Spock and Obama, Kirk and Bush
Most people get annoyed when I try to read politics into
popular movies, so I'm somewhat relieved that I'm not the first one to notice
the Spock/Obama connection made clear in the latest "Star Trek." Such as: both
are mixed race, both are logical, both have funny ears and are in love with an
African American woman. And "Live Long and Prosper" might just as well be
Obama's slogan for his health care and economic proposals. (One of my favorite
analyses of this is from ever amusing Debbie Schlussel; eg: "Spock: in real life, he's
a Jew; Barack . . . in real life, he's a Muslim." Fun-nee!)
Could that aspect of the film have contributed, however
subconsciously, to its warp-sized $76.5 million opening weekend? (Answer: not
as much as the $100 million or so marketing campaign or the lemming-like
compulsion of Trekkies past and present to go see the film again and again and
again...).
At any rate, I feel justified in analyzing the subtext in "Star Trek" and in other summer movies. Take "X-men Origins:
Wolverine," for example. It's not like the filmmakers of that one are trying to sneak their
politics by you, what with the character of Major Stryker (played by Danny
Huston, replacing the more menacing Brian Cox from the previous episode) with
his special ops "Team X" consisting of mutant commandos and given carte
blanche to kill anyone anywhere to "defend the country." Sound a little
familiar? Stryker is a kind of mix of Dick Cheney (whom Cox actually looks a
little like -- Huston looks more like Donald Rumsfeld), Lee Marvin from "The
Dirty Dozen" and Dr. Moreau as he takes his mutant specimens to a secret island to
transform them into an ultimate weapon. With it he hopes to eliminate threats to the nation before they exist -- his rant justifying
this "Pre-emptive strike" policy sounds like it was plagiarized from Richard Perle.
Which brings to mind a "Star Trek" comparison that I haven't
seen many pick up on. What about the resemblance of Kirk to George W. Bush? For example: Both have dissipated, good old boy (Iowa looks
like the Texas of the future) backgrounds that they have to shake off to become
respectable leaders. Both have father issues, with both fathers being
military heroes whom they begrudgingly want to emulate. But I think the key similarity, and it's what distinguishes
Kirk from Spock and Bush from Obama, is that both have a "from the gut" style
of leadership and decision-making. When Commander Pike tries to woo Kirk away
from his dissolute days and put on a uniform and serve his Federation, he tells
him that he's got the kind of seat-of-the-pants, go-for-broke style that Star Fleet Command has been lacking lately.... I guess after two centuries they might have forgotten just what that kind of shit that lind of decider can get you into.
So it would seem that "Star Trek" is praising the new
administration at the expense of the previous one. But that notion overlooks the fact
that, at least for the most part, Spock is seen as a pigheaded, priggish jerk who is invariably wrong and
Kirk as a regular guy who is always right. In the film Kirk's more intuitive strategies of dealing
with problems, which the namby pamby rationalizer (or is he relying entirely on
reason in his decisions?) Spock dismisses, prove to be correct. So maybe
Spock's resemblance to Obama is not necessarily complimentary according to the
movie, which appears to be endorsing the macho, shoot-from-the hip style of Kirk/George
W.
Or maybe not. I won't give away any more of the story than I have
to, but the basic motivation of the villain is not so much revenge as it is to
make a pre-emptive strike, through the plot magic of time travel, to save his own
civilization and family. And that backfires even worse than the invasion of Iraq.