Jan. 8th, 2010

ceebeegee: (Vera Ellen)
I was reading on ATC about the musical Silk Stockings, Cole Porter's last musical. It's considered problematical to revive, even though it has a terrific score, because it takes place during the Cold War (it's based on the movie Ninotchka) and the plot (and jokes) are seen as pretty dated. The same thing is said about Chess, a great favorite of mine--fantastic score but the plot is said to date it.

Now here is something to ponder--South Pacific came out a few years after World War II had ended. Why hasn't that show ever been seen as dated? After World War II ended, American culture went full-bore ahead--expansion into the suburbs, the rise of consumerist culture, the highly structured couture designs on the post-War era, the baby boom--it seems they wanted to put the past behind them and not remember this truly terrible war that had decimated their youth. (Although America, the psychological toll of Pearl Harbor notwithstanding, wasn't hit nearly as hard as Europe, especially Russia. Russia was SLAMMED. Read about the sieges of Stalingrad and Leningrad sometime--Leningrad went on for over TWO YEARS. And the pathetic death of little Tanya Savicheva--"only Tanya is left." Russia was hit so hard.) Anway, you'd think America would want to forget World War II--so why was South Pacific so successful? Why has it never been considered dated?

I wonder if it has something to do with our too-soon involvement in the Korea War--such a dreary war, not even a war, a police action, with none of the romance of World War II, the "Good War," where we clearly understood what we were fighting and why. We were conspicuously triumphant in Word War II, whereas the Cold War just sort of collapsed.
ceebeegee: (crescent moon)
...vomiting (the scene is Super-Size Me when he yaks on the second day right out the van window, all the while cataloguing his symptoms ("I got the McGurgles in my stomach now...") KILLS me). In real life vomiting really grosses me out, I sympathy-gag. But at a distance, there's something hilarious about it.

...stampeding (there's something hilarious about a situation so awful that everyone comes together as one entity, focused on ESCAPE--I'm thinking about the scene in the novel The Great Santini when Karen accidentally lobs the medicine ball onto her dad's foot and instantly all four Meecham kids, who normally fight a lot, are out the door).

...really egregious breaches of behavior.

This has all three. I cannot stop giggling.

[Although I have to object to the title of the original site that Gothamist cites. I'm really tired of douche being used as an insult. It's implicitly misogynistic. It's like when you want to insult a man by calling him a vagina--the insult is in the comparison to the female side, like hysteria (from the Greek root word for womb, hustera). Douches are disgusting because ohhh, they touched someone's girly bits, gross! They're like tampons! Anything that touches girly bits will make your wee wee shrivel up and fall off. Just call these things obnoxious, or assholery. Everyone's got an asshole.]

And this site is also hilarious: Nic Cage as Everyone. I especially like Nic Cage as Pennywise:

Profile

ceebeegee: (Default)
ceebeegee

May 2020

S M T W T F S
     12
3456 789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 4th, 2025 11:04 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios