Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Understanding the Culture: Pulp Fiction

If we want to engage the culture, we have to understand the culture.

Sometimes I think we as Christians are blinded by our distaste for foul language and violence. Now I’m not promoting any of these things and I understand we are called to be holy, but I am saying that sometimes our hatred for “vulgarity” prevents us from understanding and appreciating the culture and from truly seeing the beauty in secular films and music.

Now I can understand why some people are offended by Pulp Fiction and its barrage of swearing and blood. However, to me, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Yes, the tip is a little dark and a little bloody, but if you take the time to dive beneath the surface, if you hear the thoughts and minds and souls behind the f-bombs, if you begin to truly see the motivations and hearts behind the pools of blood, if you start to empathize with Jules and Vincent, then maybe you will understand why there’s more to Pulp Fiction than what meets the eye.

I was involved in a homeschool Christian speech and debate league, and one event I competed in was Mars Hill. Individuals presented either a book, movie, or song, dissected its worldview and underlying philosophy, and related it back to Christian themes and principles. However, most of the pre-assigned films were PG, family-friendly, moral-inducing, kid-safe films, and whenever I gave a speech, I always felt dissociated from the real, nitty gritty movies that my friends and I discussed and heard about on a regular basis.

So in light of that, here is one of those films, perhaps one of the most celebrated films that has shaped our culture: Pulp Fiction.

(spoilers alert)

#1 Life is short

When we first meet Mia Wallace, we are captivated by her. She is brilliant, charming, clever, and competent with a persona all her own, full of life, full of vitality, and a little full of herself. She seems untouchable, as if the world and all men are at her fingertips, and we the audience can only watch, half-bewitched, as she charms us with her wit. However, we soon notice she is a cocaine addict, and after a passionate and heartfelt dance, Mia Wallace is found unconscious, slumped over on a sofa, blood dripping from her nostrils, due to a drug overdose.

Although she later recovers, we cannot help feel a little disturbed and a little uneasy. A few minutes prior, Mia had been drunk on her own happiness, and it seems too sudden, too unreal, that such a sensational human would fall down comatose within a matter of seconds.

In another scene, Vincent, Jules, and Marvin drive home from a successful endeavor. All three men have somehow miraculously escaped death, and they feel invincible, insurmountable, wild with adrenaline. During their animated conversation, Vincent carelessly waves around a handgun, and all of a sudden, the gun goes off and Marvin’s brains splatter all over the rear windshield. By sheer accident.

Life is fragile. Life is fleeting. Life is fickle. Life is unpredictable and brief, and though we may not die from drug overdose or a stray bullet, life is short. The most successful, charming, intelligent, rich, beautiful people are just as prone to death as anyone of us, and Tarantino understood this well. He placed some of the most graphic scenes in the least expected of places dealing with the least expected characters just to show us that death defies expectations. 

#2 Doing what’s right is only noble if it's hard

In an oversimplified plot summary, Butch endangers himself and puts his own life at risk to rescue Marsellus Wallace, a man who wants to kill him. Jules allows a robber at the diner to walk away unharmed with all the cash in his wallet.

Why? Because it is the right thing to do.

Anyone can sacrifice himself for a friend or live a life of integrity when there are no consequences. Anyone can do the right thing when it’s easy. But when the going gets rough, when our own lives become threatened, when we really have to relinquish something, our dreams, money, careers, friends, that's when doing the right thing becomes noble.

Tarantino understood this also. The natural instinct of both men wrestled against integrity and morality. It would’ve been easier for Butch to escape when he had the chance, to let his enemy suffer from rape and torture, because after all, Marsellus had tried to kill him. It would’ve been easier for Jules to put a bullet in the robber’s head, rather than part with all his cash and also some of his pride. However, both men chose to do the right thing, to listen to morality, to sacrifice their own self-preservation, and Tarantino honored them.

#3 It’s never too late for redemption

Jules, a contract killer for Marsellus Wallace, wildly misquotes Scripture, using it as a glorified drumroll before he executes his enemies.  

“The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and destroy My brothers. And you will know My name is the Lord when I lay My vengeance upon thee.”

Yet, towards the end of the film, he reflects upon this passage and he remarks to the robber at the diner, “I'm thinking: maybe it means you're the evil man. And I'm the righteous man. And Mr. 9mm here... he's the shepherd protecting [me] in the valley of darkness. Or it could mean you're the righteous man and I'm the shepherd and it's the world that's evil and selfish. And I'd like that. But [that] ain't the truth. The truth is you're the weak. And I'm the tyranny of evil men. But I'm tryin', Ringo. I'm tryin' real hard to be the shepherd.” 

Jules begins to doubt his motives, realizes the depravity of his own nature and the selfishness of his heart, and decides to quit the business. His buddy Vincent doesn’t understand, and he sees nothing wrong with his current lifestyle, which sums up the two types of people in life, doesn’t it? There are people around us who see our innate filth and desire to change and live nobly. And there are those who don’t want to change, who like life the way it is, and who refuse to see and are blinded to the darkness within.

When Jules realizes his true condition, he doesn’t feel hopeless nor does he wallow in depression. Jules’ realization of his own depravity results in an immediate transformation to become his brother's keeper, where he shows compassion, strength, and mercy and lets the robber go free.

And so Tarantino concludes his film with a brilliant picture of redemption where a contract killer decides to become a shepherd. Perhaps that’s where he meant to leave us, in a cloud of self-introspection, where we realize the beauty of redemption. Redemption leaves no one behind, and if Jules, a hardened contract killer who lived a life of profanity and bloodshed, can change, so can we.

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We have to understand the culture to engage it, but sometimes we have to be open to let the culture teach us. I was humbled by the messages within Pulp Fiction, humbled because it defied my expectations and it made me realize how blessed my life is and how glorious redemption can be. And if a secular film ridden with degrees of profanity and violence can remind us of that truth, then it most definitely is worth appreciating.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Understanding the Culture: Noah - Heresy Played in Theaters

Noah was a direct, heretical mockery of Noah, Scripture, and God. 

And here's why.

1. The plot *spoilers alert*

The whole film was painful. The Watchers, fallen angels who were banished from heaven because they helped Adam and Eve, beings who looked like a cross between Transformers and ents. Because fallen angels aren't demons by any chance, but nice little rock giants who helped Noah's family build the ark. 

Also, how the animals were innocent and the ark was built to save them, not mankind. How those who ate meat were portrayed as living devils, while Noah and his family were commended because of their vegetarian, subsistence living, only taking what they needed to the point of not even picking wildflowers. How there were only 6 of Noah's family on the ark, plus one evil man who snuck in to kill Noah. How Noah decided God wanted him to kill everyone for their sin, to the point of almost murdering his own granddaughters to prohibit new life.

Two psycho guys with knives on the ark. Great. Now where was that in the Bible? Where was Ila and the miraculous healing of her barrenness? Or drugging the animals so they slept peacefully on the ark? Really. One needs only to turn to Genesis 5-9 and read the true historical account found right there in God's Holy Word. 

The plot bothers me. It bothers me when a producer, a mere man, would choose to interpret and change and twist the Word of God into some sort of fantastical story, a myth of fire and healing powers. Nothing more than a mere story. Is that how the Word of the Living God should be portrayed? As a book of fairytales? Not only does Noah mock Scripture, but it mocks God. It derides the power and goodness of God when the story of Noah is portrayed as an illogical fairytale, instead of the historical account of God's faithfulness to a righteous man.

2. Noah

God didn't pick Noah because he was good. God chose him because he was mass-murderer material, a man who could destroy all of mankind, including his own family. Or so it goes in the film. Because according to Noah, Shem had a wife named Ila who was barren. When she was magically healed by Methuselah and became pregnant (show me that in Scripture), Noah threatened to kill her babies if they were girls, so the human race would end. He believed in original sin so strongly that he wanted to carry out justice for God. Yet he looked down on those babies and he couldn't kill them. To quote Ila, he "saw the goodness in man." He chose to have mercy and love, rather than "obey God."

Actually, as a side note, for those who are pro-abortion, would they agree with Noah's decision to murder the babies? Would they remain consistent with what they believe and simply accept the murder of the innocent? I wonder...

Anyway, I have three problems here. 

The first: Noah was not chosen because he could complete the task of destroying mankind and saving innocent animals. According to Scripture, God chose Noah because he was righteous and feared God. Scripture says he was righteous and blameless, and he walked with the Lord and found favor in His eyes (Gen 6). Truth is, God hates evil, and though Noah was still born sinful, Noah feared God. Noah followed after Him. And that separated him and his family from the rest of the world. 

The second: The film teaches that the goodness in man outweighs the evil within us. And that is heresy, pure lies. We deserve hell. We have rejected God. There is no one good, no, not even one, and our hearts are desperately sick. When we die, we will go to hell because God's standard is perfection. We all have sinned. And no matter how many good things we do, God will judge us because of that sin. We cannot be good enough on our own. Our good deeds are like filthy rags in God's eyes, and the little good we do cannot even compare with our wicked hearts.

The third: Obeying God is more important than "love". Let me first go back and point out that God never commanded Noah to kill his own family. This part was strictly never in the Bible but added in by the producer. Also, God will never call us to go against His commandments and murder someone and take justice in our own hands. Let that stand as a warning to us to correctly interpret what we think is God's will in the light of God's Word. However, this movie reminds me of Abraham and Isaac. There, God did command Abraham to sacrifice his only son. At the last second, God stopped Abraham and provided a ram as a replacement for Isaac, both to test Abraham's faith and provide an example of what Christ would do for us on the cross. We see here that Abraham chose to obey God and was rewarded for his faith. Obedience to God should come before everything and anything. 

3. Testimony

After I watched this movie, I wondered to myself what an unbeliever would think of such a illogical, strange, and mythological work of fantasy. After seeing Noah, would it cause a hunger to know God, this powerful Creator who designed everything and who loves justice, yet has mercy? Would it produce a desire to talk about the things of God and ask other Christians more about what they believe? It's doubtful, but perhaps.

And even for Christians, is this movie beneficial? Does it cause a praise and adoration of God or an appreciation for Noah's faith and righteousness? Does it make us admire his trust in God and his steadfastness and perseverance? I think not. I think not. 


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Noah was a disappointment. I had heard negative things about it, but never had I dreamed Noah would be portrayed as someone who thirsted for murder or the animals pictured as the main point of building the ark. I never dreamed that such a strong pro-vegetarianism and environmentalist mentality would pervade the entire film. And that saddens me. I wonder what God thinks when He looks down on this film. I wonder what He feels when He sees Himself portrayed as a fantastical being or his servant Noah as a person who refuses to pick wildflowers.

Yet at the same time, I pray that God would use this film, even in its brokenness. That coworkers and friends and family would ask about the Truth, that conversations would blossom, that the Gospel would be proclaimed and the truth shared. God can use even the weak and broken and diseased and secular as Areopaguses to display His glory.