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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous Alex said...

I haven't read any of the Harry Potter books and I don't intend to. I have seen all the Toy Story films without considering the possibility that any of them is 'really' a figurative narrative which conveys a veiled moral meaning. Whoever the 'authors' of these imaginative, entertaining, but computer generated animations are, I'm reluctant to believe they had a serious allegorical purpose in mind.

However, I will admit to noticing the politically correct attitudes which are 'dramatised' in the Toy Stories. I don't think Tom Hanks would want to be associated with any movie which challenges the liberal bias that is mandatory in almost everything produced in Hollywood nowadays.

23 June 2011 at 18:23

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Alex - worthwhile allegory always works without the need for decoding - but the extra layers are there for those who want to and can perceive them.

For example, as a kid of about 10 I read and enjoyed a couple of the Narnia books without ever noticing any Christian referant - yet they are written as such (well, actually not as allegories but as what Lewis called 'supposals')

But conscious and strict allegory nowadays tends to be rather crude and simple - like Animal Farm.

What happened with Toy Story 3 was that they wanted to have a happy ending - and this bittersweet tragedy was the happiest ending they could conceive, within their PC premises.

Re - Hanks, yes indeed, he is very PC as well as a superb actor - yet the overall effect of his Band of Brothers TV programme was anything-but PC - it just seemed *true*, which PC never is.

23 June 2011 at 18:53