[For this year’s
installment
of my
annual Halloween series,
I’ll focus on 21st century pop culture villains. Share your favorite
villains, new or classic, in comments!]
On the random
but telling Anglophilia of the summer’s new supervillain.
After having
created, in the despicable but gradually reformed supervillain Gru (Steve
Carrell) at the heart of Despicable Me (2010)
and Despicable Me 2 (2013),
one of the more interesting and human film villains in recent years, the
creative team behind those films struck out with their newest supervillain. Not
much in this summer’s prequel
Minions (2015) works well for
anyone older than 10 (and this AmericanStudier knows whereof he speaks, having
seen it with his 9 and 8 year old sons), but the film’s villain Scarlet Overkill (Sandra
Bullock) is particularly lifeless and uninteresting. The character’s
personality and motivations are entirely forgettable, her flirtations with her mimbo husband (Jon Hamm)
entirely irrelevant, and Bullock’s line readings seem as disinterested as will
be the film’s adult audiences. I don’t believe the film was longer than 90
minutes, but I assure you it was the longest hour and a half of my summer.
There is one interesting
thing about Scarlet’s perspective and personality, though, and while it’s as
seemingly random as the rest of her character, it also opens up an analytical
lens worth exploring. This decidedly American supervillain, introduced in her opening scene (that
clip is in German, but you get the idea and are spared Bullock’s line readings)
as a 1960s American feminist par excellence, is obsessed with England—she lives
in a fortress in London, her husband (despite being voiced by American actor
Hamm) is a collection of stereotypes from 1960s Beatles-era England pretending
to be a character, and her sole villainous motivation is to steal Queen
Elizabeth’s crown and (according to the film’s nonexistent logic) become the
ruler of England as a result. This defining Anglophilia represents a very
specific choice for the film, particularly since the three Minion protagonists
meet Scarlet in the United States (which is the setting for both Despicable Me films) and thus the rest
of the plot could easily have taken place there as well.
So what are we
to make of this Anglophilia? In a movie as poorly planned and executed as Minions, it’s tempting to dismiss this
choice as just another random and, well, crappy one. But I would argue that it’s
more meaningful than that, although I can’t say for sure whether the filmmakers
intended these meanings or simply stumbled into them (much like their bumbling
yellow protagonists do). For one thing, the film is set during the 1960s heyday
of the British invasion, when handsome British men invaded
our shores and were celebrated by adoring American female fans; and it
interestingly flips that cultural script, portraying a thoroughly American,
very attractive woman who invades England and seeks to conquer it (with the
help of an adoring English male fan who happens to be her husband as well). At
the same time, Scarlet’s own obsession with all things England, and specifically
with the English monarchy, echoes America’s longstanding cultural obsession
with the royals, one that would explode in the post-60s decades thanks to
another attractive,
self-sufficient woman who (you could say) invaded the royal family and for
a time seemed destined for a crown of her own. Whether Minions intends these meanings or not, its central villain
certainly engages with these American and English connections in ways far more
interesting than the rest of the film.
October Recap
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other villains you’d highlight?
No comments:
Post a Comment