What the
Movies Have Taught Me
“I
won’t be wronged. I won’t be insulted. I won’t be laid-a-hand
on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the
same from them.” – John Wayne as John Bernard Books in his final
movie, ‘The Shootist’, 1976.
A man’s
got to be strong, and when he fails, he’s got to get up again,
with no crying and no complaints. He’s always got to do it when
it’s got to be done, bleeding, crippled, or broken, no excuses.
Even when he’s bad, he’s got to be good, and honest and loyal,
even if a thief.
Goofy,
bumbling, true-hearted suitors always win women’s hearts. Women
may at first go for the flash, the money and the ruggedly
handsome cads. In the end, they come to their senses and see the
value in the simple, the kind and the good.
Women are
only truly evil if they are German or Russian or speak with some
foreign accent – unless the accent is French or Spanish, then
they are cute, innocently sexy, and good-hearted. Women of the
future are cold, especially in space, but if not icily
calculating, they are just as brave and strong and warrior-like
as the men – only they go all gushy sometimes, and it’s okey
because after all, they are women even when they captain a space
cruiser.
Men in
the future always triumph over evil robots and computers by
doing the unexpected or the illogical – that is, the human. At
least one machine always remains good and remembers it was
created to serve humanity, not destroy it. Good robots are the
one’s to understand what it means to cry or laugh. They try to
tell jokes that are funny only in the failure to make anyone
laugh. They learn to cry right before going off-line to save the
world.
In war,
the soldier who shows anyone a picture of a girl dies; officers
are always cowardly and foolish; intelligence men are cynics
working on their own agenda; politicians always sell out
soldiers, country, and principles for riches and power.
When two
men are really good friends since childhood, for example, one
will always save the life of the other after a misunderstanding
drives them apart. And if one of them does betray the other or
the cause, he will repent and come back to his true self, make
amends heroically and die.
Indian
couples never have sex or even kiss until after singing and
dancing to a dozen songs, one of which must be danced and sung
around a tree or in a field of knee-high grass. Bad Indian women
are sexier and hotter than good Indian girls, but they always
die after repenting their sinful ways for the love of a good
man. Bad and good Indian men always have a humorous side-kick,
and bad Indian men are rotten to the core. If offered babies for
breakfast, they only stipulate if they prefer them boiled or
fried. Good Indian men are sometimes foolish, but they can never
be faulted for their motives, which are always pure. They will
come back from the dead many times to avenge an insult to
themselves, their mothers, their sisters, and their fathers.
Their guns never run out of bullets.
Chinese
gangsters shoot their guns sideways and are essentially
honorable men in a bad profession. Chinese cops can always teach
their American counterparts a thing or two if they are ever on
assignment in San Francisco or Los Angeles – where they should
be like a fish out of water. That’s funny to see. The converse
holds true when American policemen go to Hong Kong, Shanghai or
Beijing. Either way, cross-culture cops always end up with a
grudging respect for one another and have new adventures in
whichever one’s country they weren’t in the last time. Chinese
gangsters’ lips sometime move funny when they talk English. They
all know kung fu, and eat stinky foods. That’s funny too. That’s
the Chinese, funny and so cool.
All mad
scientists are German, Russian men, like Russian women are
always evil. Scots and Irishmen can always be trusted.
Englishmen are usually dastardly madmen, now matter how cultured
or urbane they appear. Frenchmen are almost never evil, though
everyone thinks they are, because, well, they are French.
Italian soldiers make love, not war. French soldiers never fight
unless they are Legionnaires. Then in every battle they lose
every man but one.
Life is
grand and glorious and is full of drama and sweeping musical
scores, and I’m so lucky to be alive in the age of movies. VCDs,
DVDs, home entertainment centers and cable TV.
Otherwise, I would have ended up with an unrealistic view of
life.
This was taken from the June 7-21,
2oo6 issue
Of the Bali Advertiser Bali
Skeptic by
Lee Roy
LeRoi