Of Media, Massacres, and the Unchaining of Quentin's Neuroses
Canadians
criticizing Americans is often criticized. After all, Americans don’t really
give Canadians much thought. Yet many Canadians, in the Wikileaked words of a
U.S. diplomat, “fall into the trap of seeing all U.S. policies as the
result of nefarious faceless U.S. bureaucrats anxious to squeeze their northern
neighbour.” One issue where Canadians and Americans couldn’t be more divided,
where the oft-pathetic hippie finger-wagging at the United States is a nod in
the right direction, is gun culture. The policy differences between the two
nations is another topic, but suffice it to say that a culture of firearms
seems almost as American as apple pie. After the mass murder at Newtown,
Connecticut, there’s new recognition of this and calls for political action, but
there’s also resistance to change.
Or at least
change in the direction of fewer firearms. The National Rifle Association
demagogue Wayne LaPierre called for more guns and blamed violent videogames and
the mentally ill, who he clearly considers sub-human rats. There’ve also been
fireworks when the CNN anchor Piers Morgan debated the conspiracy-obsessed radio host Alex Jones and the gun lobbyist Larry Pratt,
resulting in a 100,000-signature petition for Piers's deportation. Many Americans consider the Second
Amendment sacred, as if it frees America from despotism and tyranny. But who
are they afraid of? The ghost of King George? Muslim terrorists?
Extraterrestrials? A socialist U.S. government? Or just themselves?
Invective
aside, the reverence for the Second Amendment in the United States is here to stay and means more
guns and probably more massacres. I mean, consider a person who
owns an assault rifle versus one who doesn’t – who’s more likely to point a gun
at himself or others when he gets depressed, confused, or angry? Gun advocates like
Wayne LaPierre stress keeping guns from the mentally ill, as if guns only bring
tragedy when they’re in the hands of crazy people, not "real" people. But it
seems dubious that a change in mental health policy or background checks alone
could meaningfully reduce the rate of mass murders, if passed.
Maybe I shouldn’t have
been surprised that the Bushmaster XM-15 rifle used by Adam Lanza at
the Newtown massacre was made by a company called the Freedom Group. Or that
Quentin Tarantino, whose new film Django
Unchained is an orgy of gore, shrugs off any link between movies and
violent massacres. But my shock was most righteous when the following message
appeared in my inbox, after ordering Raybans from Illinois-based Opticsplanet: “Stock
Up On Firearm Accessories: Holsters, Cleaning Kits & More!” (my American
friends who think that whereof I cannot speak, I must be silent should blame Opticsplanet’s
market research team for thinking a Rayban-buying Canadian to be the target market
for gun apparel; America came knocking on my door.)
Anyway, the link between mass murders and gun numbers might
be the domain of statisticians, and the link between mass murders and mental
illness is – well, good luck to whoever grapples with that. But the link
between mass murders and violent media, while abstract and murky, is pretty
interesting to this wannabe writer. Now, it’s not trendy to say that video
games and movies affect violence levels in the West. But media is now part of
the oxygen we breathe. Quentin Tarantino must know this. He cancelled Django Unchained’s premier in the wake
of Newtown, which might not warrant comment except that there are, like, a
hundred gruesome murders in his new flick. And except that he positively
refuses to address the link between movie violence and real violence, even telling
a persistent British interview “I’m not your slave.” Go ahead and watch Django Unchained and tell yourself that
violence isn’t what received almost half of Quentin’s tender loving care. Now,
you might like the pulpy violence, the sheer entertainment, not to mention the
vibrant set pieces and lofty Tarantino production, but can you tell me that he
hasn’t received $100,000,000 to film his violent wet dream where blood sprays
like champagne and limbs break apart like jelly donuts? Do Inglourious Basterds and Django
Unchained actually have a progressive historical bent (i.e. exacting
revenge on Nazis and slave owners), or is that just a conceit so Quentin can
play with himself and we pay to watch, like lambs to the slaughter?
Wait –
I’m not saying that anybody who’s watched a Tarantino flick has committed a bloody massacre
as a result. But the movie has grossed $125,399,000 in
a couple weeks and Hollywood influences what’s normal, at least as
entertainment. Even shelving the theory that violent media influences sick
young men, it’s strange that we congregate in public to watch bloodbaths for
fun, while considering other subject matter taboo. Basically, moviegoers’ daily
lives are marked more by deviant sexuality and drug use than gore, yet a film
that showed, say, teenagers having promiscuous sex and dropping tabs (cough, Kids)
would be dark and scandalous, whereas Django
Unchained is just an action movie.
I think
that the coincidence of Newtown and Django
Unchained’s release signals a depraved, violence-obsessed culture. But I
admit that the impetus to call out Quentin Tarantino as irresponsible might be
linked to the very mediocrity of his new movie. The late David Foster Wallace
contrasted Tarantino unfavourably against David Lynch in his non-fiction book A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again.
Yet that was the Tarantino of Reservoir
Dogs, a light-years superior movie to Django
Unchained. Maybe my inner creative writing student is as appalled by the
puerile script (“Niggales” is the black Hercules), flat characters (the
crowd-pleasing Dr. Schultz is too one-dimensional to save us from dull Django’s
lack of meaningful development), and plodding narrative as my moral, preachy
self is annoyed by how much Quentin relishes violence.
I, too,
play violent video games and watch violent movies. And I’m not going to argue for
a ban or say that they cause massacres in the United States. But neither will I
suggest that in our sleepless, media-drenched culture where young kids are
almost tweaking, almost stoned with media, are hooked to an IV of connectivity
and influence, and sometimes boil down to a set of “Likes” to be mined by
corporations for profit – neither will I suggest that Quentin is “just making
movies” and has moral impunity. Real war isn’t pornographic; Django-type
executions are perpetrated almost exclusively by either Tarantino-esque cartoon
characters or by the Seung-Hui Chos, Dylan Klebolds, and James Eagan Holmeses. Do we really
know that there’s no precession of simulacrum? Can we really say that the
orgasmic machinegun fire in the movie-theatre massacre of Inglourious Basterds found no echo in the shooting at the premier
of The Dark Knight Rises? My view is
that Quentin’s moral flicks do more to sicken our culture than to address
historical tragedies. Even if I can’t prove that, still, the fundamentals of
these movies, the guts of them, are very weak indeed.