So after taking a lovely thing and making it cheap, it gets worse. Featured quite prominently in the trailer and in movie posters is the lovely Angelina Jolie, and I find Adrienne Rich's "When We Dead Awaken" may have a great deal more carry over than I thought. Her complaint, you remember, is that in literature male writers only ever portray women as a dream or a terror, an angel or a monster, a redemption or a threat. And in the end of her piece, Rich also refers to the grindhouse movies of the 70's. One would think we've moved beyond those days, that literature, those films, but I don't know if we've moved at all beyond those exploitative grindhouse movie days when sexy women were victims who became terrors who then took particular pleasure in killing men. Jolie plays Grendel the monster's mother - and guess what? She gorgeous, sexy, semi-naked, and she seduces men into her lair, so she can kill them. They didn't make Grendel's mother a monster, they made her a beautiful woman. No wonder Rich was angry.
Here's the beginning of one of her poems:
A woman in the shape of a monster
a monster in the shape of a woman
the skies are full of them
Are our theaters full of them, do you think?
2 comments:
Wow...I never thought of it that way... I thought that it was pretty cool that the whole thing looked like a video game movie..thing. It looks like it must've been hard work to do all that...Although, when I saw Grendel and her son...I thought 'Wow he's...scary...so, why is she so...beautiful...?' Good reference with what Rich said! :D
I think I wouldn't really have anything against the movie if it was just a movie, and it didn't have literary beginnings. Grendel's mother in the poem is nothing like this sexy one in the movie! The change seems really telling, disturbingly so. I've just been listening to an audio recording of the real Beowulf - recorded by Seamus Heaney - a marvelous poet in his own right. I love the way he reads Beowulf - it's mesmerizing.
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