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Matrix
The Matrix, a violent sci-fi adventure film, has drawn comment by social critics who
see it as uncannily representative of the type of amoral entertainment that drives kids to
acts of violence like the Columbine High School shootings.
And there is a scene in the Matrix that anyone familiar with the Littleton, Colorado
shootings would find disturbing: at one point, the heroes strap weapons and ammunition
onto their bodies, dress in black trench coats, and then enter a building where they shoot
the hell out of a bunch of bad guys. You hear the shell casings rattle to the floor, the
rat-tat-tat of automatic and semi-automatic weapons fireeven a few shotguns, in the
hands of the bad guys (who, in this film, are the police). In The Matrix, the shooters are
heroes. They were dark glasses so they look cool as they kill. They are fighting evil. You
conquer evil by outgunning them, or stylishly beating their faces to a pulp with karate
blows.
There is nothing new here: Hollywood has glorified this type of adolescent fantasy for
years. Hollywood is getting better at it though: the amount of computing and artistic
effort put into these scenes is astounding. The sound effects batter the listener with
Dolbyized wall-rattling chunky, acerbic smacks. The walls explode with spattering bullets
and ricochets.
A fair number of commentators have tried to draw a link between movies like this and
incidents like Padukah and Littleton. They believe that children are influenced by these
movies. They watch the carnage and enjoy it. It thrills them. They want to be like the
actors in the movie: cool and powerful. They derive a invigorating sense of gratification
from seeing the bad guys get blown away.
There is always a conversation with the meanest, baddest, most ruthless of the bad
guys, before he is dispatched. It doesnt matter that such conversations have never
taken place anywhere in history: they are a staple of the action-adventure film. Usually,
the hero revels for a moment in his triumph, and we glimpse suffering, finally, on the
face of the man who inflicted so much suffering on others. We feel the necessity of
grudging submission, acknowledgement that we (identified with the hero) are the good guys.
Just before we blow their brains out.
But there is another weird convention to these action adventure films: the hero has to
suffer too. In almost all of them, the hero himself undergoes a few serious, painful
trials, before undertaking his climatic mission. Why? Ive heard this element
rationalized as some kind of test of worthiness that ties into our primitive instincts for
sacrificial leaders. Thus when the killer acts just as brutal and ruthless as the enemy,
in the end, he appears to be justified, because he has suffered. . I always find these
sequences a little squirmy, because they are so close to pure adolescent fantasy, and
adolescent fantasy is utterly self-centred and masochistic. Adolescents dont feel
comfortable with their place in the world; theyre always being accused of not
suffering enough, or of making bad decisions. So being dominated and victimized plays
nicely into their sense of being very worthy individuals who are unjustly persecuted. All
the better if a lovely woman, preferably about 18, feels so moved by your suffering that
she pleads with you to save your self. Adolescence. Fantasy. Myth.
Did Dylan Klybold and Eric Harris shoot their class-mates because, though they were
otherwise of sound mind and body, they saw films like "The Matrix"
(specifically, "Natural Born Killers"), and decided that killing people was so
cool they just had to try it themselves? Thats hard to believe. These films do very
well at the box office. You would think there would a veritable rash of killings after
every showing. The truth is, we dont have any evidence at all that these films
influence anybody to kill. How unlikely is it, after all, that killers would not have seen
the most popular films, played the most popular video games, or listened to well-known
metal rockers?
As tempting as it is to ascribe a single cause to the Littleton disaster, the truth is
probably more complex than that. Klebold and Harris were disaffected youths, marginalized
by the nasty jock culture of Columbine High School. They were intelligent and imaginative,
too intelligent to not harbor some bitterness about the putdowns they received constantly
from the jocks and preppies . They were probably somewhat psychotic. Perhaps Harris, by
himself, would merely have committed suicide. The two of them together formed a deadly
combination of audaciousness, bitterness, and collective energy. Their uncensored
fantasies of revenge and domination came to life in their conversations and acquired an
energy of their own.
So how would you prevent future massacres from happening? Again, people are tempted by
simple solutions: censor movies or the internet, ban violent games, restrict access to
guns. The most idiotic come first: ban trench coats, which is what all high schools in the
Denver area and many more nation-wide have done. Ban trench coats? What about gym bags,
back packs, suitcases? What about pockets and purses and bulky ski jackets? Im
afraid I dont have much faith in knee-jerk solutions.
No surprisingly, conservative Republicans, who constantly insist that only a
free-market--without the slightest government intervention--can gratify the needs of the
human soul, suddenly reverse themselves when it comes to culture and demand stricter
censorship and tougher punishments for thought crimes. I dont understand why the
magic of the marketplace is so wonderful when it comes to wages and product liability, but
so odious when it comes to movies and rock music. This position is frankly hypocritical.
If conservatives really believe in the principles they describe so passionately as they
apply to the economy is absurd to think that those same principles shouldnt also
apply to culture. If they dont like movies like "The Matrix",
toughthe magical marketplace has decided that this is the way to go. Learn to live
with it.
Liberals are at least more consistent on the general principles. They advocate a clear
role for government in the economy, ensuring minimum wages and protection of the
environment, for example, and they urge a role upon the government in preventing and
reducing teen violence. The government should make it far, far more difficult for people
to obtain guns, especially by changing the exemptions that allow people to buy powerful
weapons at gun shows without even a background check or waiting period. And schools should
develop programs that attack the roots of alienation and disaffection, and encourage
values of tolerance and diversity, so that students like Klebold and Harris are never
again as marginalized as they were at Columbine.
Copyright © 1999 Bill Van Dyk All rights
reserved. |
May 8, 1999 |