intertribal (
intertribal) wrote2008-05-24 06:54 pm
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turistas go home!
The title is my reaction to Indiana Jones: The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The above is also my reaction to every Indiana Jones movie, so I guess if you like Indiana Jones, you'll like it.
Let me just say though, that as someone who watched 9 FUCKING seasons of the X-Files, this sanitized, Americanized, and abridged version in 2 1/2 hours and M&Ms packaging just feels like a smack in the fucking face.
+ : every time Indiana Jones fails at something.
- : every time Indiana Jones succeeds at something.
best character: crazy professor man + mutt
worst character: marion ravenwood + indiana jones
best impossibility: Indiana Jones gets pulled out of a sand trap by holding onto a snake that is somehow able to hold his entire weight!
worst impossibility: Indiana Jones survives a nuclear explosion by hiding in a refrigerator and doesn't die of cancer in three weeks!
Let me just say though, that as someone who watched 9 FUCKING seasons of the X-Files, this sanitized, Americanized, and abridged version in 2 1/2 hours and M&Ms packaging just feels like a smack in the fucking face.
+ : every time Indiana Jones fails at something.
- : every time Indiana Jones succeeds at something.
best character: crazy professor man + mutt
worst character: marion ravenwood + indiana jones
best impossibility: Indiana Jones gets pulled out of a sand trap by holding onto a snake that is somehow able to hold his entire weight!
worst impossibility: Indiana Jones survives a nuclear explosion by hiding in a refrigerator and doesn't die of cancer in three weeks!
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Jason would say this is especially problematic for any racial minorities that are essentially defined by their class position--people think they're talking about race, think there is such a thing as (for example) "black culture" when what there mostly is is poverty. And taking pride in such an identity that's defined by a lack of education, working class masculinity, etc., only makes the inequality worse, and he wishes people would get outside those stereotyped identities. "Mexico is not a plumber!" And not all white people are rich and privileged. And so on. He usually says that people have to just improve themselves, need to be taught that college is an expectation for them just as much as rich white people (here I agree), rather than taking issue with the standards people have to meet to get there, although I think I've changed his mind somewhat about what standards are/do--that they don't have inherent value/superiority. Then again, he was a Marxist before giving up and saying, 'There's no way to create the sort of change that needs to happen, I'm just going to be an arrogant elitist, the West is the best! Besides, Western repression compensates so much better for Western flaws than anything else.' And so he joined the Peace Corps to try to do something in the real world.
I disagree with Tara, I don't think it's okay deceive people into thinking things are their fault which clearly aren't, although I'm not in a position to make that sort of decision. People learn to speak how they grew up speaking, they learn to act how they grew up acting, and so they're at a disadvantage from before they even get to school and try to learn what's standardized in books, which is, of course, taken from a certain class position. So standardization presents more and more of a problem--it has to come from somewhere, it's not something that's equally achievable for everyone. How to solve that, though, is a really difficult question. I don't think I have a very good answer, and if anyone does, I'm all for it, really. Maybe the best there is is making the system we've got as good, as fair for all citizens, as it can be. But I do see the problems with that, with the hegemonic culture of standardization.
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