Qualms and Quandaries
My friend Collette and I took our kids (her three, my two)
to see Ender’s Game on Tuesday evening. Collette and I and her two boys, both
avid readers, had read the book and all placed it in our top ten list of all
time. A few months ago, I was talking to Collette and since she had once said
she would never pay money to see another Mel Gibson movie, I asked how she felt
about paying money to see a movie based on a book by Orson Scott Card, to which
she replied “huh?”. After I filled her in, she added something like, “did you have
to tell me that, you bitch?”
It’s a funny thing, the artist verses the art thing. Works
of the most heart-stopping beauty and magnificence can come from the most
reprehensible of human beings. I find it mystifying that writing that to me has
always seemed suffused with the utmost kindness and generosity of spirit, comes
from an intelligence that believes wholeheartedly that homosexuality is the
gravest of sins.
Another friend consoled us with the fact that Card had made
all his money off the movie up front, and that ticket sales wouldn’t put
anything extra into his pocket. He also said that he has no difficulty
divorcing the art from the artist, so he would have experienced no moral
dilemma either way.
I’m honestly not entirely sure where I stand on the matter
(I’m sure that comes as a great shock to everyone). If I buy a book by Orson
Scott Card, I’m endorsing his writing, not his views on sexuality, right?
Should I boycott every author who holds an opinion I find objectionable? Every
movie starring an actor who’s gotten drunk and spouted racist slurs? I did
publicly state that I would never eat at Chick fil a – by the preceding logic
shouldn’t I be saying that if the chicken was good enough I would eat it even
though the place was owned by bigots?
On the whole, I would say it does make a difference, however
unquantifiable. I can’t say I won’t ever buy a book by Orson Scott Card again.
I don’t want to refuse to read or see anything made by people I disagree with,
because that furthers no one’s growth. I guess I need to think about this some
more.
As for the movie, it wasn’t blow-your-mind wonderful, but it
wasn’t as big a disappointment as it could have been. Some of the exposition
was pretty ham-handed, which was partly regrettable and partly understandable,
given the time constraints. The two boys who read the book and the boy and two
girls who hadn’t all said they really liked it. Harrison Ford was good, Asa
Butterfield was really good, and Angus and Eve and I couldn’t get over the fact
that Bonzo Madrid was played by Rico from Hannah Montana.
Comments
I don't know if I should be able to divorce art from the artist, but I can't. I suck at it. So thanks for telling me about Enders Game. Sigh.
I guess you just do the best you can on a case by case basis. I personally had major issues when the Abercrombie and Fitch guy said his clothes were "not for ugly people" last year. That to me is tainting the brand, making me feel like if I wore his clothes, I'd be endorsing that idea. Other cases, like the pasta guy that said he wouldn't put a gay couple in one of his ads... a grey area. I understood what he was saying (it was a marketing decision, not a personal statement), and I wouldn't feel like serving his pasta was endorsing his ideas...
So. In the end, having three leftover slices of pie for breakfast has caused me to dither on in your comments section and come to absolutely no conclusion. Oh, except this one: sugar for breakfast is good but may kill brain cells. UGH.
I wonder if his position has changed since he wrote Songmaster or if I wildly misinterpreted that book. It seems weird that he would write something that seemed so pro-homosexual if he's so 100% anti.
The Chic-Fil-A thing is just visceral for me. I can't say I'm boycotting exactly because we're vegetarians and never went there before the controversy, but I went to a Christmas party last year at the house of the parents of one of J's friend and they served Chic-Fil-A and I just felt weird about it, weird to the extent of re-thinking my idea of making some friendship overtures to the mom in question. And I never did invite her out for coffee as I'd been planning.
Is it an art v. commerce thing? Do I give more leeway to artists? Food for thought.