Empire of the Sunglasses: How They Live Took on Republicans and Won - 27reservation

Ads 720 x 90

Empire of the Sunglasses: How They Live Took on Republicans and Won


Every few months, RollingStone.com will shine a spotlight on a forgotten, neglected, overshadowed, underappreciated and/or critically maligned film that we love in a new series were calling Be Kind, Rewind. Our latest movie: John Carpenters They Live.

Spend enough time (a life-ruining amount) writing and thinking about movies, and you begin to obsess about things that are only tangentially related to whats in front of you. Its the groupie-ish side to being a film critic. We all do it, even if our rock stars are intense directors who can barely function in public. From my teenage years on, I lavished a ridiculous amount of energy pondering the question: What would it like to be John Carpenter? Not to make his movies to be him.

Even in his Eighties heyday, Carpenter always came across as bored in interviews, a rascally chain-smoking Kentuckian whod rather be watching college basketball. If you were JC, youd probably grow tired of yet another question about Halloween, the slasher-flick classic you made when you were 30 and that redefined a genre you only partly gave a shit about. You might go home and putz around in your synthesizer room, coming up with spiky music for futuristic thrillers. For several years, Adrienne Barbeau would be there to greet you. And then, after hundreds of phone calls with Kurt Russell, after getting the opportunity to remake your favorite movie and improve upon it (The Thing), after watching your passion projects tank at the box office, youd hit a brick wall.

The Top 20 Sci-Fi Films of the 21st CenturyThe Best Box Sets of 2019How Americana Went Mainstream in the 2010s

They Live, Carpenters 1988 paranoid freakout, deserves to be thought of as a masterpiece, an artists defiant last grab at substance before losing the thread. Its a cheesy but lovable movie about a working-class hero (WWF wrestler Rowdy Roddy Piper), struggling to find work in a harshly class-riven Los Angeles. He discovers, after slipping on a pair of special sunglasses, that the citys abundant population of yuppies are aliens. Its that simple: Yuppies are aliens. In interviews, Carpenter often goes further than his screenplay (based in part on Ray Nelsons short story Eight OClock in the Morning, which became a 1986 graphic novel), flatly calling the secret ghouls Republicans. They Live portrays these goo-faced interlopers, as viewed via the black-and-white sunglasses-cam, in three-piece suits, being pushy and uncaring, blithely telling their coworkers to Go for it. And when theyre finally seen for what they are, by this nothing of a denim-clad construction worker (Piper character is named Nada), they panic.

Plenty of films since Carpenters have come down hard on Reaganomics; its almost too limiting of They Lives stealth power to call it a political screed. Far more adventurously, this is a thriller a mass-consumable entertainment that tries to reprogram its audience into anti-consumers. Everything we watch in a theater asks us, to some degree, to see the world as it does. But They Live literalizes that idea, forcing the shades on us to display a wholly different perspective. The first time Nada gets hip to the secret world order, hes walking down a city street on a typically hazy L.A. morning. He slips on the glasses and what we see over the next several minutes is something no other movie has attempted as plainly. Billboards become bold-text messages. A bikini-clad woman is replaced by MARRY AND REPRODUCE. Magazine racks exhort us to CONSUME and OBEY. A wad of bills in a vendors hand says THIS IS YOUR GOD.

Nothing can prepare you for this sequence, a near-wordless piece of sociocultural smackdown smuggled into a sci-fi flick. Brooklyn author Jonathan Lethem, a huge They Live fan, has called it 10 minutes of cognitive dissonance as sublime as anything in the history of paranoid cinema. The moment has been rhapsodized by Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek and appropriated by culture-jamming artist Shepard Fairey for his iconic Andre the Giant posters. Carpenters target was advertising but also a slick television-dictated lifestyle, putting his movie in the prickly company of media satires like Network (this is very much the training-wheels version). Mainly, though, the scene makes you gasp: Are we really going there? Even now, its easy to laugh at the idea of bros lining up for the next Big Trouble in Little China, instead being served up a heaping helping of media semiotics.

Its that simple: yuppies are aliens.

They Live was a bridge for some of us, a bona-fide act of subversion from a filmmaker who invested his famous style of clean widescreen compositions and Hawksian gab with something larger, something flattering to the audiences intelligence. You feel alarm and desperation emanating from the film: the passion of a director lunging for significance, maybe because he saw his crazy run of a career butting up against Hollywood indifference. Its a sad movie, a Lorax-like cry.

This will not be the moment to make claims for the acting stylings of Roddy Piper, who bounded up to Carpenters skybox at WrestleMania 3 and landed the part. But lets say this about him: He often played the villain and he often got trounced. Some of that beaten-down persona makes its way into Nada, himself having head west after fleeing a dried-up job market in Denver. I believe in America, the character says as he gazes into a pink twilight, alluding to a far-better movie yet still effectively milking that statements navet. (They Live makes pointed use of Los Angeless economic disparities: Those are real East L.A. homeless Carpenter paid a days wages to, the glistening downtown towers visible behind their shantytown.)

Piper does fine by the rebellion action the movie eventually reduces itself to, a final frenzy against the alien-yuppies and their human power elite. (He even has his own Schwarzeneggerian catchphrase, improvised on the day: I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick assand Im all out of bubblegum.) But he does magnificently with the film most infamous scene, a six-minute slugfest with costar Keith David thats just stupefying in its duration. Nada only wants the guy to put on the shades and join the crusade amazingly, this is a serious sticking point, one that leads to body blows and pile-drivers. The scene goes on and on. Carpenter has called it an homage to John Fords The Quiet Man, a touch too foxy as references go. More honestly, its a concession to Pipers fans.

Yet isnt there something depressing about the brawl as well, an utter waste of energy that could be better spent against the Republicans? It would be great to believe Carpenter thought about that. It would also be wonderful to think that he shifted his signature musical palette away from his tingling sequencers and toward They Lives plodding downtrodden blues because the director was, in a way, playing the blues his lament for the American dream, couched in a plastic, commercial idiom. When I saw They Live at age 17, I finally knew what it was like to be John Carpenter. And it was miserable.

Related Posts

Posting Komentar

Subscribe Our Newsletter