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Aquarian
Weekly 3/2/11
REALITY CHECK
ANGLO-AMERICA
ON PARADE
"The King's Speech & "The Social Network" in Oscars
Contrast
By the time this goes to press it is likely one
of the two films we'll discuss here will have won the Academy
Award for Best Picture; "The King's Speech" or "The Social Network".
Granted, many outside of Hollywood could not give a pack of flying
farts, nor do we, particularly. Although the Oscars is the only
award show worth watching, an annual fury of unchecked wagering
(some larger than others) on the outcomes of Best Costume, Most
Likely to Gaffer or some such. My wife is always surprised when
I pick six or seven in a row, citing corporate politics and the
inner machinations of the studio culture -- who is owed what and
why someone like say Martin Scorsese can be repeatedly ignored
after directing an unmatched string of brilliant, culture-defining
films and then win for a piece of shit like "The Departed".
It
is also an opportune time for me to ratchet up a healthy dose
of rage for less dire activities, which has happened on several
occasions, not the least of which surrounded the defeat of "E.T."
at the hands of "Gandhi" in 1982, when as an apoplectic college
student drunk on a dozen Genesee Cream Ales I went off the rails
and took on half a dorm room of activists.
However, we're not here to merely discuss Oscar
mistakes, but use the timing to discuss two extremely important,
if not disparate films, as a consequence of their place of origin
and the revealing aspects of their cultures.
Aside from three-word titles beginning with "The",
there is nothing about either "The King's Speech" or "The Social
Network" that could be compared. The contrasts however are stark
and provide ample insight into the general milieu of which they
depict. There is also the interesting inside game of how the awards
culture may view the films around the events of its times.
For a good example, one could cite the 1976 Best
Picture that the experts had all-but handed to "All The President's
Men" for its timely pertinence to the fall-out of Watergate, et
al. Judging from the preponderance of left-leaning, Nixon-despising
voters, it appeared to the odds makers as a no-brainer. However,
it was the individualist, rags-to-riches feel-good "Rocky" that
took the prize, celebrating the nation's bicentennial in style;
erasing our horrors by pasting over it with goose-bumped fantasy.
This, of course, was the polar opposite of the old-fashioned
childhood fairy tale of "E.T." being dumped in favor of the solemn
epic of political strife in "Gandhi" two-years into the Reagan
era. This made the 1998 Oscars a tough call as the brutal WWII
odyssey magnificently told in "Saving Private Ryan" was beaten
by the wryly poignant "Shakespeare in Love". Go figure.
This year "The King's Speech", a superb tale of
overcoming a stigma, both physical and metaphorical, set against
the backdrop of a Europe at war, has rightfully been the talk
of the odds circuit. As timing is everything in handicapping these
things, "King's" recent release last month helps the cause. The
press has been kind and the performances, specifically Colin Firth
as the self-flagellating, reluctant King of England, George VI,
whose infamous stammer threatens to victimize an empire, are certainly
worthy. "The Social Network", released in early October of last
year, initially fell into "perfect timing" in the "awards season"
brief, but has lagged in the shadow of "King's" since the new
year. But just in the nick of time, the more recent uprisings
in the Middle East, more to the point, Egypt has brought the subject
of Facebook and social media in general to the fore. And while
"King's" deals with a time of enormous upheaval and greatness
overcoming peril both on a personal and national level, the charming/alarming
story of Harvard computer geeks on an inebriated vengeance kick
exploding into a billion dollar culture shift now trumps it. However,
here comes another royal wedding, so...
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There
is nothing subtle in the way these films showcase their
cultures.
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Ultimately, though, and what I actually set out
to dissect this week, is the glaring introspection of stereotypes
set in these films' environments that make for an interesting
stand-off at Oscar time; an echo of the British sense of deportment,
image and overt social roles versus the infinite American scuffle
for fame, riches and personal victory.
Let's face it, without having to issue a spoiler
alert "The King's Speech" is eminently English in every way, and
not just its setting, cast, and history. It reeks of a sense of
duty to a greater cause, the respect (obsession) with both visible
and hinted caste systems, the tethered subjugation of personal
safety for an expected task, and the explicit role of gender in
a habitually repressed society. The setting and its environs ignite
the patrician tension and the subsequent English charm. Without
the cultural boundaries and royal expectations, as well as the
pressure set upon the mid-twentieth century man, or the male figure
seen as an effective father figure, leader, or functioning testosterone
machine, especially when confronted by an outside aggressor, we
have the story of a whiny dink with a speech impediment.
Now line that up against the world of "The Social
Network" and it's as if we are watching a different species, much
less a different culture; as the characters -- youthful, defiant,
slyly disingenuous and voraciously creative -- work on a sub-level
of society, actually going as far as to circumvent, manipulate,
and eventually obliterate it. "Social" is uniquely an American
film, or at the very least a heaping slice of Americana; with
characters exhibiting a feral level of competition, utilizing
ingenuity as an act of revenge, and once the cash comes in, unleashing
a relentless back-stabbing free-for-all.
"The Social Network", as "The King's Speech" on
the other end of the pond speaks of the image and scope of power,
could only be about the power grab in the American experience;
substitute Mark Zuckerberg, played with an understated kind of
robotic myopia by the young, talented, Jesse Eisenberg, with say
Thomas Edison and you've got the American Experience and everything
that results from it; power, celebrity, riches. Oh, and also backlash,
fall-out and comeuppance.
There is nothing subtle in the way these films showcase
their cultures. For instance, the use of references and soundtracks;
Shakespeare is routinely quoted and classical music beautifully
layered in "King's" and a bevy of fast-talked, tech-driven jargon
and strategically placed hip hop/rock colors "Social". At the
end of each film, the melancholia of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony
in "King's" expertly balances the tortured protagonist's final
triumph and The Beatles "Baby You're a Rich Man" underlines the
main character's ivory tower isolation at the epilogue of "Social";
both as equally gripping as they are forcefully incongruent.
Both stories are about men, one a middle-aged product
of societal station, the other a boy, using wit, skill and aggressive
battle tactics to overcome the very same prejudices that make
the former character in "King's", well, a king. Even their women
respond accordingly to their environments, "King's" mothering
queen engineering the action, ably played by the gorgeous Helena
Bonham Carter, and the parade of young women, opportunistic, manipulative
and sometimes outright mad, which come in and out of "Social".
Finally, we have the supporting male characters,
which act as confidants and spiritual guides in both films. The
stalwart, Geoffrey Rush, who plays therapist, Sherpa, and buddy
to the king in his time of crisis and the new comer, Justin Timberlake,
whose slick-talking, coke-addled contrivances, pull the golden
goose inside out. The Englishman, refined, if not middle class,
a patriarchal substitute, and the American, a rebellious, capitalist
rogue, a kindred spirit. It matters little the personalities or
their methods, because both main characters do just fine in the
end. Well...?
So who will win? Hey, by the time many read this,
you'll know. But, as in the tertiary awards; Best Actor, Actress,
Supporting Roles, Director, etc, don't look for the voters to
provide a hint where they believe the audience or the artists
are in terms of sentiment, acceptance or comfort. For certain,
both films have done well and gotten the lion's share of rave
reviews; American and British.
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