By Ayad Rahim on 4.7.06 @ 12:06AM
In depicting terrorists, Hollywood is a gang that can't see straight.
While Sun Tsu counseled, "know thy enemy," Hollywood's motto
appears to be, "look the other way."
In the popular television series about terrorism 24,
those trying to kill hundreds of thousands in Los Angeles are
Russian secessionists named Anton, James Nathanson (who's extremely
Nordic looking), Ivan Erwich, Sergei, Polokov, Jacob Rossley,
Victor Gregorin, Mikhail and Vladimir Bierko (played by British
actor Julian Sands, of A Room With a View) -- most of
them, blond.
Yup -- that's who we have to watch out for, those damn
Scandinavians and Slavs.
What's more, a mole in counter-terrorism, a hit man sent to kill
our hero, and the men who helped the terrorists acquire nerve gas
(Christopher Henderson and National Security Adviser Walt Cummings)
are all European Caucasians.
As Yogi Berra said, "It's too coincidental to be a
coincidence."
It reminds me of actor Ben Affleck's explanation
for why The Sum of All Fears replaced novelist Tom
Clancy's Arab terrorists with neo-Nazis: "The Arab terrorist thing
has been done a million times in the movies." (The actor's
namesake, Michel Afleq, was a founder of Arab fascism.)
Actually, the makers of 24 might be on to something. In
December, a Swedish terror suspect was picked up in Prague. So said
all the headlines and the contents of the main stories. It took a bit of digging to find
out that the man's name was Oussama, that he was Lebanese, and that
our government accused him of being "bin Ladin's man in Sweden" and of
setting up terrorist training in Oregon.
I'll grant you, it is a little hard to tell who the terrorists
are. In the past few months, news reports have informed us that it
was just "youths" who set off holocausts in 900 towns in France,
and undefined "rioters" rampaging on the beaches of Sydney.
Better yet, the terrorists could be a race of invisible men --
superheroes -- like the unmentioned gang-rapists targeting
improperly appareled women across Europe and Australia, and the mystery man who drove a rented SUV into a crowd on the University of
North Carolina campus. Actually, credit must be given, where it's
due. The Associated Press got very specific, about one man's
identity, calling him "an exiled Saudi dissident." That's Osama
bin Laden, in case you didn't recognize him.
WHEN IT'S NOT SLAVS AND Scandinavians, the bad guys are...us. In
George Clooney's Syriana, American oilmen are determined
to corrupt a benign Arab despot (read, Saddam), while his son,
intent on democratizing the country, is killed -- along with his
lovely family -- by a missile sent from CIA headquarters.
24 seems to be thinking along the same lines. The
president's national security adviser helps terrorists acquire
nerve gas for purely patriotic purposes -- part of a larger plan to
ensure greater military spending and the freer flow of oil.
When it's not Big Oil, it's some other large company, the
archvillains of quite a few recent films being multinational
corporations. In fact, last year's much-praised Constant
Gardener applies the phrase "axis of evil" to pharmaceutical
companies.
Why, 24's most loathsome and bungling characters aren't
any of the terrorists, but counter-terrorism head Lynn McGill and
U.S. President Charles Logan, who asks his closest adviser to pray
with him and is in cahoots with the terrorists.
Next thing you know, we'll have a terrorist named Judah or
Christian.
In fact -- been there, done that. In Ridley Scott's movie about
the Crusades, Kingdom of Heaven, a Christian beheads a
Muslim hostage, the Christians execute Salahudine's sister (in
reality, they released her), and Salahudine himself, picks up a
crucifix from the ground and fondles it admiringly. Why, the
Russian gang in 24 carries out staged executions for the
TV cameras. I wonder where we've seen that!
Steven Spielberg does 'em one better. He avoids the terrorists
altogether, and not-so-subtly blames Israel for 9/11 -- and, by
extension, our soldiers for terrorism.
The closing shot of his Munich is a longing one of the
newly built Twin Towers. "Had to show them," Spielberg told
Time magazine, explaining that the Middle East's "cycle of
violence" had reached our shores. He conveys his message that
responding to terrorism is futile, by having his terrorists conduct
a bombing campaign in response to their peers being put out of
commission.
Indeed, the movie's Israeli protagonist, Avner, comes to realize
"we have to do this not as a war, but within the legal system." To
top it off, Avner fulfills the dream of Iran's president and other
anti-Semites by abandoning Israel to find his home in Brooklyn.
To add insult to injury, we are barely shown the slaughter of
the Israeli Olympians -- only at the end, glancingly, and
interspersed with shots of Avner having rough sex -- and it's the
movie's Jews who viciously gun down a kind Palestinian
poetry translator, a doting father, a philosopher, and a beautiful
Dutch prostitute. I told you we'd get a Judah. Actually, methinks
we have a Judas, in our midst.
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS, if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. The winner of
this year's Golden Globe for best foreign film, Paradise
Now, portrays Palestinian suicide bombers as Jesus-like and
sanitizes their bombings. So, you see -- the Arab terrorists aren't
our enemies, they're our saviors. In Syriana, too, the man
who becomes a suicide bomber is the movie's most noble character.
The newest entrant, V for Vendetta, puts it all together.
The terrorists, called freedom fighters, blow up buildings to
topple a fascist Christian tyranny that suppresses -- are you ready
for this -- Islam.
Hold onto your hats, though. The first big movie in the works
about 9/11 -- purportedly hailing that day's heroes -- is being
directed by Oliver Stone, who called the 9/11 attacks a justified
"revolt" against the established order and the six companies that
control the world, compared Palestinians cheering 9/11 to
celebrants of the French and Russian revolutions, and said 9/11 may
have unleashed as much creative energy as the birth of
Einstein.
"Hooray for Hollywood!"
topics:
Television, Islam, Hollywood, Movies, Military, Iran, Russia, Israel, Fascism, Energy, Oil