[lit-ideas] Re: Superman Returns

  • From: "Judith Evans" <judithevans1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 2 Jul 2006 19:31:14 +0100

LH>My problem is a worry about some form of dementia.  
LH>I know Judy doesn't like jokes about Alzheimer's but she's not as old as I am

non sequitur




  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lawrence Helm 
  To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Sunday, July 02, 2006 7:22 PM
  Subject: [lit-ideas] Re: Superman Returns 


  I will be 72 this coming October and so have a different sort of concern than 
that described by Irene in her note below.  My problem is a worry about some 
form of dementia.  I know Judy doesn't like jokes about Alzheimer's but she's 
not as old as I am.  Soldiers joke about getting killed, and you should hear 
the jokes the people who work in mortuaries tell each other . . . anyway, I had 
a jolt when I read Irene's note.  I found it clever, intelligent and rational . 
. . gads!  That's clearly not possible so can this be the first sign of 
A********'s?



  Worried Lawrence



  -----Original Message-----
  From: lit-ideas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:lit-ideas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
On Behalf Of Andy Amago
  Sent: Sunday, July 02, 2006 8:36 AM
  To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [lit-ideas] Re: Superman Returns 



   [Original Message]

  > From: Omar Kusturica <omarkusto@xxxxxxxxx>

  > To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

  > Date: 7/2/2006 6:07:29 AM

  > Subject: [lit-ideas] Re: Superman Returns 

  > 

  > 

  > 

  > --- Andy Amago <aamago@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

  > 

  > He also complains, appropriately, I think,

  > > that the characters are too young-looking for the

  > > part.   They probably are, but that might be in

  > > large part because movies today are made with an eye

  > > toward world, rather than U.S. consumption.  Most of

  > > the world (especially the developing world) are

  > > obsessed with youth.  In a lot of the world, once

  > > you turn 30 you enter the realm of the living dead

  > > for the rest of your living dead life. 

  > 

  > *I find this rather puzzling. I would have thought

  > that it is the modern cultures that tend to emphasize

  > youth and physical looks, while traditional cultures

  > tend to place more value on maturity and social

  > accomplishments. This is no doubt a generalization but

  > I am still surprized that you would assert the

  > opposite with such certainty.

  > 







  I would have thought the same, but it turns out that what I would have

  thought is a failure of logic.  I was at one time personally acquainted

  with a quite number of Indians (I was taking a programming course run by

  and pretty much for Indians, although there were some Americans in it).  To

  be sure, a lot of them were over 30 and quite alive and well.  But age was

  definitely a consideration.  There was one girl in the class (sample size

  of one, but not really), 25 years old, who considered herself the "baby",

  literally used the word baby.  She agonized at a birthday.  The instructor

  herself, who was probably about 35, claimed to be 25.  And on and on.  It

  was kind of pathetic, actually.  The very fact that Supermans producers

  cast such young-looking actors, says it all.  Note that Lois Lane is now a

  single mom.  I almost defy you (almost) to find a Hispanic family of

  father, mother and children.  Almost invariably its mother and children,

  no husband, and more than one father, even several fathers, for her

  children.  The new and improved Lois Lane is the reality; the young Lois

  Lane is the societal construct.  Note shes both young and with a five year

  old child.  Thats reality the way it really is in a lot of the world,

  including the changing U.S. with its illegal immigrants.



  I invite you to watch a Bollywood movie.  Notice that all the main actors

  are young, and white skinned (I have yet to see a white skinned Indian; I

  don't know where they get them).  The old actors are all normal darker

  skinned.  I don't remember if the bad guys were darker skinned or not in

  the movie I saw recently.  Back when taking the course, I was invited to

  the home of one of the Indians (she had quite a nice home) and her

  television was on with an Indian movie.  It was virtually the same thing,

  young white or light skinned actors.  All their movies are basically the

  same formula.  In the movie I saw in my Indian friend's home, there was

  also violence against women.  That was absent in the Netflix Bollywood I

  saw.  Also, much of the developing world has a high birth rate, so a lot of

  the population is in fact literally young, teenagers, as Andreas pointed

  out.  It's also my understanding that in India a lot of Bollywood movies

  are what we would consider soft porn.  Young women "clothed" in see through

  saris, etc.  (Wall Street Journal I think.)



  Europe might be a little better in terms of allowing people to exist in

  time.  Judy can tell us about England.  I know when I was in England a long

  time ago, newspapers advertised for specific ages, invariably under 45 and

  most a lot younger than that.  Russian employment ads are the same.  Here

  in the U.S. there certainly is ageism but it's more covert and it's against

  the law.  I think the laws that were enacted in around 1990 give protection

  to people over 40.  40, can you imagine.  I also remember a post once from

  Didier about how he came to open a bookstore.  It was because he turned 50

  and basically (paraphrasing) he was too old to continue in his regular job.

  Here 50 is, they say, the new 30, and 60 the new 40.  In theory anyway, but

  at least the sentiment is in some of the air and some of the water.  Having

  said that, there are plenty of people in the U.S. who dread getting up in

  the morning because they're one day older, and try and find a birthday card

  that isn't some variation of older the hill, starting at, yes, 30.  I have

  a personal friend who, when he turned 40 about 25 years ago, all but

  thought his life was over.  He and his wife still have the potholder on

  their wall that says, 40 and still cooking.  Kind of puts a perspective on

  things.



  I had no intention of seeing Superman Returns, but I think I'll see it

  after all.  It might be fun for everyone to go out and see it and we can

  talk about it.  Or not, as the case may be. 









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