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MOVIE NEWS
Be Thankful For: Filmmakers Who Keep It Real![]()
I’m not rich and never have been. If everything you know about America was learned from our movies you might think otherwise. I am after all, white. In Hollywood’s America all white people are wealthy, corrupt, and either work in the movie business or are doctors, lawyers, superheroes, and if you’re lucky, maybe investment bankers. Non-white people are generally criminals or Will Smith. Or perhaps you get your view of America from our journalists, most of whom went to expensive, top flight colleges on their parents’ dime, and then got jobs on either the country’s East or West coasts, the only parts of the United States that matters. Or maybe you know what you know based on the internet’s current crop of movie bloggers, who spend their days smoking pot and bragging about all the toys their well-to-do parents bought for them as kids, living in a never ending fantasy of infinite presents under an infinite Christmas tree.
That’s not America, it’s just a small part of it, and it’s not just the Michael Bay’s of this world that are to blame for ignoring reality. Yes his movies are full of supermodels with perfect teeth out to save the planet, but more often than not our supposedly more realistic indie movies do little better. This year’s top Oscar bait films tell the stories of a gay politican, a professional wrestler, and oh yeah, the president of the United States of America. America is a lot of very different things, it’s just rare that any of them are reflected in our entertainment. Most of the people I know and grew up knowing live in a country where they spend out their existences engaged in menial labor. An existence where money isn’t easy and simple things like going to the doctor when you’re sick are a pipe dream. My Dad is and was a mechanic. Worked and continues to work hard every single day of his life, yet still there were more than a few summers spent living off food stamps and eating government cheese. Lavish presents and geeky toy collections were a fantasy, cable television was something other people had. I played with sticks in the back yard, until after a year of saving my allowance I managed to buy a single Transformer. It was a Dino-bot, and while other kids played with armies of Autobots my single, lonely Transformers fought pitched battles against Decepticons… who just happened to be disguised as household appliances. I never minded.
That’s America. Real people working hard for what sometimes is very little, and yet being happy, living, cursing, talking with uncensored glee. Real people with real jobs. Carpenters and brick layers, janitors and McDonalds cashiers and miserable saps hidden behind the four walls of an unforgiving, never ending, corporate cubicle. You’ll almost never see that in our culture’s movies, where every character is an artist or a writer or a Hollywood agent. Our movies tell the stories of politicians, doctors, and police detectives who drive around in Lamborghinis.
After a weekend in which a movie about unrealistic teenagers moaning about vampires was number one at the box office, maybe it’s time to take a minute to remember and appreciate those filmmakers who are out there, fighting to show us the little guy. The average guy. The average kid. The average girl. The 70s are long gone, and that type of filmmaker is a vanishing breed. The number of directors I considered and disqualified before putting together this list is both shocking and depressing. Consider for instance Judd Apatow, a guy known for making comedies about the average guy every man. Or is he? His first movie told the story of a bunch of dudes working at an electronics store, and we related. Apatow, having made it big, instantly went Hollywood. His second movie told the story of a guy having a baby with a glamorous entertainment reporter. Her brother in-law? A big time rock promoter with a lavish California mansion. And for his next flick, Apatow is making a movie about stand up comics. Sorry Judd, you’re off the list. There are so few everyman filmmakers left, that it’s important to credit those who are still out there making the effort. This is a week all about being thankful, so let’s be thankful for those few, brave directors willing to step outside the Hollywood comfort zone to tell stories about me and you. Give us movies about the guy in the next cubicle over. Celebrate existence of the average dude with these consistently salt of the earth movie makers. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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