Reality:
•A friend and I made a seemingly simple bet four years ago
about whether Bush or Obama would expand government faster, and we ultimately
decided to abandon the bet after realizing it’s gotten more complicated – and
dependent on highly contingent factors – than we’d foreseen, even with his
sophisticated suggestion of breaking the bet into three parts, two dependent on
the size of government relative to GDP (I think I won those two parts, albeit largely because the economy has done so
badly) and one dependent only on percent change in absolute spending (I think I
lost that part, due mainly to Bush
ratcheting up spending so much for bailout purposes in his final months in
office).
Ironically, if I had constructed the bet alone, I probably
would’ve included only the third portion, since it arguably has the clearest
ideological implications, and would thus have lost the whole bet, even
though Obama still spends like a socialist (and does so without even an
official budget in place, disturbingly).
But as it is, there were not only the ambiguities above but the
whole question of whether we were to remain bound by the “2000-2004” vs.
“2008-2012” formulation we first agreed to or whether (as we’d probably both
now agree) it’d make more sense (for purposes of gauging presidential influence
as opposed to inheriting a budget from one’s predecessor) to use Fiscal Years
2002-2006 vs. Fiscal Years 2010-2014...which would then lead (if we settle up
now) to having to estimate 2014 spending, and...
Well, we just decided to call the whole thing off. Real-world politics, much like history, is a
disappointing, contingent mess compared to political philosophy. This much is clear: We are doomed.
Fantasy:
•The same friend will join my small band of Hobbit-goers (tomorrow night, 68th and
Broadway, pre-assigned seats in the back middle, IMAX 3D, in intriguingly controversial
feels-too-real 48 frames per second). One
member of our group asked me if hobbits are libertarian, to which I reply that
they (and Tolkien) are more nearly paleoconservative, opposed to both
governmental and industrial aspects of modernity (as the Shire coda at the end
of the Lord of the Rings books – left
out of the movies – suggests).
Tolkien was sort of a holdover from nineteenth-century Tory
agrarian thinking, though the right and capitalism have now become thoroughly
entwined.
•Garth Franklin makes a good point in an essay
about well-done
films that nonetheless feel like a “remarkable chore” instead of just being
enjoyabale. Will Hobbit prove to be one despite seeming kid-friendly and
effects-filled? “Remarkable chore” is
roughly how I feel half the time I’m at the Angelika – and pretty much every
time I try once more to enjoy a Pedro Almodovar or Gus Van Sant movie.
•I am more inclined than Tolkien to be wary of nature, much
as I love it, and to want some technological distance from its ravages most of
the time. After all, one wouldn’t want
to end up being chased and molested by a deer, like
the young woman in this video.
•Much as I would love to have forests and plenty of cats – preferably
talking cats – around us, if the world were remade according to my imagination,
it’d probably end up looking like these
spectacular double-page comic book spreads (h/t Jeffrey Wendt) by the
legendary Jack Kirby.
Kirby, as I’ve noted before, was also hired to do costume
designs on that fake sci-fi movie the CIA pretended to be making in 1980, which
inspired Argo.
•We all now know the CIA can fake producing a sci-fi film,
but one Facebook friend of mine still questions whether the government could
ever get its act together enough to build real giant robots, as in the new trailer for
Guillermo del Toro’s Pacific Rim.
•One unexpected bit of epic sci-fantasy news in the past
couple years is Michael Jackson/James Brown-like singer (and dancer and model
and tux aficionado) Janelle Monae doing “concept albums,” sort of like Pink
Floyd except dancing like
this.
•One way Disney minimized its losses on the underappreciated
John Carter earlier this year was by
pairing it with the hit Avengers at
drive-ins (if you live in New York City, there’s a good chance you didn’t even
know there still are drive-ins). I suspect it was the failure of John Carter (exactly 100 years after the
first serialized portion of the novel came out) – and resulting bad blood
between Pixar and the Disney Pictures head who resigned over the film – that
clinched the Disney decision to acquire animation-savvy Lucasfilm and the
reliable Star Wars franchise.
I’m as intrigued about what new Star Wars movies will look
like as the next nerd, but my main regret about the John Carter franchise being
abandoned is that we won’t get to see Carter slugging demagogic theocrats in
the series’ second entry, Gods of Mars
(ah, the era of Nietzsche-readers and Teddy Roosevelt fans fighting it out in fictional
jungles, all too soon replaced by the days of Nietzsche and TR fans fighting in
disease-ridden European trenches).
Instead of seeing John Carter fight false gods, let us
commemorate the late Christopher Hitchens in tomorrow’s blog entry, on the eve
of the first anniversary of his death.
2 comments:
"We are doomed"... Great post.
I couldn't agree more with the blog's insightful connection between sci-fi/fantasy and our messy government reality. It's uncanny how real-life politics can sometimes resemble dystopian plots. Just like a Milwaukee Bucks starter jacket can bring back memories, these analogies remind us to stay informed and engaged in shaping a better future. The blurred lines between fiction and reality certainly make you ponder the intricacies of our world. Great read!
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