WALL-E
FOR PRESIDENT
By FRANK RICH
The New York Times, 7/6/08
So much for a July Fourth week
spent in idyllic celebration of our country’s birthday. This
year’s festivities were marked instead by a debate —
childish, not constitutional — over who is and isn’t
patriotic. The fireworks were sparked by a verbally maladroit retired
general, fueled by two increasingly fatuous presidential campaigns,
and heated to a boil by a 24/7 news culture that inflates any passing
tit for tat into a war of the worlds.
Let oil soar above $140 a barrel. Let layoffs and foreclosures proliferate
like California’s fires. Let someone else worry about the
stock market’s steepest June drop since the Great Depression.
In our political culture, only one question mattered: What was Wesley
Clark saying about John McCain and how loudly would every politician
and bloviator in the land react?
Unable to take another minute of this din, I did what any sensible
person might do and fled to the movies. More specifically, to an
animated movie in the middle of a weekday afternoon. What escape
could be more complete?
Among its other attributes, this particular G-rated film, “Wall-E,”
is a rare economic bright spot. Its enormous box-office gross last
weekend swelled a total Hollywood take that was up 20 percent from
a year ago. (You know America’s economy is cooked when everyone
flocks to the movies.) The “Wall-E” crowds were primed
by the track record of its creator, Pixar Animation Studios, and
the ecstatic reviews. But if anything, this movie may exceed its
audience’s expectations. It did mine.
As it happened, “Wall-E” opened the same summer weekend
as the hot-button movie of the 2004 campaign year, Michael Moore’s
“Fahrenheit 9/11.” Ah, the good old days. Oil was $38
a barrel, our fatalities in Iraq had not hit 900, and only 57 percent
of Americans thought their country was on the wrong track. (Now
more than 80 percent do.) “Wall-E,” a fictional film
playing to a far larger audience, may touch a more universal chord
in this far gloomier time.
Indeed,
sitting among rapt children mostly under 12, I felt as if I’d
stepped through a looking glass. This movie seemed more realistically
in touch with what troubles America this year than either the substance
or the players of the political food fight beyond the multiplex’s
walls. While the real-life grown-ups on TV were again rebooting
Vietnam, the kids at “Wall-E” were in deep contemplation
of a world in peril — and of the future that is theirs to
make what they will of it. Compare any 10 minutes of the movie with
10 minutes of any cable-news channel, and you’ll soon be asking:
Exactly who are the adults in our country and who are the cartoon
characters?
Almost any description of this beautiful film makes it sound juvenile
or didactic, and it is neither. So I’ll keep to the minimum.
“Wall-E” is a robot-meets-robot love story, as simple
(and often as silent) as a Keaton or Chaplin fable, set largely
in a smoldering and abandoned Earth, circa 2700, where the only
remaining signs of life are a cockroach and a single green sprout.
The robot of the title is a battered mobile trash compactor whose
sole knowledge of human civilization and intimacy comes from the
avalanche of detritus the former inhabitants left behind —
a Rubik’s Cube, an engagement ring and, most strangely, a
single stuttering VCR tape of “Hello, Dolly!,” a candied
Hollywood musical from 1969. Wall-E keeps rewinding to the song
that finds the young lovers pledging their devotion until “time
runs out.”
Pixar is not Stanley Kubrick. Though “Wall-E” is laced
with visual and musical allusions to “2001: A Space Odyssey,”
its vision of apocalypse now is not as dark as Kubrick’s then.
The new film speaks to the anxieties of 2008 as specifically as
“2001” did to the more explosive tumult of its (election)
year, 1968. That’s more than upsetting enough.
Humanity is not dead in “Wall-E,” but it is in peril.
The world’s population cruises the heavens ceaselessly on
a mammoth luxury spaceship that it boarded in the early 22nd century
after the planet became uninhabitable. For government, there is
a global corporation called Buy N Large, which keeps the public
wired to umpteenth-generation iPods and addicted to a diet of supersized
liquefied fast food and instantly obsolete products. The people
are too bloated to walk — they float around on motorized Barcaloungers
— but they are happy shoppers. A billboard on the moon heralds
a Buy N Large outlet mall “coming soon,” not far from
that spot where back in the day of “Hello, Dolly!” idealistic
Americans once placed a flag.
And yet these rabid consumers, like us, are haunted by what paradise
might have been lost. How can they reclaim what matters? How can
Earth be recolonized? These questions are rarely spoken in “Wall-E,”
but are omnipresent, like half-forgotten dreams. In this movie,
a fleeting green memory of the extinct miracle of photosynthesis
is as dazzling and elusive as the emerald city of Oz.
One of the great things about art, including popular art, is that
it can hit audiences at a profound level beyond words. That includes
children. The kids at “Wall-E” were never restless,
despite the movie’s often melancholy mood and few belly laughs.
They seemed to instinctually understand what “Wall-E”
was saying; they didn’t pepper their chaperones with questions
along the way. At the end they clapped their small hands. What they
applauded was not some banal cartoonish triumph of good over evil
but a gentle, if unmistakable, summons to remake the world before
time runs out.
You have to wonder what these same kids make of the political show
their parents watch on TV at home. The fierce urgency of now that
drives “Wall-E” and its yearning for change is absent
in both the Barack Obama and McCain campaigns these days.For me,
Mr. Obama showed signs of jumping the shark two weeks back, when
he appeared at a podium affixed with his own pompous faux-presidential
seal. It could have been a Pixar sight gag. In fact, it is a gag
in “Wall-E,” where, in a flashback, we see that the
original do-nothing chief executive of Buy N Large (prone to pronouncements
like “stay the course”) boasted his own ersatz presidential
podium.
For all the hyperventilation on the left about Mr. Obama’s
rush to the center — some warranted, some not — what’s
more alarming is how small-bore and defensive his campaign has become.
Whether he’s reaffirming his long-held belief in faith-based
programs or fudging his core convictions about government snooping,
he is drifting away from the leadership he promised and into the
focus-group-tested calculation patented by Mark Penn in his disastrous
campaign for Hillary Clinton. Mr. Obama’s Wednesday address
calling for renewed public service is unassailable in principle
but inadequate to the daunting size of the serious American crisis
at hand. The speech could have been — and has been —
delivered by any candidate of either party in any election year
since 1960.
What Mr. Obama has going for him during this tailspin is that his
opponent seems mortifyingly out-to-lunch. Mr. McCain is a man who
aspires to lead the largest economy in the world and yet recently
admitted that he doesn’t know how to use a computer, the one
modern tool shared by everyone from the post-industrial American
work force to Middle Eastern terrorists to Pixar animators. Getting
shot down over Vietnam may not be a qualification for president
in 2008, but surely a rudimentary facility with a laptop is. What
Mr. McCain has going for him is a press corps that often ignores
or covers up such embarrassments.
The Republican’s digital ignorance is not a function of his
age but of his intellectual inflexibility and his isolation from
his country’s reality. To prove the point last week, he took
a superfluous, if picturesque, tour of Colombia and Mexico, with
occasional timeouts for him and his surrogates to respond like crybabies
to General Clark’s supposed slur on his patriotism.
For connoisseurs of McCainian cluelessness, the high point was his
Wednesday morning appearance on ABC’s “Good Morning
America.” The anchor, Robin Roberts, asked the only important
question: Why in heaven’s name was Mr. McCain in Latin America
when “the U.S. economy is really at the forefront of voters’
minds”?
“I know Americans are hurting very badly right now,”
he explained, channeling the first George Bush’s “Message:
I care.” As he spoke, those hurting Americans could feast
on the gorgeous flora and fauna of the Cartagena, Colombia, tourist
vista serving as his backdrop. “It’s really lovely here,”
Mr. McCain said. Since he can’t drop us an e-mail, a video
postcard will have to do.
Mr. McCain should be required to see “Wall-E” to learn
just how far adrift he is from an America whose economic fears cannot
be remedied by his flip-flop embrace of the Bush tax cuts (for the
wealthy) and his sham gas-tax holiday (for everyone else). Mr. Obama
should see it to be reminded of just how bold his vision of change
had been before he settled into a front-runner’s complacency.
Americans should see it to appreciate just how much things are out
of joint on an Independence Day when a cartoon robot evokes America’s
patriotic ideals with more conviction than either of the men who
would be president.
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