-----Original Message-----
From: Portside Moderator [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, October 31, 2011 2:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [SPAM] A Movie for the Attractive, Radical Redistributionist in
Your Life


FutureSex/Class Warriors

Jamelle Bouie
October 28, 2011
American Prospect
http://prospect.org/article/futuresexclass-warriors

In Time is a movie for the attractive, radical
redistributionist in your life.

The thing to understand about In Time-the latest from
Gattaca director Andrew Niccol-is that it isn't a good
movie. Characters lack compelling motivations, action
set-pieces veer from boring to incoherent (In Time
apparently takes place in a world where everyone is an
expert marksman), and it's hard to take Justin
Timberlake seriously as an action hero.

But for as much as In Time fails as an action thriller,
it fascinates as one of the most overtly ideological-and
openly left-wing-movies of the year. The film's premise
is straightforward: at some indeterminate time in the
future, humans were genetically modified to stop aging
at 25, at which point they receive a year of time, which
is the world's currency. Time can be exchanged between
people through a touch on the forearm or earned through
work, and when you run out, you die. Like most people in
this world, Will Salas (Timberlake's character) is time-
poor, lives in the slums, and works an industrial job in
order to scrape through a working-class existence with
his mother (played by Olivia Wilde - yes, it's weird).

After rescuing a very rich man (played by Matt Bomer)
from a crew of gangsters, it's revealed to Salas that
the system is completely rigged-the rich (those with
centuries or millennia of time) live in lavish, guarded
communities where they tightly control the supply of
time and live lives of near-immortality, while ordinary
people toil and die and pine for the endless life
they'll never attain (a heavy-handed reference to the
dreams of wealth held by many Americans.)

>From here on, the movie becomes a full-on Marxist
critique of capitalism. As something of a reward for
saving him, the rich man gives Salas his entire century-
and dies in the process. Salas attempts to use his
newfound wealth to treat his mother, but she is unable
to meet him under her allotted time, and dies as a
result. Spurred by his grief, Timberlake uses his time
to infiltrate a nearby wealthy community and steal as
much as he can, to redistribute it to the slums. In the
course of this, he meets Amanda Seyfried's character,
Sylvia Weiss, a young, disillusioned socialite with a
tremendously wealthy father-and together they embark on
a quest to rob her father's banks and shower the poor
with time. It's as if you took Bonnie & Clyde and
crossed them with both Robin Hood and a Depression-era
leftist.

Cillian Murphy pursues the couple as Raymond Leon, chief
of the Timekeepers-men and women tasked with maintaining
the unequal distribution of time. If you're keeping up
with the film's Marxism, Murphy also exists to
illustrate the concept of false consciousness, through
his commitment to a system that harms him (he's
underpaid) and his community (he's a native of the
slums.)

There are points when In Time's commitment to its
ideology gets a little tiring. When they're not running
across rooftops or stuck in formulaic high-speed chases,
the characters are either denouncing the stranglehold of
the rich, "It's not stealing if it wasn't theirs to
begin with."; defending it, "Many must die so that a few
might have immortality."; or bemoaning the extent to
which individual action can't break the system, "We
can't win. We can't hurt them. The time we take makes no
difference." At the same time, what makes the movie
interesting is the extent to which it runs with its
theme.

It should be said that the movie is filled with
genuinely good moments. Cillian Murphy's performance
impresses throughout, and Justin Timberlake is
surprisingly subtle in his class mannerisms-walking with
a fast pace, eating quickly, and carrying himself in a
host of ways that mark him as a member of the low-time
caste. Indeed, the film is at its best when it focuses
on these cultural markers; during one action sequence,
Timberlake and Seyfried assume that they'll be able to
escape the Timekeepers, on account of their class-bred
aversion to taking physical risks. When Timberlake sees
Cillian Murphy disregard his safety in pursuit of the
duo, he realizes the extent to which Murphy shares his
origins (and marks the moment with a well-timed
"Unfuckingbelievable").

It's no exaggeration to say that more than anything else
on screens right now, In Time seems to be the movie that
most captures the mood of the moment. Millions are
furious with a system that rewards the rich at the cost
of everyone else, and In Time offers one possible
solution-the forced redistribution of wealth at the
hands of ridiculously attractive people.

For my part, I think we should approach this movie as
Hollywood's contribution to Occupy Wall Street; flawed,
but still worth the engagement.

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