This is an archive of the former website of the Maoist Internationalist Movement, which was run by the now defunct Maoist Internationalist Party - Amerika. The MIM now consists of many independent cells, many of which have their own indendendent organs both online and off. MIM(Prisons) serves these documents as a service to and reference for the anti-imperialist movement worldwide.
SMALL SOLDIERS GIVE OUT BIG CARNAGE
"Small Soldiers"
PG-13
110 minutes
1998
by MC234
When MIM writes a review of a movie or other cultural work, we
always ask: is the world better off with or without this work?
In the case of "Small Soldiers," a film about military toys
called the "Commando Elite" that come alive, the world was a
better place a few weeks ago before the film. It does have two
redeeming qualities, however. First, the bad guys are neither
people nor the peace-loving alien toys, but the toy soldiers.
The soldiers are very Amerikan, and speak in Amerikan war
movie clichés to patriotic music.
Second, "Small Soldiers" has the kid movie cliché in which
parents treat a kid like crap, and then get upset when he
"acts out." After being sent to psychiatrists, the parents can
just label their kid with fancy psychological labels and then
ignore the child. Predictably, after the usual hijinks the
parents learn the kid is can do things right and is telling
the truth. Like most other Hollywood "kid movies", this never
gets beyond a criticism of some temporary bad parenting into
the systematic criticism of the patriarchal family that is
required. If anything, the frequency of this plot device
should suggest that parents lot listening to their kids is a
common occurrence and a problem with the system.
In this film, Heartland Toys is acquired by Globaltech, a
company with many divisions, including military. The CEO of
Globaltech criticizes the upcoming soldier product of
Heartland because the commercial features the toy speaking and
breaking out of the box. Instead of asking "What role should
toys play" he instead says "I want to make a toy that actually
does what it does in the commercial." He gives Heartland
access to the Globaltech computer system so that they can in
fact make a toy that moves and speaks.
The Heartland employees discover and order the most advanced
chips in the Globaltech inventory, ignoring the fact that
these chips were designed for a military application.
Also pitched to the Globaltech CEO was a separate series of
toys named Gorgonites, peaceful lost aliens on a search for
their home planet. The Gorgonites instead become targets for
the Commando Elite. Heartland uses the military chips to
process movement and speech, but are unaware that the chips
give real intelligence and the ability to learn beyond their
core programming.
"Small Soldiers" got some criticism in the mainstream press for
being violent. Others defend the film "But what do you want
soldiers to do?" Which gets back to MIM's point, in a more
just society such as in socialist China (1949-76), the
military exists to serve the people. In China, many movies
were made about the People's Liberation Army and the
sacrifices they made to serve the people. Here in Amerika,
soldiers exist only to kill enemies and movies are made--
including for children--that glorify war against the oppressed
or just senseless violence.
MIM doesn't oppose this movie on pacifist grounds, but because
the violence in the film serves no purpose other than to make
violence fun. While the "bad guys" are the soldiers, the film
doesn't demonize them as they deserve to be. And the public
relations folks in Hollywood saw fit to label the film after
the soldiers and to make millions of soldier toys to
distribute in Burger King.
A young teenager who works in his father's toy store gets
early access to the Commando Elite and the Gorgonites. The
toys come alive, with the Commando elite discarding their
plastic weapons for ones they construct, and the hunt for the
Gorgonites begins. Humans are identified as the protectors of
the Gorgonites, so they are targeted as well. As the Gorgonite
Emissary, Archer, warns, the Commando Elite show no mercy. The
Amerikan reluctance towards so called "humane" war is also
shown, with the Commando Elite not accepting the surrender of
a human and instead trying to kill him.
From the advertisements, MIM thought the violence in the film
would be between animated figures. We were wrong. The Commando
Elite use knives, fire, and a nail gun against the humans. And
of course the humans fight back with equal force, with clubs,
a garbage disposal, and a lawnmower.
Amerika leads the world in two kinds of violence: First in
violence against the oppressed which is necessary to maintain
the status quo. Secondly, Amerika also leads the world in the
senseless kinds of violence, such as people shooting up
McDonalds, Post Offices and schoolyards. The anti-oppressed
violence and its media fanfare desensitize people to violence,
and movies like this one take that several steps forward.
Bringing it all together, the Burger King in Springfield,
Oregon has stopped distributing Commando Elite promotional
figure "Kip Killigan" because his name sounds very close to
that of a local teenager accused of killing his parents and a
number of schoolmates.
Even Globaltech in the film recognizes that the two kinds of
violence are not so far apart. At the end of the movie,
Globaltech buys off all the witnesses and people who suffered
property or physical damage in the Commando Elite assault. The
CEO asks the Heartland employees: "What are we charging for
the Commando Elite?" To the response, the CEO then adds: "Add
a few zeros and transfer them to the military division. I know
some South Amerikan guerrillas that are in for a nasty
surprise." The Heartland employees, one of whom had serious
misgivings about violent toys, don't object to this plan.