[On July
30th, 1945, the USS
Indianapolis was sunk by a Japanese submarine on its way back from
delivering the components of the atomic bombs. That wartime tragedy became the
basis for one of the great
speeches in American film history, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy that
monologue and four other knockout cinematic orations!]
On a
multi-layered speech that sandwiches a compelling point within an
all-too-familiar mythmaking frame.
The opening
lines of Gordon
Bekko’s “Greed is good” speech, the most famous moment in Oliver Stone’s Wall Street (1987), sound eerily similar
to the June
2015 speech with which Donald Trump launched his presidential campaign. Trump’s
speech opens with, “Our country is in serious trouble. We don’t have victories
anymore. We used to have victories, but we don’t have them”; while Gekko begins, “we're
not here to indulge in fantasy, but in political and economic reality. America
has become a second-rate power. Its trade deficit and its fiscal deficit are at
nightmare proportions.” Gekko was
apparently based in large part on the prominent New York financier Ivan
Boesky, who argued in a
1986 business school commencement address that “Greed is all right, by the
way”; but Trump and Boesky ran in similar circles, and it seems far from coincidental
that Stone puts “Make America Great Again” ideas in this character’s
perspective. Like Gekko, after all (and Boesky, who not long after his speech
was indicted for his
role in an insider trading scandal), Trump uses this ostensible critique of
our communal failings in order to advance his own agenda and wealth.
Stone and
Michael Douglas manage to make the deeply despicable Gekko a charismatic and at
times even sympathetic character, though, and the middle of this speech
illustrates one key way in which they do so: by having him make a fair amount
of sense. Gekko critiques the failing Teldar Paper company this way: “Teldar
Paper has 33 different vice presidents, each earning over 200 thousand dollars
a year. Now, I have spent the last two months analyzing what all these guys do,
and I still can't figure it out. One thing I do know is that our paper company
lost 110 million dollars last year, and I'll bet that half of that was spent in
all the paperwork going back and forth between all these vice presidents.” While
33 seems like a hyperbolic number, in keeping with the movie’s overall,
over-sized satirical feel, I have to admit that Gekko’s point here feels eerily
prescient of our current age
of administrative bloat within my own field of higher education. As I’ve
argued elsewhere, by far the #1 reason for public higher ed’s financial
struggles is defunding; but even if our proliferation of VPs and Deans and
other administrators are not as central a cause as Gekko argues about these
VPs, it remains deeply frustrating to learn of admin
salaries that double or triple faculty compensation, all in an era of
budget cuts and crises. In the middle of this speech, anyway, Gekko’s got me.
But in the
speech’s final section, Gekko returns to and amplifies his opening MAGA-esque
frame. The closing is best known for its “Greed—for lack of a better word—is good”
line, but it also includes two parallel and even more problematic ideas. One is
an implied embrace of the
eugenicist theories known as Social Darwinism: “The new law of evolution in
corporate America seems to be survival of the unfittest…Greed clarifies, cuts
through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit.” And the other is
captured in Gekko’s culminating phrase: “And greed—you mark my words—will not
only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the
USA.” Few recent political ideas have been more pernicious and destructive than
the notion that the government is akin to and should
be run like a business, and here Gekko goes one significant step further
still: defining the nation itself as a corporation. I’m fine with the idea that
all Americans are stakeholders in our society, but that’s not at all Gekko’s
emphasis here—his repeated celebration of greed makes clear that it’s the
corporate prioritizing of profit which he’s highlighting. Profit also seems
clearly to be what President Trump has meant by “winning”—and just like Gordon
Gekko before him, Trump means profit for himself and his friends, not (indeed,
at the expense of) the rest of us stakeholders.
Next movie
speech tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other movie speeches you’d highlight?
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