this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
19 points (100.0% liked)

movies

22772 readers
225 users here now

Rules for Movies & TV Discussion

  1. Any discussion of Disney properties should contain a (cw: imperialism) tag. If your post isn't tagged appropriately it will be removed.

  2. Anti-Bong Joon-ho trolling will result in an immediate ban from c/movies and submitted to the site administrators for review.

  3. On Star Trek Sunday only posts discussing how we might achieve space communism are permitted. Non-Star Trek related content will be removed and you will be temporarily banned until the following Sunday.

Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.

AVATAR 3

Perverts Guide to Ideology

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

As far as I could tell in the movie the rich people were depicted as decent parents if not a bit naive, while the poor family were backstabbing assholes who betrayed their fellow workers (the housekeeper and her husband) because of sheer malice. Not once does the film hint at the underlying economical system as the reason why the rich are rich and the poor are poor.

If you are a socialist, you will (correctly) identify capitalism as the reason for the misery of the poor people in the film, and the rich as part of the bourgeoisie who exploit them. But that isn't any different than analysing an IRL crime through that lens, the film didn't help you reach that conclusion, it just presented a scenario.

A chud could easily see the rich family as the honest entrepreneurs and the poor family as poor because of the negative behaviors they exhibited, and there is nothing in the film that would dispute that interpretation.

With the poor family getting punished for their deception, and the son resolving to make money to save his father at the end (presumably through more "honest" means), it even displays the "pull yourself by the bootstraps" belief.

The best case interpretation of the film I can make is that "the rich people should be more conscious of the poor's struggles, and the poors should stay in their place or risk losing everything" which is pretty reactionary and not the class conscious film many people described it as. I guess you could see the ending as punishment for the class betrayal but I think that's a stretch.

Am I overzealous in policing the politics of the media I consume to the point of misinterpreting things or finding an even vaguely leftist film that hard?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 11 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Is that what he does? I'm not sure I ever really saw it that way, the brutality seemed to me to be pretty straightforwardly a symptom of police incompetence and it just fucks up their investigation more and more until they are so out of leads that even the guy who acted like he was the smug smart cop who cares about evidence, is about to just murder someone and put the blame on him anyways.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 11 months ago

I watched this again recently and you're right, the violence is really just incompetence. Their abuse of suspects interferes with solving the case more than helping it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

guy who acted like he was the smug smart cop who cares about evidence, is about to just murder someone and put the blame on him anyways.

At the end, he tried to do his optical pat down as well, but then realized he doesn’t know shit and stares at the audience because he knows that the killer outsmarted him and is probably watching