little more than a remake of the original trilogy. Each plot-point, scene and character seems to have a companion in the 1977 film or one of its sequels. As well as clear parallels between, say, Rey on the desert planet of Jakku and Luke on the desert planet of Tatooine (both characters are strong in the force and both are hurriedly propelled skywards by the same piece of ‘junk’, the Millennium Falcon), there are times when the similarities are egregious and a little lazy. Entrusting crucial computer files to a brave, bleeping droid; a planet killing weapon with a single point of weakness. 
However, the similarities become forgivable when they invert the original scene or flip the gender roles: my favourite was when the hapless Finn arrives, still in his Stormtrooper gear, to rescue Poe—a clear reference to the Luke and Leia meet-cute in Episode IV.
As the film progressed, I was struck by how so much of its meaning depends on a good knowledge of the previous films. By this, I do not simply mean that the story is a saga or a soap opera, where what happened to this person’s dad or that person’s mum is crucial in understanding the drama of each scene (it is that, too, but that is to be expected with epic sci-fi and fantasy stories).
Rather, it is that every scene has two layers of meaning.  First, the prima facie advancing of the plot; and then a second meaning, which is the reference: not to some abstract monomyth, but to a precise piece of film-making within an specific, earlier piece of art from the late 1970s.
I am sure that there are plenty of people who watched this film with little or no knowledge of the original triology.  I do wonder what that would be like! Akin, I imagine, to watching a Bollywood film when you cannot speak Hindi. The subtitles help you out but you chuckle out of time with everyone else. The Force Awakens is not really a film for newbies.
That the film cannot stand alone, that it is not self-contained, is not necessarily a bad thing.  Indeed, at times I think the references are perfect.  The way the music score in the final scene iterates towards Luke’s familiar theme is just sublime.  Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that the biggest film of the year (possibly the highest grossing film of all time, eventually) is predominantly paraphrase, parody and reference. I think that it is emblematic for how the dominant culture entertains us in the middle half of the second decade of the twenty-first century: through overt and specific call-back. This is a post-Simpsons Star Wars; Sci-fi for the Family Guy generation.
The self-awareness is not only to be found in the scene-for-scene parallells, but in the dialogue. Star Wars always had funny, flippant lines, usually spoken by Harrison Ford as Han Solo. He, and others, deliver similar lines in The Force Awakens and yet here they feel more appropriate than in the earnest originals.  In particular, the way in which Rey chastises the men who patronise her feels bang on-trend for the decade. Her dialogue with the other characters reminded me of countless scenes from the modern Doctor Who, where the various so-called ‘companions’ do a good trade in one-liners that deflate the Doctor’s grandiosity…. as if they know they’re in a TV show. Star Wars: The Force Awakens does not break the fourth wall in the way Spaceballs does so magnificently. But there are moments, when a character subverts a movie cliché, where I felt that a wink at the camera was just a few frames beyond the cut.
The biggest subversion of movie clichés is in the notable and welcome prevalence of female characters in the film. I think that also says something important about our Fifteen-Years-Into-The-Millenium1 culture. I will write about that in a separate post.


1. Its incredibly tiresome that we lack an eloquent way to describe our current period in history. “The Noughties” sounds crass and uncultured, and what do we even call the years beyond 2010: “The Teens”? “The Tweens”? In the past I have used fin de millenaire, referencing the established phrase fin de siecle, but of course that refers to the end of a period, right before the turning of the century or millenium, rather than the period immediately after.