1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,080 [light piano music] 2 00:00:04,200 --> 00:00:09,720 I often discuss the negative impacts that pop culture media can have on people's attitudes and opinions. 3 00:00:12,280 --> 00:00:19,440 But, if entertainment can propagate harmful ideas, then it stands to reason that it can also have positive effects on our lives. 4 00:00:21,540 --> 00:00:26,420 So in this video, I want to focus on media that fosters empathy and solidarity. 5 00:00:26,860 --> 00:00:30,860 Now admittedly, that's a pretty broad category, so to narrow it down, 6 00:00:31,060 --> 00:00:37,080 I'll be highlighting a handful of my favorite movies from my most formative years: the 1980s. 7 00:00:41,900 --> 00:00:46,460 Looking at Hollywood today, it's pretty clear that the 1980s are back in a big way. 8 00:00:46,840 --> 00:00:51,580 The current nostalgia craze is largely driven by Hollywood's obsession with remakes, 9 00:00:51,960 --> 00:00:56,540 reboots, sequels, and loving limoges to popular 80's franchises. 10 00:00:57,680 --> 00:01:04,519 The apex of this wave of nostalgia comes in the form of the novel turned blockbuster Ready Player One. 11 00:01:05,140 --> 00:01:06,960 "I was born in 2025. 12 00:01:07,320 --> 00:01:09,640 But I wish I'd grown up in the 1980s." 13 00:01:09,860 --> 00:01:12,700 Ernest Cline's book, and by extension the film, 14 00:01:12,700 --> 00:01:17,900 is built around a long list of superficial and rather ostentatious references 15 00:01:18,080 --> 00:01:20,280 to geeky pop culture entertainment. 16 00:01:21,100 --> 00:01:23,260 As a boy who grew up in the 1980s, 17 00:01:23,860 --> 00:01:27,940 most of the media that's name-dropped in Ready Player One I remember well. 18 00:01:28,960 --> 00:01:30,820 The Goonies, Gremlins, 19 00:01:30,940 --> 00:01:35,540 Weird Science, Tron, Back to the Future; I watched them all. 20 00:01:36,220 --> 00:01:38,300 But thinking back to my childhood, 21 00:01:38,520 --> 00:01:43,840 the cinematic moments that had the most profound impact on me and my emotional development 22 00:01:44,160 --> 00:01:47,720 weren't necessarily from the most popular or iconic movies. 23 00:01:48,780 --> 00:01:52,160 The movie scenes that left the biggest impression on my young mind 24 00:01:52,160 --> 00:01:54,860 were unapologetically sappy and sentimental. 25 00:01:55,320 --> 00:01:59,360 "Goodbye Charlie. I love you." 26 00:02:00,220 --> 00:02:06,900 They're the moments that still put a lump in my throat; the ones that make my eyes water and my heart swell. 27 00:02:07,560 --> 00:02:15,560 "They look like big, good, strong hands, don't they?" 28 00:02:15,980 --> 00:02:21,080 Movie critic Roger Ebert once said that movies are empathy-generating machines. 29 00:02:21,520 --> 00:02:25,820 By which he meant that we as viewers identify with the characters on the screen, 30 00:02:26,180 --> 00:02:30,440 and that helps us understand experiences and perspectives other than our own. 31 00:02:32,660 --> 00:02:39,120 Movies can also affirm the human spirit by showing us examples of what empathy and solidarity look like. 32 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:44,400 Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings or emotions of others. 33 00:02:45,020 --> 00:02:46,900 Now, it's important to note that empathy 34 00:02:46,900 --> 00:02:53,400 isn't just feeling bad for the misfortunes of other people; empathy is about feeling what others are feeling. 35 00:02:55,020 --> 00:02:59,800 Solidarity is when people from diverse backgrounds find a common cause, 36 00:02:59,800 --> 00:03:02,600 and then work together to achieve social change. 37 00:03:03,500 --> 00:03:07,780 You can think of solidarity as empathy put into collective action. 38 00:03:09,100 --> 00:03:13,560 So with those two definitions in mind here's my personal list of 5 39 00:03:13,959 --> 00:03:17,969 lesser-known movies from the 1980s that helped shape our humanity 40 00:03:24,170 --> 00:03:25,910 The journey of natty Gann 41 00:03:25,910 --> 00:03:31,990 chronicles the adventures of a young woman and her canine companion as they hopped freight trains from Chicago to 42 00:03:32,180 --> 00:03:34,480 Washington State in a quest to find her father 43 00:03:36,470 --> 00:03:41,649 Set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, this is a quiet film with beautiful cinematography 44 00:03:42,230 --> 00:03:46,390 That shows us the world through the eyes of characters living in poverty 45 00:03:47,569 --> 00:03:53,619 The filmmakers deliberately place us as the audience firmly on the side of the downtrodden as 46 00:03:53,989 --> 00:04:00,819 We see police evicting impoverished families and company bosses treating workers with heartless and difference 47 00:04:02,989 --> 00:04:08,229 But while this depression-era world is harsh, it's not defined by cynicism 48 00:04:10,370 --> 00:04:16,779 Acts of kindness and solidarity between economically oppressed people are highlighted throughout the movie 49 00:04:24,860 --> 00:04:29,200 The journey of natty Gann is also reminiscent of the classic a boy 50 00:04:29,200 --> 00:04:35,049 And his dog adventure story genre except here. The boy is a girl and the dog is a wolf 51 00:04:35,750 --> 00:04:41,410 it's especially important for young women to be represented as leads in their own adventure stories and 52 00:04:42,020 --> 00:04:47,859 I'd argue that it's just as important for young male audiences to see these kind of representations 53 00:04:52,970 --> 00:04:54,970 He's a wolf 54 00:04:55,550 --> 00:05:03,520 Boys need to learn to identify with female characters and see women and girls as fully human equals with their own stories 55 00:05:07,430 --> 00:05:12,280 Nausicaa of the valley of the wind is set 1,000 years after humans have destroyed 56 00:05:12,650 --> 00:05:15,730 civilization and the planet in a great apocalyptic war 57 00:05:18,110 --> 00:05:21,010 We follow the adventures of a young woman named Nausicaa 58 00:05:21,320 --> 00:05:29,079 princess of one of the few remaining human kingdoms as she struggles to understand and heal a world that's been overrun by mutant creatures and 59 00:05:29,330 --> 00:05:31,330 toxic forests 60 00:05:37,970 --> 00:05:40,869 The story centers on Nausicaa struggle to restore 61 00:05:41,150 --> 00:05:47,560 equilibrium to the environment and to end the violent conflicts between human tribes and the giant insects of the jungle 62 00:05:47,870 --> 00:05:50,169 We are not your enemies. We mean you no harm 63 00:05:52,130 --> 00:05:58,779 In group depictions of empathy for friends teammates and family members are relatively common in pop culture media 64 00:05:59,630 --> 00:06:06,549 Stories, built around expressions of out-group empathy that is empathy for strangers or Outsiders to your own group are more unusual 65 00:06:07,250 --> 00:06:09,250 and 66 00:06:09,350 --> 00:06:12,909 Expressions of empathy for one's enemies are especially rare 67 00:06:17,350 --> 00:06:22,689 And empathy for the enemy is really the guiding principle of this film 68 00:06:28,730 --> 00:06:30,730 He's so badly 69 00:06:32,510 --> 00:06:39,069 Nausicaa remains acutely aware of the danger posed by the gigantic bug like creatures, but she nonetheless 70 00:06:39,620 --> 00:06:45,910 Extends her empathy to these mutant beasts, and it's that act of empathy that ultimately saves humanity 71 00:06:52,820 --> 00:06:55,869 It has a range of 7,000 miles 72 00:06:57,200 --> 00:06:59,710 And a twenty Megaton warhead 73 00:07:00,920 --> 00:07:05,649 Amazing Grace and Chuck is about a small-town boy. Who refuses to keep playing Little League baseball 74 00:07:06,230 --> 00:07:09,909 because of the existence of nuclear weapons and what the hell is this about 75 00:07:12,350 --> 00:07:14,120 Just can't play 76 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:16,149 Can't play because there's nuclear weapons 77 00:07:17,090 --> 00:07:19,090 SEC had to do with baseball 78 00:07:19,190 --> 00:07:22,299 Nothing, what's my best thing? I have to give up something I 79 00:07:23,150 --> 00:07:25,629 Feel real bad about this. You know that 80 00:07:27,920 --> 00:07:29,920 Game 81 00:07:31,070 --> 00:07:38,379 His protest inspires the professional basketball star amazing grace to join his strike and together they organize a global 82 00:07:38,660 --> 00:07:40,660 movement for nuclear disarmament 83 00:07:42,800 --> 00:07:50,590 Hollywood very rarely gets political activism right the depiction of activism in most movies is limited to raising awareness or 84 00:07:50,960 --> 00:07:52,960 personal acts of defiance 85 00:07:53,540 --> 00:07:59,230 Amazing grace and Chuck on the other hand manages to show how social change actually happens 86 00:08:01,150 --> 00:08:08,669 Social change is brought about when organizers raise social costs higher and higher until it becomes more advantageous 87 00:08:09,130 --> 00:08:10,660 for the powers-that-be 88 00:08:10,660 --> 00:08:14,369 To give in to people's demands than to keep opposing their cause 89 00:08:15,490 --> 00:08:21,240 In the movie we see this play out when so many athletes joined Chuck's strike that it forces all 90 00:08:21,550 --> 00:08:24,270 professional sporting leagues to cancel their seasons 91 00:08:25,510 --> 00:08:32,220 destroy professional sports most college athletics high school scores resume even such things as Little League 92 00:08:32,559 --> 00:08:38,940 So far it has made a shambles of the World Cup Wimbledon and events as far away as India and mainland, China 93 00:08:39,280 --> 00:08:46,169 These protests raise social costs to the point where the public the media and world leaders have to pay attention 94 00:08:47,650 --> 00:08:50,669 Hello, Chuck, and then bruh grudgingly take action 95 00:08:52,150 --> 00:08:54,629 In the end the world has radically changed 96 00:08:55,630 --> 00:08:58,739 But unlike most Hollywood movies this social 97 00:08:59,110 --> 00:09:04,830 Transformation is not brought about by defeating the bad guys or through the actions of benevolent leaders 98 00:09:06,040 --> 00:09:13,499 This social change comes from the bottom up it comes from people organizing and standing in solidarity together 99 00:09:19,000 --> 00:09:26,069 Harry and the Hendersons is about a typical white American family who accidentally hit Bigfoot with their station wagon 100 00:09:29,139 --> 00:09:31,139 The 101 00:09:31,839 --> 00:09:37,619 Family's relationship with this gentle giant who they named Harry ultimately changes their lives forever 102 00:09:40,569 --> 00:09:45,089 This one really is better than a campy Bigfoot movie has any right to be 103 00:09:47,110 --> 00:09:55,079 Over the course of the film the empathy that Harry demonstrates towards other living creatures inspires the family to rethink their worldview 104 00:09:56,110 --> 00:09:58,289 especially in regards to hunting and guns 105 00:09:59,139 --> 00:10:03,299 the father played by John Lithgow undergoes an especially striking 106 00:10:03,699 --> 00:10:10,409 transformation from avid hunter and firearms dealer to someone who over the objections of his own father learns to value 107 00:10:11,050 --> 00:10:14,370 Non-violence and embrace his creative side. Did you dress? 108 00:10:17,470 --> 00:10:19,470 Beautiful 109 00:10:20,470 --> 00:10:28,170 Depictions of men and boys who reject guns and violence as markers of their manhood are critically important in our current culture I 110 00:10:29,020 --> 00:10:34,650 Wanted King Kong you brought me a god damn giant gerbil. I told you exactly what to do 111 00:10:35,410 --> 00:10:39,660 Maybe it's right on the nose. I mean how do we know maybe it's not vicious at all 112 00:10:40,030 --> 00:10:44,939 Maybe it's gentle even has feelings. Where'd you dream of that shit? 113 00:10:46,180 --> 00:10:52,859 As this movie illustrates, there's no reason Hollywood can't present empathy as a defining feature of masculinity 114 00:10:57,670 --> 00:10:59,050 Batteries not included 115 00:10:59,050 --> 00:11:05,760 centers on the tenants of an old New York City apartment building who are resisting a real estate tycoons efforts to evict them in order 116 00:11:05,760 --> 00:11:07,760 To build a skyscraper 117 00:11:11,020 --> 00:11:13,619 The residents are a band of down on their luck 118 00:11:13,620 --> 00:11:20,549 But kind-hearted misfits who find unlikely allies in a group of mechanical aliens looking for a place to recharge 119 00:11:22,030 --> 00:11:25,139 our group of humans embrace their strange 120 00:11:25,750 --> 00:11:26,670 extraterrestrial visitors 121 00:11:26,670 --> 00:11:34,289 And they all work together to help their new friends by providing fuel and energy for the aliens reproductive process 122 00:11:41,210 --> 00:11:48,460 In return the mechanical life-forms help the residents by repairing damage done to their building by the tycoons henchmen 123 00:11:54,860 --> 00:11:58,450 This story is really built around solidarity on all sides 124 00:11:59,030 --> 00:12:05,139 The human tenants and the alien creatures come from very different backgrounds and have very different needs 125 00:12:05,140 --> 00:12:09,939 But they still feel for each other and work to provide mutual aid and support 126 00:12:11,930 --> 00:12:13,930 Going back and re watching these 127 00:12:14,570 --> 00:12:19,599 unapologetically sincere and sentimental movies feels like an antidote to the superficial or 128 00:12:20,150 --> 00:12:23,919 Ironic appeals to nostalgia that saturates much of Hollywood today 129 00:12:26,960 --> 00:12:33,849 Now I should say that none of the movies on my list are without their flaws like a lot of pop culture in the 1980s 130 00:12:33,950 --> 00:12:39,429 Some include racial stereotypes and the stories mostly focus on the experiences of white people 131 00:12:40,250 --> 00:12:46,989 Still the core themes of empathy and solidarity had a profound impact on me and my values growing up 132 00:12:47,990 --> 00:12:53,289 My list is of course a personal one and therefore specific to my identity and my upbringing 133 00:12:55,190 --> 00:12:58,390 Depending on your age your gender and your cultural background 134 00:12:59,090 --> 00:13:02,259 Your own list of movies will likely look quite a bit different 135 00:13:03,220 --> 00:13:10,020 If I were making a list like this one but for media from this decade there are a handful of excellent movies that I definitely 136 00:13:10,270 --> 00:13:17,969 Include I have made video essay is discussing a few of them like wall-e and fantastic beasts, which you can find elsewhere on this channel 137 00:13:18,610 --> 00:13:25,050 But entertainment, built around empathy and solidarity is still relatively uncommon in 2018 138 00:13:26,560 --> 00:13:33,690 Which is too bad because we really need more movies that embrace their role as empathy generating machines I 139 00:13:35,350 --> 00:13:41,640 Hope you enjoyed this look back at some of my favorite movies from the 1980s if you'd like to see more of these long form 140 00:13:41,640 --> 00:13:47,999 video essays that examine the messages in our media then please consider going over to patreon and helping to fund this project there 141 00:13:48,040 --> 00:13:52,020 There's also a link to PayPal in the description below next time 142 00:13:52,020 --> 00:13:56,189 We'll be talking about a rather disturbing action movie trope called abduction as romance