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A Political Parable With Swordfights

'V For Vendetta' Is An Action-Adventure Film That Might Just Inspire You

V for Vendetta Directed by: James McTeigue Written by:
the Wachowskis Starring: Natalie Portman, Hugo Weaving,
Stephen Rea, John Hurt Rated R for violence, brief
nudity 132 minutes

By Dave Saldana 

UE News
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America
http://www.ranknfile-ue.org/uenews.html

You don't find many films based on comic book
characters that really stick with you.  The Batman
series started with Michael Keaton playing a brooding
Caped Crusader and ended with George Clooney doing a
fair impression of Adam West in the campy 1960s TV
show.  The X-Men, Fantastic 4, the Hulk, and Spiderman
all got the big-screen treatment to varying degrees of
success, but none of them would stand accused of being
thought-provoking.

V for Vendetta is a very different comic-book-hero
film.  Based on writer Alan Moore's 'graphic novel,' as
comic books are now called, V has a purpose.  The cause
of his vendetta is a major plot point, so I won't
divulge it, but it puts him at extreme odds with a
totalitarian regime in Great Britain in the near
future.

As written by Moore, the regime was inspired by
Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980s, every bit
as reactionary, hard-hearted and anti-labor as the
Reagan Administration, but without the sunshiny
rhetoric and the 1984 Summer Olympics to put a happy
face on it.  This film adaption by the Wachowskis, the
brother team responsible for The Matrix and its
sequels, is more reminscent of the Bush Administration.
Examples of the regime's treachery could have come from
today's newspaper: secret tribunals, secret prisons,
political scapegoats 'disappeared' and tortured, a too-
cozy relationship between Big Business and government,
TV blowhards and corrupt religious leaders helping the
government do its dirty work, and a ruthless political
henchman pulling the strings.

Against this regime battles V, played by Hugo Weaving,
known for his roles as Agent Smith in the 'Matrix'
series and Elrond, king of the Elves in the 'Lord of
the Rings' trilogy.  He hides behind the mask of Guy
Fawkes, the 17th century anarchist who tried to blow up
London's Parliament building in 1605.  Quoting
Shakespeare and showing considerable dexterity with
knives, he seeks his revenge on those who did him wrong
and hold the people down with an iron fist. He is aided
by Evey, a young woman who has reasons of her own to
hate the government, but is too caged by fear to do
anything about it.  Evey is brilliantly played by
Natalie Portman, who stretches her action-film cred
beyond Star Wars Episodes I-III, and shows considerable
depth.  When V rescues Evey and helps her escape from
her fear, Portman transforms into an everywoman hero.
(It is wrenching to watch Portman genuinely sob while
her hair is shorn and then appear in a shapeless prison
smock, looking worn and emaciated, especially in light
of the fact that she is proudly Jewish.  Given that the
film was made in Berlin, one suspects she did not have
much trouble finding her motivation.  The evocative
imagery, one assumes, did not come about by accident.)

Into this fray comes Stephen Rea (The Crying Game) as
Chief Inspector Finch, the cop who wants to catch V .
More compelling is Finch's desire to uncover the truth,
which High Chancellor Sutler, played by John Hurt (The
Elephant Man), wants to keep hidden at all costs.
Sutler's chief tool is fear, and compliant media repeat
government claims they know to be lies. V is no
superhero out to solve the people's problems.  Rather,
he attempts to free them to solve their own.  Perhaps
there is a lesson to be learned in this: the public
knows that the government is up to no good and the
media is lying about it.  When V presents an
opportunity for them to do something about it, the
government gets very, very nervous.

Finch is part of Sutler's inner circle, and knows where
this is headed: 'What always happens when people with
guns are confronted by people without guns?' (Finch,
like Rea in real life, is of Irish extraction, adding
another layer of political resonance to this line.)

The result is a powerful and moving climax.

V for Vendetta owes a debt to George Orwell's 1984,
Sinclair Lewis's It Can't Happen Here, Margaret
Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, and any number of
cautionary tales about government power and the public
who surrender to it too easily. Like those books, the
film does not resolve itself in a nice, button-down
ending, but leaves open what happens next.  Although
some of the dialogue is political cliche ('People
should not be afraid of their governments, governments
should be afraid of their people.') the message is more
textured.  Building a just society doesn't lend itself
to facile resolutions.

V for Vendetta does not insult its audience with a
'Hollywood' happy ending. While you are likely to feel
good as the credits roll, you are also likely to feel
inspired and, hopefully, maybe a little bit like you've
been sprung from a cage.
__

Dave Saldana is Communications Director for the United
Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. 
_______________________________________________________

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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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