Friday, March 15, 2013

Babineaux Mars Attacks!

 
 
             Tim Burton obviously satirizes the government, military, and many other attributes of America in his film Mars Attacks. Although he has many scenes that illustrate the parodies he tries to get across, there are two that I would like to write about. Those two are the scenes that show the president doing a whole bunch of nothing and the scene that shows how the general just wanted to kill everything from the beginning. The president in this film does absolutely nothing for the citizens of the country. People constantly look to him for direction and guidance, but he never really knows what to do. Instead, he asks everyone else what they think should be done. This is very different from the president in Independence Day. The president in that film is very strict and stern and is always taken seriously. Sometimes he is taken too seriously, which is why Burton makes a parody out of the president. Burton also shows that the president dies, but it really made no impact on the country at all. The people did not really even need him in the first place. The scene that shows the general shows how Americans mostly care about destruction. When the general found out the Martians were on planet earth, he immediately thought of using weapons in order to stop them. He did not care about the aliens or what they could have possibly wanted. This film is definitely one of science fiction, though it is not like the ones prior to it like Blade Runner and Alien. Mars Attacks is very comical and cartoonish compared to the other sci-fi films. A prime example that displays its cartoon traits is the way the Martians look. They are very vibrant and imaginative compared to the aliens of other movies like Independence Day for instance. The aliens in Mars Attacks also had no real reason to do what they were doing. They were quite the tricksters of this film because all they did was make chaos and destroy the world. They also made jokes out of everything. This film has many subsidiary points that are not so evident when they are not expected.


2 comments:

  1. Hello Asenath! I also think that Burton is making quite a few quiet points about government and politics. I think the general is a great character that embodies the American view of killing all things. Obviously not all Americans want to kill everything, but it is a stereotype that is prevalent in our culture. I also want to point out that the general does have the best idea from the beginning. I mean if it weren’t for him they would never have tried to really fight off the aliens. This all supports your assertion that the president, supposed leader of the free world, does very little actual leading. Personally, I think that the general would probably have been a better actual president that the real president in the film. Do you think that Burton knew about all the political messages that we have found in his film? I wonder if sometimes our class finds messages that even Burton had not already purposely created.

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  2. Now that you mention it, the country didn’t respond the president’s death like viewers would expect. I think that at that point, the citizens realized they had to fend for themselves, and it didn’t make much of a difference that the president died because he didn’t defend for them in the first place. I like your point about the president always asking for other people’s ideas on the matter. It emphasizes the fact that he doesn’t truly know how to be a president. It is much easier to say you’re a president during easy times then times of turmoil. I also mentioned the part with the general trying to destroy things. I think this is very much a human trait. When we see something as unfamiliar, it is automatically seen as dangerous and an enemy and the way we take care of it is by destroying this unknown. I think Burton did a good job with pointing out these facts with this movie.

    -Allison Davis

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