Rant of the Week

Transgression

 

Some connected with the production have been monitoring the reaction of the Mormons, but so far, the church has put out one bland statement, and some Mormons who have seen the show told reporters they were pleasantly surprised. At least it doesn’t dwell on polygamy, they said, and its ribald humor seems braced by traditional values and affection for the Mormon characters. NY Times March 27, 2011

Braced by "traditional values"? 

From Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the authors of "South Park"?  Well, yeah, I suspected as much. 

You might think that the creators of an animated series that famously uses every expletive in the book might be rather liberal on social, if not economic, issues.

But Stone and Parker's secret is that they believe that swearing really is transgressive, and that's why I think they think it's really so funny, and never stops being funny, to them, even after the 25,487th time.

I have no idea of why they thought "Team America: World Police" would be funny to anybody.  Sometimes people forget what happens when you parody something that is already a parody of itself, like Michelle Bachman, and Kim Jong Il.   You look clumsy and mean.   Which characteristics are you going to exaggerate for comic effect?  That he actually believes that for all the ranting and raving from America he could count on America doing absolutely nothing to stop him, even as he starved his own people to death?  Because there is no oil under North Korea?  Let's make fun of him.  Let's have him try to get a nuclear bomb, knowing full well that only an insanely amoral country would ever use one.

And the parodies of Hollywood liberals might have been funnier if Parker and Stone were not equally amusing as heartland redneck conservatives who know better than Hollywood liberals because, geez, George Bush says these guys are really bad-- are you stupid or what?  Don't you know that there really are bad people out there? 

It may well have been the worst, least interesting movie I saw that year.

In earlier South Park episodes, which were funny and original at times, a character would sometimes voice the moral of the story at the end in a  clever, self-mocking tone, as if Stone and Parker were just too cool to not be self-mocking.  I suspect they're not, really.


 
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