The Dark Defender
Unite and Fight
- Joined
- May 29, 2003
- Messages
- 11,002
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 31
I didn't get that they were the most non-violent people imaginable. They were a pretty typical family sure, they come off as saints either.![]()
And again, the same could be said of any other horror film where innocent, and mostly defenseless people are horribly victimized till they start toughening up in order to survive. Add to that the fact that the film had a bunch of other horror movie cliches. I didn't feel like they were savages in the end, but that they did what needed to be done. I mean if anything I was disturbed by what they'd been through, and not what they had to do to make it out alive.
The point is the social commentary of how the mutants got the way they were, the mutants themselves were once the "normal American family" and had no interest in hurting anyone either, again until their land was blown up by a corrupt, greedy, selfish government, turning them into brutal savages; which is exactly what the the typical American family that we meet at the beginning (whether they had to or not) turned into during the latter part of the film. The bottom line is that both were typical American families that had horrible acts of violence committed on them that caused them to react with more horrible acts of violence.
The movie is an allegory for Modern America and terrorism(look where the film takes place, out in the desert), if one monstrous act did not occur, it wouldn't lead to another, and another...
There were a few cliches here and there, but the film hardly centralized on them.