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Myth in movies: Are we the bad guys?

For those who may not know, I’ve been deciphering mythological messages in TV shows, music, and movies long before Lost, and will hopefully continue to do so long after its finale next May. It’s something that most people don’t think about, but I believe that these stories and themes are reflections of our collective unconsciousness, and that storytellers are able to tap into them. In other words, I feel that today’s writers, musicians, poets, and artists are like modern-day shaman who channel messages that all of us are ready to know consciously.

In my presentations, I often comment about themes that are showing up in movies and what they may mean.  For example, during the last year there were dozens of movies with superpower themes. While the average year may have a handful of superpower movies, The 2008/09 season was full of them. Just to give some examples, there was Iron Man, Dark Knight, Hulk, Fantastic 4, Hell Boy, Wolverine, The Watchmen, Push, Hancock, Twilight, Kung-Fu Panda, Bolt, Special, Super Capers, Ponyo, and of course, Heroes on TV. In tough times, superpower movies inspire us to overcome obstacles by bringing out our inner strength. On a more esoteric level, there is a lot of talk in spiritual circles about an evolution that may enable us to develop our unique, individual gifts. That probably won’t be an ability to fly or turn invisible, but it might be a strengthening of our insights, extra-sensory perceptions, empathic skills, or ability to interpret clues from the universe, or, even movies.

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Yes, movies do tend to copy on successful themes. That would explain the recent influx of 3-D and comic book films. But I find it most interesting when these movies all come out at the same time, particularly dealing with themes that aren’t explored that often. Almost immediately after Lost delved into time-travel, we had the new Star Trek movie doing the same. Land of the Lost followed and then the Time Traveler’s Wife came out. I’ve also seen a lot of ads lately featuring people being visited by their future selves to tell them what a good choice a certain car or school had been for them. Similarly, there are also a plethora of stories lately dealing with the ghost in the machine myth. Terminator Salvation dealt specifically with this issue whereas the others before it had not. Both arriving in September is Gamer and Surrogates, which deal with the idea of placing people in other bodies. The TV series Dollhouse also touches on a similar theme.

Perhaps because of the Mayan end date of 2012 on the horizon or the doom and gloom feeling in the air these days, there are a lot of apocalyptic movies coming as well. Tim Burton’s 9 is out now, Antichrist arrives in October, 2012 comes out in November, Legion flies into theatres in January and there are many more

So, what’s the point? If there is a truth in these movies, what are they telling us? Are we all doomed? Is there a major catastrophe coming that’s going to wipe us out and we’ll all have to download our souls into robots for our species to carry on? Is the world going to continue in a downward cycle that is so horrific we will have to resort to realistic videogames or even simulated worlds to experience any kind of enjoyment? These films may be hinting at any of these things, but since I also believe that our minds create our reality, I’m going to posit a different scenario. Perhaps we are not on the verge of the end of times, but a new beginning. While many of us have been reduced to becoming zombies — stuck in our routines and surrounded by mind-numbing distractions — perhaps this sleepwalking through life is about to lead to a new awakening.

Right now, I truly feel that we are asleep. And who came blame us? The world is changing so quickly we have become desensitized to it. It’s almost the only way to cope with the constant onslaught of news, technology, distractions, and never-ending amount of things to do. Unfortunately, this has made us easily manipulated. We have been brainwashed to accept news as we hear it, to believe that we must keep moving with the masses or risk getting trampled, and buy every new gizmo that comes out for fear of being left behind. Who has time to make waves? You have to earn money so you can afford to get a new iPhone or Blackberry to replace the old model you got last year. You need to use your free time to find out what TV character you are most like on Facebook or to read your dozens of daily Twitter Tweets.

Hey, I have nothing against casual fun distractions or advancing technology that is helping us to stay connected. It’s just that it’s leaving us in a vulnerable place. We are too tired and overwhelmed and have too much on our plate to pursue our passions or speak out against unfair treatment. I mean, the government just took your hard-earned money and gave it to greedy fat cats who had abused it to begin with. If that had happened in the 1960s there’s be rioting in the streets! But today, we don’t have the time to do much about it, except maybe passively join a Facebook group that basically amounts to nothing. There seems to be something in the air. Something that makes me feel like we’re all being played. Something just doesn’t feel quite right. And once again, the movie messages I’m seeing seem to be confirming this.

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What do Watchmen and Angels & Demons have in common? Both came out recently and have some cool special effects, but there is a theme that these movies share that really intrigued me. Both films feature an intricate scheme intended to fool the entire world in hopes of uniting it. In Watchmen the scheme works — halting a possible nuclear war after a powerful hero-tuned-enemy destroys a city. In Angels & Demons, the plan to give new life to Christianity by threatening to destroy its center kind of works, but not exactly as intended.

I realize that both films are based on stories that came out years ago, but I feel that it’s no accident that they have been made into movies now. These movies seem to be telling us that there are powerful forces at work that are manipulating society — that the events of the world today have been calculated to play mankind like pawns. So who or what is the wizard behind the curtain? Many people assume there are shadowy figures involved in this grand scheme to keep us too busy or distracted or defeated to make a difference. Free Masons? The Illuminati? A powerful New World Order? Anything is possible I suppose. But perhaps there is another culprit. Maybe it is simply the blueprint of the universe. What if its invisible forces have brought about the collapse of our economy, causing countless pain and suffering? Why would it do such a thing? Isn’t the universe (God, Buddha, Allah, the light, whatever you want to call it) supposed to be like a loving parent that guides us through life? Well, if it is, perhaps we are going through this for our own good. Perhaps, we deserve it.

Nobody deserves to suffer. But perhaps we could all use some challenging times to help us grow so we might reach the next level. Maybe the universe is just breaking us down so we can be mended, nudging us towards a more united world. Perhaps this is all preparing us for whatever is to come in 2012 or beyond — the challenges that we may not be ready for now, but after several more beatings will be tough enough to handle. Let’s face it; we’ve become soft, spoiled, greedy, selfish, and lazy. We are just like the pompous Roman rulers before the fall of their empire or the snooty noble class before the French Revolution. In effect, we have become the bad guys.

Like most bad guys, it’s really not our fault. Being this way is all we know. Who among us ever thought to save water in the shower just by getting wet, turning off the water, lathing up, and then turning it on again to rinse off? I know I didn’t until I was in Switzerland and saw that they had showers like we have push-on faucets in restrooms.  Who regularly volunteers to help other people in need? Who has time? Who scooters or cycles to work — even in the cold weather? And who among us would give a crap how banks and stocks were making money as long as we were too? Yep, we have become villains, complete with waxy moustaches, black capes, and evil laughs. But don’t take my word for it, look to the messages movies are revealing from our collective unconscious thoughts.

I love science fiction movies. And I’ve seen hundreds of them spanning  over a hundred of years. Many are filled with aliens, monsters, and other various creatures. But I can honestly not recall seeing even one where the monsters were considered good, and mankind was bad. While I’m sure that there probably have been a handful of such films, I’m also sure that they didn’t all come out at the same time. No, that hasn’t happened until right now.

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I first noticed the theme with the original, non-theatrical ending of I Am Legend where Will Smith comes to realize that by killing hundreds of zombies, he has become the boogeyman of their nightmares. That ending actually didn’t go over too well with test audiences. That’s because it touched a nerve. The mythological message was that we are the bad guys. Even if you didn’t get it consciously, you got it on some level and it left a bad taste with audiences. So, they changed the ending and made it more typical Hollywood. You can still see the original ending on the special features of the DVD or here.  (This is the theater ending that audiences saw.)

Two years later, we are apparently a bit more ready for messages showing us that we may indeed be the bad guys. Whereas I cannot honestly recall a single film where Earthlings were bad and aliens good, now we are given a dose of THREE films all with this theme — District 9, Planet 51, and Avatar.

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This past weekend, I saw District 9 and was very impressed by how many risks this film took that made audiences uncomfortable (several people walked out of the theater, as I’m sure they do at most showings). While the movie admittedly makes a lot of statements, the one that hit me the most is how the greed, fear, and selfishness of rich counties has reduced most of the rest of the world to the third-world status it’s in, and how the powers that be look to exploit it, rather than cure it. What’s so powerful about this film is how it makes us see the aliens right from the start as aggressive, foolish, and animalistic, while slowing revealing how these traits are much more befitting of us.

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While I haven’t seen Planet 51 or Avatar yet, from the trailers, it’s almost certain that these films share the same theme. In Planet 51 an egotistical astronaut lands on a suburban alien planet, failing to realize that he is the invader of their world. Avatar is pretty much an update of the cowboys and Indians theme, only now, we may finally be waking up to the fact that perhaps the indigenous people were the good guys. In the film, the inhabitants of a peaceful world are invaded by Earth (I believe because we destroy our world and need another to inhabit) and several human minds are transferred into alien bodies (there’s that ghost in the machine myth again), only to realize that perhaps they’re fighting for the wrong side. It’s almost like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but we’re the aliens snatching the bodies.

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So, if this is true. If we are indeed the “bad” guys, and mythically speaking, the bad guys always lose, what can we do about it? Should we just wait for an apocalypse to wipe our materialistic society away? Should we helplessly just carry on with our business as usual and hope that things will just all work out? I believe that all we have to do is get out of our zombie-like trances. (see Zombieland coming in October). Wake up to the messages of our collective unconscious so they can at last become a powerful part of our collective consciousness. And you don’t have to change the world. All you have to change is yourself, and the world will follow. Discover your inner superpower. Spend more time on your passion and less on your work. Value family over job. Free time over overtime. Board games over video games. Simple pleasures over materialistic treasures. Breathing over stressing. Offering a smile instead of your credit card. If you’ve taken the time to read this far, chances are, I’m preaching to the converted. But perhaps you know someone who could use a gentle reminder of what you’ve come to remember.

Marc Oromaner is a New York City writer whose book, The Myth of Lost offers a simple solution to Lost and uncovers its hidden insight into the mysteries of life. He can be contacted in the discussion section of The Myth of Lost Facebook page.

The Myth of Lost is available on Amazon and barnesandnoble.com.

Marc Oromaner is a spiritual author and speaker who teaches how we can discover our destiny using clues found in the media and in our lives. His book, The Myth of Lost deciphers the hidden wisdom of the hit TV show and explains how we can use this wisdom to overcome our own challenges. His blog, "The Layman's Answers To Everything" points out the patterns that run through all great stories including our own. These patterns are clues that are meant to guide us towards a life full of love, light, and fulfillment.
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7 Responses to “Myth in movies: Are we the bad guys?”

  1. it was inspiring and refreshing read. It really made my day, together with your article ‘How “Lost” Explains Why “The Phantom Menace” Is Responsible For Our Current World Crisis’ – I am fully blown away and feel less alone. thank you

    The alternative ending for “I am Legend” can be found here: http://www.traileraddict.com/clip/i-am-legend/alternate-ending (not deleted or “comedy”, but available outside the US)

  2. Glad you liked it and thanks for the link.

  3. “But I can honestly not recall seeing even one where the monsters were considered good, and mankind was bad.”

    What about The Day the Earth Stood Still? Or E.T.? Cacoon? The Iron Giant? Or the most obvious example, King Kong?

  4. Hey Michael,

    Thanks for those examples.

    Yes, all those films do hold a mirror up to humanity. But none of them go the lengths that these newer movies have in suggesting that our entire way of life may be wrong. In Iron Giant, ET, Starman and others the alien is being chased to be studied, and mostly it is official government types trying to do so. IG and ET specifically focus more on how kids are often wiser than adults. The theme of those movies is not that mankind is bad.

    In Coccon, the old people have no idea that they are harming the aliens by using the pool. Certainly, they were not being malicious.

    I have not seen the original The Day The Earth Stood Still, but I believe that in both versions the aliens wanted to destroy us. This shows that mankind is flawed, not evil. The aliens came to wipe us out, not vice-versa.

    As for King Kong, yes, that one does fulfill the “man bad, nature/monster innocent myth”. However, what I wrote was:

    “But I can honestly not recall seeing even one where the monsters were considered good, and mankind was bad. While I’m sure that there probably have been a handful of such films, I’m also sure that they didn’t all come out at the same time.”

    Even in King Kong, mankind did not come down upon an entire society thought to be bad or unimportant because they are not like us. And prior to King Kong, nobody thought about giant gorillas as being evil. The myths coming out now show characters we generally think of as being bad in a new light, and they are all coming out within several years of each other: Wicked, District 9, Avatar, Planet 51, and the soon to be released “How to Train Your Dragon.” Your examples span 50 years. There’s something going on today that is inspiring many writers to pick up this theme at roughly the same time.

  5. I see what you’re saying, that’s fair. I suppose you’re right when you consider the density with which these movies are coming out. You can probably throw “Shrek” in there, too, as a post-9/11 movie about formerly-bad-guys-turned-heroes. The upcoming “Legion” (while not looking like a great movie) also seems to be about how humanity sucks.

  6. Marc, good post on a topic I love – MOVIES! Thanks for sharing.

    I suggest that a better match for “Planet 51” and “Avatar” might be the 2007 computer-animated film, “Battle for Terra,” which features many of the points you made in your post about how ‘we’ have become the ‘bad guys.’

  7. Michael: Yes, “Shrek” definitely fits the “looking at former bad guys in new light” myth. I think “Legion” is more the apocalyptic theme, but I don’t know that much about the film yet.

    Jeff: Glad you liked it. I saw previews of “Battle for Terra” but haven’t had a chance to see it yet. Judging from the title it seems like a movie with an eco-message so I’ll take your word for it.

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