July 7, 2008 -
July 14, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 41 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
An Indecent Decision
by Matthew Continetti

SCRAPBOOK
Buckminster Fuller, Justice Anthony Kennedy

ARTICLES
Closing the Enthusiasm Gap
by Stephen F. Hayes

Very Retiring Republicans
by Fred Barnes

McCain, Obama, & the Catholic Vote
by Ryan T. Anderson

History's Fall Guys
by Dean Barnett

Shaken and Stirred Up
by Reuben F. Johnson

A Heaping Bowl of Mush
by Philip Terzian

Laughter at the Supreme Court
by Lee Ross

FEATURES
L'Affaire Enderlin
by Anne-Elisabeth Moutet

BOOKS & ARTS
Talking Politics
by Christopher Hitchens

Isn't That Special?
by Andrew Roberts

Boris the Good
by Andrew Nagorski

After the Fox
by Edward Short

Unholy Thoughts
by Stefan Beck

Speak the Speech
by Judy Bachrach

Rhymers' Dictionary
by John Simon

Keeping Score
by James M. Banner Jr.

Here's My Plan
by Matthew Continetti

Identity Theft
by Edith Alston

Cops on the Case
by Jon L. Breen

CASUAL
Lost in the Personasphere
by Andrew Ferguson

PARODY
Fred Flintstone wins McCain's eco-challenge


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Zombie Politics

28_070510043542787_wideweb__300x375.jpg
Rose Byrne and Jeremy Renner in 28 Weeks Later.

You’d be hard pressed to argue that 28 Days Later/28 Weeks Later are inherently conservative movies (and you’d probably hear some complaint from series creator Danny Boyle if you did), but there are certainly some conservative undertones. If the sequel, released on Friday, was meant to be an allegory for the evils of the Iraq war (as some have claimed), it’s a terribly confused one. But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let’s look at a few aspects of the series that merit closer attention (SPOILERS FOLLOW. Stop reading now if you don’t want the film ruined).

In the original, the film kicks off when a group of do-gooding PETA/Earth Liberation Front types break into an animal testing lab to free some cute, cuddly monkeys. Except these cute, cuddly monkeys are infected with the Rage virus, the disease that ends up destroying England. Instead of listening to reason, the radicals threaten the scientist who discovers them with bodily harm and release the animals.

Similarly, in 28 Weeks Later, an American sniper refuses to fire on a crowd of civilians who are quickly being turned into rampaging zombies by their infected countrymen. This action is supposed to gain our sympathy--indeed, the sniper pays the ultimate price for refusing to kill, and later helping to escape, the child within his scope’s sight. His refusal to follow orders and his imploring a helicopter pilot to carry the child to the European continent and safety, however, will lead to millions, if not billions, more deaths, as the boy is a “carrier” of the disease. He doesn’t show any symptoms, but he can infect others through his saliva and blood. The final scene of the movie is that of a cadre of zombies rushing the Eiffel Tower--by transporting the boy to the mainland, one American soldier with a conscience has doomed the Eurasian landmass to a nasty, horrible death.

My basic point is this: In both films, liberal good intentions are the catalyst for the deaths of millions of people. Another example from 28 Weeks Later: if the military doctor overseeing the case of an infected survivor had followed her superior’s orders and promptly killed the woman, the plague wouldn’t have been reignited (we also wouldn’t have had a movie, but you see my point).

Also, the portrayal of the militaries in the two films is fundamentally different. In 28 Days Later, the British military is depicted as a group of sadistic rapists. In 28 Weeks Later, the American occupiers of Britain are depicted as benevolent, if incompetent. Once the virus breaks free again, it’s hard not to agree with the decision to firebomb the affected area in hopes of containing the outbreak and saving the rest of the “green zone” from infection and certain death. Even the use of nerve gas is understandable in the context of the film. A.O. Scott, the superlative film critic for the New York Times, said it best in his review: “It is only when things spin out of control that the inherent brutality of the situation becomes clear, but here again the movie poses intractable conundrums rather than scoring easy points. To the soldiers and the survivors alike, there are only bad choices, and doing what seems like the right thing--firebombing an open city or rescuing children from the bombs--can turn out to have horrendous consequences.”

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