Tuesday 30 September 2014

On The Road


Also Known As:
Unknown
Year:
2012
Countries:
Argentina… Brazil… Canada… France… United Kingdom… United States…
Predominant Genre:
Adventure
Director:
Walter Salles…
Best Performances:
Ximena ADRIANA… Alice BRAGA… Steve BUSCEMI… Marie-Ginette GUAY… Terrence HOWARD… Imogen HAWORTH… Lilia MENDOZA… Viggo MORTENSEN… Elisabeth MOSS… Sam RILEY…
Premiss:
Whites searching for meaning outside their own superficial culture go slumming in others’.
Themes:
Personal change | Self-expression | White culture
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Diarios de Motocicleta (2004)… My Own Private Idaho (1991)…
Review Format:
DVD

Empty Vessels Make the Most Noise

As usual, when Whites search for something to fill the void at the center of their inner lives, they find their own political obsession with pigeonholing others (to demean them) getting in the way of any true personal expression. Here, Whites universalize their existential suffering as if everyone else also had no culture to tell them who they are and no culture to tell them how to solve the problems they face. Whites permanently analyze but never truly understand or truly live, since such analysis is an attempt to avoid understanding: Wanting to become something, not being anything. The film’s characterization is so poor precisely because Existentialism is such a superficial philosophy that its adherents are more interested in thinking about life than actually living it.

All of life is a foreign country.

White Whine with Every Meal

Whites’ lack of genuine experience results from the necessary emotional repression inherent in White culture (White supremacy is only sustainable by avoiding all contact [& experience] with non-Whites; hence, White violence placates their fear of those they exploit). This explains why Whites use non-prescription drugs to medicate their inability to connect both with others and with themselves. Such emotional repression means automatic personal dishonesty, it also means judging people politically as a group; rather than personally as individuals; hence, the loneliness on show in this film. The always-unrequited White desire to be someone other than whom one is, purposely-trapped in a culture that defines people by skin color and by little else.

Rolling Stones Gather No Moss

Although self-discovery can only come from within ones cultural experience, Whites persist in believing otherwise, their culturelessness virtually guarantees this. Yet, Whites never accept this reality - any more than this dishonest film does. The experience of life so gained is not real experience but a running away from it; hence, the film’s superficiality. All that such people can ever be is parasites; feeding off their cultural betters while repeatedly engaging in emotional self-indulgence and psychological self-destruction by feeding off cultures they despise; including their own.

Whites are stuck in their culture because no others will accept them because of the lack of trust engendered by White supremacy. Whites, thus, learn to rationalize their self-oppression with mealy-mouthed movies like this, rather than face-up-to the quintessential emptiness of a culture designed to serve collective goals far more than individual ones. The so-called free spirits on display here are, in the end, no more free than the White puritans they so openly disdain.


Monday 29 September 2014

Happy Endings


Also Known As:
Unknown
Year:
2005
Country:
United States…
Predominant Genre:
Comedy
Director:
Don Roosr…
Outstanding Performance:
Maggie GYLLENHAAL…
Premiss:
Weaves multiple stories to create a witty look at love, family and the sheer unpredictablity of life itself.
Themes:
Alienation | Destiny | Emotional repression | Loneliness | Loyalty | Narcissism | Political Correctness | White culture | White supremacy
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Unknown
Review Format:
DVD

Cold White Whine

The usual White whining about how no-one can trust no-one in White culture.

The usual directionless esthetic expression of human emotion fails to enlighten us as to why Whites are as unempathetic as this; a depiction degenerating into criticizing others for their emotional inadequacy as a means of Projecting & Displacing ones own inabilities.

This movie wastes a great cast on little more than the superficiality of White culture where Materialism has replaced Happiness as a social and a personal goal. This makes the characterization feeble because the characters are so similar to each other.

This meta-film talks about Whites rather than expressing who they are - in any deep sense. Much like in real-life, Whites are unable to really address why they have created such a lonely and such an emotionally-masochistic culture. Is it the White insularity that inevitably springs from White supremacy?

Despite the title, there are no real endings here - happy or otherwise.


Sunday 28 September 2014

Tsotsi


Also Known As:
Thug (2005)…
Year:
2005
Countries:
South Africa… United Kingdom…
Predominant Genre:
Crime
Director:
Gavin Hood…
Outstanding Performances:
Entire Cast…
Premiss:
Six days in the violent life of a young gang leader.
Themes:
Alienation | Christianity | Compassion | Destiny | Emotional repression | Guilt | Loyalty | Narcissism | Personal change | Political Correctness | Redemption | Self-expression | Social class | White culture | White guilt | White supremacy
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Unknown ()…
Review Format:
DVD

Despite the political and psychological naivety of the piece, this is a deeply-affecting tale of redemption among the shanty townships of Johannesburg. You will find yourself rooting for the villain in his long dark night of the soul as he struggles to be one of the few leopards who ever changed his spots.

Fully imbued with a richly-warm and a profound humanity, this is the kind of story that Leo Tolstoy would have dearly loved. The performances speak directly to the audience of the passion of each of the characters and of how they either chose to buckle under the pain or become better people for it.


Saturday 27 September 2014

Creation


Also Known As:
Unknown ()…
Year:
2009
Country:
United States…
Predominant Genre:
Historical
Director:
Jon Amiel…
Outstanding Performances:
Paul BETTANY… Martha WEST…
Premiss:
English naturalist Charles Darwin struggles to find a balance between his revolutionary theories on evolution and the relationship with religious wife, whose faith contradicts his work.
Themes:
Alienation | Atheism | Christianity | Compassion | Destiny | Emotional repression | Evolution | Loyalty | Nature | Personal change | Political Correctness | Religion | Science | Self-expression | White culture
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Unknown ()…
Review Format:
DVD

Hardly surprising that a self-contradictory hypothesis like Evolution (Random Mutation & Natural Selection contradict each other since they do not resolve the issue of whether mutations are based on luck or survival fitness) should produce such a confused movie.

Claims that Nature is brutish and purposeless and that survival at all costs is all that matters to species is self-evident nonsense since few species predate and devour each other. Such a claim is more a matter of White pseudo-intellectuals projecting and displacing their own violence onto the rest of the world: The so-called ‘Universal struggle for Life’. One wonders if Darwin’s ideas about Natural Selection are nothing more than an intuitive response to selective breeding of livestock practised by humans rather than the voyage of the Beagle - despite the fact that such breeding does not lead to an evolutionary improvement in the species so bred, but to inbreeding. (Darwin’s marriage to his own first cousin being a prime example.)

Because Christians have always been uncivilised in their attempts to force others to their will - because they lack the very civility they wish to inculcate in others - it follows that Darwin is seized upon by atheists as a contrary explanation for the existence of life on Earth in a desperate attempt to refute god. The false conflict between Science and Religion is merely the attempt to aggrandize both - but has failed since both are still triumph in the modern world. It is possible to claim that god created Evolution such that Darwin’s theories do not kill god - as claimed here.

There is no suggestion here that since the publication of The Origin of Species in 1859, the evidence for the existence of a process called Evolution should be so scant as to call its very existence into question, despite its unquestioned acceptance by most of Western culture; making this no more than propaganda for a barely credible pseudo-scientific belief. Strip away all the White political hocus-pocus and you have a hypothesis that is no more than a self-fulfilling prophecy: The fit survive because they are the fittest to survive. A statement of the obvious that does not qualify as the “biggest single idea in the history of thought” - especially when some mutations are not beneficial to survival, such as humans with six fingers, but which does not harm the possessors.

Paul BETTANY is excellent as always and the relationship between himself and his screen daughter (Martha WEST) is well-handled; revealing - better than his relationship with his wife - the life of the mind that he pursued. His daughter turns out to be far more perspicacious than he about the human soul as she is written to be his conscience; constantly commenting on the action of the drama as often as she is an integral part of it. She is, in fact, what this movie is all about.

Emotionally, this film is an impressive achievement; scientifically, it is little more than quackery.


Friday 26 September 2014

River’s Edge


Also Known As:
Unknown
Year:
1986
Country:
United States…
Predominant Genre:
Crime
Director:
Tim Hunter…
Outstanding Performances:
Crispin GLOVER… Dennis HOPPER…
Premiss:
A high school slacker kills his girlfriend and shows off her dead body to his friends. However, the friends’ reaction is almost as ambiguous and perplexing as the crime itself.
Themes:
Alienation | Emotional repression | Ethical Politics | Friendship | Guilt | Loneliness | Loyalty | White culture
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Of Mice and Men (1992)… Rebel Without a Cause (1955)…
Review Format:
Cinema

Children Without Childhood

Nothing to dislike here despite the fact that the characterization is archetypal and thus the characters are only visible for what they do rather than who they are.

This one focuses on the actual motivations of White teenagers, not just their behavior; revealing directionlessness and an unempathetic White culture. The lack of self-respect so revealed reveals the characters as having no sense of the value of life nor of any self-worth; normalizing murder as a valid means of self-expression.

White youth are shown as morally-bereft; their false sense of loyalty to those they grow up with masked by trying to keep a secret so vile it becomes the basis of false friendship for the lonely. The choices people make about who their friends are become problematic in the presence of bad parenting and a declining White culture, since accepting what one is born into is easier than consciously choosing between False Loyalty; Loneliness; or, Finding New Friends.

Friendship as emotional blackmail becomes the central metaphor for a culture-in-crisis as teens try to discover the true nature of human relationships when surrounded by adult ones that have largely failed through lack of application. Characterless, friendless moral vacua in a morally-vacuous culture - they do not know themselves so do not know each other; desperately wondering how to respond to situations that may result in the loss of friendships that might not be worth continuing in the first place.

Only a deep sense of morbidity makes the people here feel alive since life itself is alien to them: They are potentially dead before ever having lived since their lives lack meaning. A cultureless culture where Will to Power becomes a solace for the paranoid/schizophrenia brought-on by a profound sense of existential despair.

A masterpiece.


Thursday 25 September 2014

Traffik


Also Known As:
Unknown ()…
Year:
1989
Country:
United Kingdom…
Predominant Genre:
Crime
Director:
Alastair Reid…
Outstanding Performances:
None…
Premiss:
Police arrest an international businessman, charging him with smuggling heroin. While he is on trial, his trophy wife, a former swimmer, discovers steely ruthlessness within herself. A politician tours the poppy-eradication project and returns home to find his daughter is a heroin addict. While trying to save her, and helped by a crusading attorney, he learns the limits of government policy. A peasant burned off his land where he farmed poppies, goes to work for a murderous drug lord.
Themes:
Alienation | Compassion | Destiny | Emotional repression | Guilt | Loneliness | Narcissism | Personal change | Political Correctness | Self-expression | Social class | White culture
Similar (in Plot, Theme or Style) to:
Traffic (2000)…
Review Format:
DVD

Turning Poppy into Gold

The usual White whining about how terrible it is for Western Whites to be addicted to non-prescription drugs when this is entirely their own fault and responsibility.

This lack of human understanding extends to never exploring why so many Whites wish to take drugs in the first place and what this indicates about the state of White culture that so many of its adherents should wish to be affectively elsewhere.

The economics and the politics of drug-abuse is well-handled, however, and the fact that as drug-users fulfill their need to fill the vacuum of their lives, so drug traffickers and growers make the most money from exploiting the emotional emptiness of others.

The reason the War on Drugs failed is that the essential truths about the Western Demand for such drugs and the fact that interdicting the Supply of drugs will not eliminate the demand are being ignored. (Wherever there is a demand there will be a supply.)

The Hollywood remake (Traffic) is somewhat better because somewhat more honest.


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Science:



No science is immune to the infection of politics and the corruption of power.



Jacob Bronowski… (1908 - 74), British scientist, author. Encounter (London, July 1971).


Sleep of Reason:



The dream of reason produces monsters. Imagination deserted by reason creates impossible, useless thoughts. United with reason, imagination is the mother of all art and the source of all its beauty.



Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes… (1746-1828), Spanish painter. Caption to Caprichos, number 43, a series of eighty etchings completed in 1798, satirical and grotesque in form.


Humans & Aliens:



I am human and let nothing human be alien to me.



Terence… (circa 190-159 BC), Roman dramatist. Chremes, in The Self-Tormentor [Heauton Timorumenos], act 1, scene 1.


Führerprinzip:



One leader, one people, signifies one master and millions of slaves… There is no organ of conciliation or mediation interposed between the leader and the people, nothing in fact but the apparatus - in other words, the party - which is the emanation of the leader and the tool of his will to oppress. In this way the first and sole principle of this degraded form of mysticism is born, the Führerprinzip, which restores idolatry and a debased deity to the world of nihilism.