Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Point of View Gun, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

This is a clip from the movie. 

The writing is annoying glib. That must be accepted to get at the gems throughout. The glibness strings together the gems. (glib: two men shot out of vacuum hatch into the void of space, chances of survival calculated to be grim, rescued by passing ship, annoying. It wretches glibly from one vignette to another)  This scene that describes the Point of View Gun is such a gem. It seems to me British style liberal fantasy of a gun that aggresses the shooter's POV, to violently penetrate a victim with one's own perspective, to force one's feelings combatively. An empathy gun. It's easy to miss at first they're speaking Britainlandia-talk and it goes quickly, but the narrator explains what happens. Like all British handling firearms the character accidentally shoots it, they must, they're British, the moment they touch a gun, the fist moment, it fires and hits somebody, and that's not even part of the glibness. That's innate to British psyche. When the woman gets hold of the gun then things get really dangerous. Another trope there.  Here, the writer describes women as walking emotional basket cases. She shoots the guy right off who she want's to have know (about herself). She keeps shooting to get deeper insights into herself through his expressions of her emotions as if experiencing therapy, not just pleased to have the guy know but to also learn for herself (about herself). Pow - pow for double-depth insight at the end cracks me up for its indifference to the pain of being shot.  


3 comments:

john said...

The last line is why there are no such things as "walk a mile in my shoes" shoes.

Methadras said...

This is the only gun leftists would commission to everyone in the world. It would become gigantic circular clusterfucking firing squad of POV!!!

William said...

I forgot Zoey Deschanel was in that movie. She's one of my favorites, but she's never had a memorable role. Audrey Hepburn had two or three. Life is unfair.