swan_tower: (armor)
swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2006-12-19 12:56 am
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Apocalypto

Grar.

So very nearly good. I can forgive it things like architectural features apparently drawn from about 1500 years of Mayan history. I can, if I try very hard, dig up a Mayan city still occupied around, y'know, that time. (Though they could have made my life far simpler in that respect by filming in Nahuatl instead of Yucatec. Then I wouldn't have spent five minutes after the credits snarling and flailing about Aztecs.) I could maybe even let go of the weirdness of a large Mayan city apparently being surrounded by hunter-gatherers at no more than two days' distance. (What, did they all survive off that one cornfield?) And hey, some of the things I thought were inaccuracies turned out not to be!

But grar.

I debated long and hard whether or not I wanted to see this movie, given Mel Gibson's personal disagreeability to me, given the potential (and, I'm afraid, actual) colonialist overtones of the story. In the end I went because I'm a Mesoamerican geek, and because I wanted to tell Hollywood there's at least one more person in the world who will happily watch movies in obscure Central American languages with actors nobody's ever heard of. And I don't regret going, and I really almost like the movie. But it isn't what you'd call the best representation of Mayan culture; the aforementioned hunter-gatherers make it look more primitive than it needed to, and it doesn't give the context that human sacrifice needs. (Okay, so my article is Nonfiction Lite, but it sums up much of what I would otherwise have to repeat here.) Few people watching that movie will know or care about the cosmological framework in which sacrifice generally fit, nor the ways in which the epidemics that appear to have preceded the physical arrival of Europeans on the mainland sent people into a frenzy that was to normal behavior as the apocalyptic cults and flagellant societies of plague-era Europe were to normal Christianity before everybody started dying. Few people will think to make that comparison to our own history, and therefore to understand how Europeans wouldn't come off so well were we to make this kind of movie about them during the Black Death. Instead, we get Noble Savages (the hunter-gatherers, whom I actually quite liked aside from their anachronistic subsistence strategy) fleeing the pointless sadism of the Evil City Folk. Things lack context, and sometimes sport inaccuracies while doing so. It isn't a great combination.

And yet. And yet. The cenote outside the village, the jade in the nobles' teeth, the atlatl. The murals with elements taken from a site my sophomore tutorial leader excavated. The actor whose profile is about the closest you can get to Mayan without practicing cranial modification on an infant and then waiting twenty years for him to grow up. There were so many details that were good, and Gibson filmed the movie in freakin' Yucatec. It came so close to being a film that would make me melt in geeky glee. I just wish I didn't have to feel so ambivalent about it.

[identity profile] mindstalk.livejournal.com 2006-12-19 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the review. And I liked your sacrifice article.

[identity profile] d-c-m.livejournal.com 2006-12-19 12:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the review!!! I plan to see it. I wondered how authentic it might be but hey, I fully support movies being made that aren't about a bunch of young white people so off I go. Cool about your teacher too!! My best friend has done lots of her work in Central America. Hmmm.... I bet you two would really like each other. She'll be here for Xmas break.....

[identity profile] ombriel.livejournal.com 2006-12-19 03:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Too bad it's not utterly awesome, but I am relieved that it didn't out-and-out suck donkey balls.

[identity profile] rubynye.livejournal.com 2006-12-19 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
That's an excellent and useful review. Thank you for it!

[identity profile] lemuriapress.livejournal.com 2006-12-24 06:07 am (UTC)(link)
Been meaning to see this movie, and will probably go ahead and do it despite the warnings. I am a sucker for Maya/Aztec/Olmec anything, even if it is relatively crappy.

I came across your LJ thanks to the White List. I read about half of Doppelganger before I got distracted by work emergencies and had to put it down. I _will_ get back to it, as I enjoyed what I read. I have to say I like the cover to the sequel a lot better.

Nice to see you on LiveJournal. Consider yourself friended.

Our moms would be so proud! :)

--Erik Mona

[identity profile] lemuriapress.livejournal.com 2006-12-24 08:10 am (UTC)(link)
We were the first plane to leave Seattle for Denver in three days, and everyone clapped when we finally lifted off. We had about eight minutes to make our connection (one of the first planes to _leave_ Denver), so I didn't get a chance to see much. The woman next to me on the plane said it took her three hours to get through security in Denver, and I heard on the radio today that they won't even let you into the airport unless you have a confirmed flight. On our run to the second plane we passed dozens of people sleeping, mid-afternoon, on airport-provided cots.

Yuck.

Have a great Christmas! Please give my regards to your family.