Saturday, February 29, 2020

Matt's Take on "The Invisible Man"



by Matt Gaskin


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I saw "The Invisible Man" with Elisabeth Moss last night. The movie was plenty creepy on its own but I think it was elevated in my head by the fact that I'd recently watched her in The Handmaid's Tale. Her characters in both are women who have escaped the people who have tortured and objectified her, literally meaning that they turned her into an object that can be owned and used like a tool to achieve some sort of end.

[Spoilers to follow]

The symbolism seems very post-modernist to me. The protagonist is controlled the entire movie by an oppressor who cannot be seen and whose very existence is doubted by everyone to whom she tries to explain her situation. Instead of believing her narrative, that an invisible man was framing her for murder in an attempt to take control of her reproductive rights and bring her into captivity, they chose the more reasonable belief that she was insane. Stripped of her family, friends and freedom by a force that could neither be seen nor fought, she was given the ultimatum to either remain this physical and social prison, or to capitulate to the demands placed upon her by that unseen power.

One framework to understand this could be Michael Foucault's description of Jeremy Bentham's panopticon. The panopticon is a prison whose economy came from a design which made each prisoner feel as if they were under constant surveillance without having to actually constantly place them under watch. Marvel created a prison like this for super villains. The jail cells all face outwards in a circle with a guard tower in the middle with one way windows on all sides. From inside the tower an observer would be able to see a 360-degree view of every prisoner, but the prisoners would only see each other and the tower. They would never know if someone was in the tower and if they were being observed, so they would assume that someone was always watching and always behave accordingly. The guard tower wouldn't even have to be fully-staffed at that point, so long as no one could be seen coming and going. Bentham didn't imagine modern security cameras, but they would have the same sort of effect as they ensure that people believe they are being filmed.


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What Foucault points out is that the power of the panopticon is itself invisible. It exerts force without having to actually exert force. He would go on to argue that much, if not all, of what keeps modern society together is due to similar forces which cannot be seen, are difficult to identify, but apply a powerful pressure on individual choices, freedom and behavior nonetheless. These pressures exert themselves and it's not always clear where they are coming from. They create beliefs and weave narratives which may not have an ontological reality, but bring about real world consequences. One of the most powerful outcomes arising out of hidden, unseen oppression is the fact that the oppressed do not consciously realize they are being manipulated, and if they figure it out, they are not believed.

The narrative follows a familiar path toward handling this type of unseen oppression. The protagonist attempts to reveal the hidden villain and is declared insane. When the protagonist persists in their claims, they are imprisoned (physical or psychological). The solution is ultimately a struggle to remove the power of the unseen force by unmasking it and making it visible. But the destruction of the method of oppression is different from destroying the actual source of oppression. For example, the prisoners in the panopticon might imagine that if they could destroy the guard tower or reveal who is watching them, that this would be enough to liberate their situation. But it isn't really the guard tower or the guards that keeps them from their freedom, it's an entire system at work. In this situation, the protagonist makes visible her assailant and reveals his identity, but the actual power behind her trouble remains hidden. She finds herself in a loop where having revealed her initial claims of conspiracy as true, she is again being disbelieved and accused of insanity when asserting that the real villain is yet to be captured.

This is where I question the direction of the story, because the ultimate solution to unmasking this unseen power is essentially violent revolution. The protagonist cannot be helped by family, friends, or even the law. The only thing remaining to her is to adopt the methods of her oppressor and then kill them. She had to become invisible herself and become her oppressor in order to be free of him. The message seems to be that revealing these unseen powers will never be enough because society will never see them and will never take meaningful action, at least not within a reasonable amount of time. The only solution is radical and decisive action.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

John's Review of Diana Ross' Columbia, SC Concert



by John Zenoni


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How was Diana Ross live in concert in Columbia? Oh man, she was amazing! I was really impressed. Her youngest daughter opened her and she was good too! She even sounded like Diana at certain times except for the fact that her pitch was off every now and then. But Diana still has a voice! Could not believe it. She did her Vegas style show and changed outfits four times!

My only complaint is that it was a short show. The daughter came on at 7:30 and played for 20 minutes; then a set change; then Diana came out at 8 and performed until about 8:50 or so -- not even an hour. But she's going to be 76-years-old next month and she commented a couple times about how hot it was lol!


Diana did her hits with Nile Rodgers, some Motown stuff, Lady Sings the Blues stuff, and of course, "Ain't No Mountain High Enough". Then her encore was "Reach Out and Touch". I don't know why she didn't get a male backup to sing "Endless Love" with her but she didn't get around to that jam. She also did a brief minute of "I'm Coming Out" -- as she was coming out on stage, in fact -- and she sang "Ease On Down the Road" and "Do You Know?".

I think it went by so fast because she was just like boom, boom, boom with the songs. And while I wished "The Boss" had performed more, she was still amazing! 

Sunday, February 2, 2020

"21 Bridges" Mini-Review



by John Zenoni


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While not the best ‘corrupt cop’ film, or best film period, I have to say ‘21 Bridges’ is very entertaining. It kept me glued to the screen from the get-go! The action and suspense is plenty and Chadwick Boseman is great. I have to admit I had some things figured out early on but the way the film was directed made it work and I didn't even care about that. This is a definite good popcorn flick to catch one weekend!

Chadwick Boseman can do no wrong!