October
13 , 2003
New Republic Online
EASTERBLOGG
by Gregg Easterbrook
_____________________________________________________________
TAKE
OUT THE GORE AND KILL BILL IS AN EPISODE OF "MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER
RANGERS": Is Quentin Tarantino the single greatest phony in the
history of Hollywood? I realize that's saying a lot--about Hollywood,
not him. But it's the sole explanation I can think of to explain his
bizarre prominence.
All of Tarantino's
work is pure junk. How can you be a renowned director without ever having
made a film that's even good, to say nothing of great? No film student
in 50 years will spend a single second with a Tarantino movie, except
to shake his or her head.
Tarantino does nothing
but churn out shabby depictions of slaughter as a form of pleasure--and
that, for decades, has been what the least imaginative and least talented
of Hollywood churn out. Supposedly it's "revolutionary," or
something, that Tarantino films revel in violence to a preposterous
degree, but that's like saying it is revolutionary for a presidential
candidate to revel in complaints against Washington bureaucrats. Nothing
about Hollywood is more hackneyed or trite than preposterous violence--and
that's all Tarantino has ever put onto film.
Set aside what it
says about contemporary Hollywood culture that the supposed liberal
progressives of this city now ceaselessly mass-market presentations
of butchering the helpless as a form of entertainment, even, as rewarding
self-expression. Why do we suppose that, with Hollywood's violence-glorifying
films now shown all around the world to billions of people--remember,
mass distribution of Hollywood movies to the developing world and Islamic
states is a recent phenomenon--young terrorists around the globe now
seem to view killing the innocent as a positive thing, even, a norm?
Set that concern aside. Tarantino's films are simply trite as regards
adoration of violence. In Hollywood, nothing could be less original.
And his supposed
innovative screenplays? Spare me. The out-of-sequence technique Tarantino
uses is praised as ingenious, yet every first-year film student is taught
this device. To laud Tarantino as innovative because events happen out-of-sequence
is like lauding The Bridges of Madison County as innovative because
it opens with a discovered letter from someone who has died. All novice
novelists know that device. Of course, the novelistic device may be
used well or poorly, just as time-shifted cinema may be good or bad.
Tarantino's out-of-sequence film moments are, uniformly, trite drivel.
And supposedly Tarantino
is some kind of counter-genius for getting box-office stars like Bruce
Willis and Uma Thurman to debase themselves in his drivel. But commercial
Hollywood types debase themselves for a living; most never do anything
else. To persuade someone to do that which he or she was eager to do
anyway isn't much in the way of accomplishment.
Tarantino must draw
his prominence in Hollywood, and among film-buff culture, from the very
fact of his phoniness. First, his career says that you can do nothing
but wallow in preposterous violence--Hollywood's cheapest and least
original aspect--and still be revered. Second, his career validates
the idea that you can accomplish nothing at all in any meaningful sense
and yet acquire fame. The idea that you can get celebrity, money, and
women through the movies without having any merits whatsoever is at
the core of the Hollywood's conception of itself. Tarantino is its ultimate
expression of this phoniness. Please don't tell me that makes him ironically
postmodern.
Corporate sidelight:
Kill Bill is distributed by Miramax, a Disney studio. Disney seeks profit
by wallowing in gore--Kill Bill opens with an entire family being graphically
slaughtered for the personal amusement of the killers--and by depicting
violence and murder as pleasurable sport. Disney's Miramax has been
behind a significant share of Hollywood's recent violence-glorifying
junk, including Scream, whose thesis was that murdering your friends
and teachers is a fun way for high-school kids to get back at anyone
who teases them. Scream was the favorite movie of the Columbine killers.
Set aside what it
says about Hollywood that today even Disney thinks what the public needs
is ever-more-graphic depictions of killing the innocent as cool amusement.
Disney's CEO, Michael Eisner, is Jewish; the chief of Miramax, Harvey
Weinstein, is Jewish. Yes, there are plenty of Christian and other Hollywood
executives who worship money above all else, promoting for profit the
adulation of violence. Does that make it right for Jewish executives
to worship money above all else, by promoting for profit the adulation
of violence? Recent European history alone ought to cause Jewish executives
to experience second thoughts about glorifying the killing of the helpless
as a fun lifestyle choice. But history is hardly the only concern. Films
made in Hollywood are now shown all over the world, to audiences that
may not understand the dialogue or even look at the subtitles, but can't
possibly miss the message--now Disney's message--that hearing the screams
of the innocent is a really fun way to express yourself.
posted 09:24 a.m.
- Gregg Easterbrook
Published At New
Republic Online
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Gregg Easterbrook