Monday, January 26, 2009

Superpowers as superheroes

I’m hesitant to link to this article, because the larger context enunciates a fear that has likely been hovering within many of us as of late, and that, frankly I don’t wish to discuss or dwell on. That being said, I always think its fascinating to see how America is viewed from the outside, and Charlie Brooker, the TV columnist over at the Guardian offers up such a brilliant passage about what recent years have looked like from across the pond, that I can’t resist:

For the last eight years, watching America at work was like watching the scenes in Superman III where Superman, under the influence of red kryptonite, goes "bad" and grows stubble and gets drunk and starts vandalising the city and shouting at kids. He's only stopped when his geeky alter ego Clark Kent magically fights his way out from within, and stands blinking before him, in his nerdy suit and thick glasses. Evil Superman scowls, and the pair have a cathartic bust-up in a junkyard - at the end of which Evil Superman is finally vanquished. As a battered but unbowed Clark Kent gazes up at the heavens, the theme music swells, and he pulls his shirt open to reveal - ta da! - a fresh, clean Superman costume he'd been wearing underneath the whole time. Then he flies off and beats up Robert Vaughn or something, which is a shame because until then it had all been a pretty good metaphor for the redemptive spectacle of last November's election. And now it's just a silly action movie I probably shouldn't have mentioned in the first place.

So nice to know we’re seen as the good Superman again.

3 comments:

E.W.B. said...

Starting with his speech in Chicago on election night, I have not been able to watch Obama at a public event without fearing for his life to some degree. This nation has a recent history of killing left-ist leaders, sometimes for political reasons, and sometimes for reasons unclear.

John F. Kennedy, shot and killed November 22nd, 1963 in Dallas, TX.

Malcolm X, also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, shot and killed February 21st, 1965.

Martin Luther King, Jr., shot and killed April 4th, 1968 in Memphis, TN.

Robert F. Kennedy, shot June 5th, 1968 in Los Angeles, CA, died the following day.

E.W.B. said...

Malcolm X was shot and killed in Manhattan.

Carly B. said...

Didn't you read the part where I said "I didn't wish to discuss or dwell on" that aspect of the article.

But I too have the same fear.