Friday, July 09, 2010

Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Review plus Lazy Susan: retro heaven

I saw The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo the other night which has a slow build but is riveting, as the story of a missing girl gets overtaken by a larger story. In the same way the journalist Mikeal (based on the author who died before he could finish the 10 book cycle on abuse and violence on women) is overshadowed by this mystery researcher, indeed the whole missing girl and film is almost overshadowed by the mystery of Lisbeth.

The work is a denouncement of what is allowed as acceptable behavior: now that is the way males and males in authority treat women while a generation ago it is the Nazi ideals, or as it is put by one relative on this island of now rich, older generation: “Yes, he had no love of the children of Abraham.” (hated Jews)

But this is not a US film where we go Nazi=bad/thus solved. The problems isn’t JUST the Nazi’s, since as the film ‘What did you do during the war?’ showed, you dig a little bit and you find lots of people who were in the Hitler youth, or in the war for Germany or named after Hilter and immigrated after the war. I know several. The question is do these people consider that attitude still acceptable, did they after the war? The ones I met see it now as while part of their personal history also part of a great delusion.

In the film we are directly challenged, not by the abuse of women we are shown or told about. This is accepted by us, as stats roll over us all the time. No, one woman challenges, specifically Lisbeth, who is a burr under the skin to men who feel themselves important (Lisbeth treats all men the same – she wants no interaction with them, which is completely unacceptable to many - Those male need to establish a dominance whether that is a drunk male who feels he can push a woman aside and not get punched, or a business or other authority figure abusing the bounds of authority). Sexual abuse is rampant, dubious actions rampant both in the past and present, which would have no meaning if Mikeal was there alone in the film. It is the presence of Lisbeth (her vulnerability and her 'dragon') which cystalizes the sexual abuse which we have become culturally accepting of. We may not SAY, “She deserved to be abused/raped/groped/beaten...” but this film challenges our thoughts of ‘well, if she is going to act like……(like that to someone like him….) then what does she expect?’ The film links the need for superiority that drew some to the Nazi's to the same desires, now played out on women, often vulnerable ones.

We find that out because the film shows us what for many are considered extreme violence: acts of sexual abuse and violence towards men BY a woman. People flinch, they told me ‘well except those minutes I had to fast forward’ from viewers, from those who rent these DVD’s. The rapes, the incest towards women, the dismemberment, that was just....you know, common: But that calculated violent dominance using sex modes and pain which visually rips away the pretence that sexual abuse is anything BUT about power, power against men which makes the viewers squirm and turn away.

Making Hannibal Lector sexualizing noises and sniffing, making inappropriate comments about women is simply a cultural reference now. THAT isn't disturbing. But the androgynous Lisbeth as an answer to Prof Higgen’s lament of ‘why can’t a woman be more like a man!!’ – she uses people for sex and rolls over for sleep, she takes her place when walking, she comes back at you, she believes she has the right to decide a male's fate, much as we have seen hundreds of times in film from men deciding about women: in this she challenges your mind. I would NOT recommend this for anyone of rape as you will trigger – bad. Because it isn’t Hollywood shown sexual abuse of women, but what occurs every six minutes in the US.

Do I recommend it? Hell yeah. Lisbeth is a person who looks into the fire, and which is a mirror to help me see myself, knowing already what she does, seeing how she could do that after what she has gone through, that is iron courage. She knows she is in a war and wears cameo to match.

The next day before the heat started to go crazy here, Linda took me to Lazy Susan, a retro shop that had opened recently in town, and was doing good business. It heavily featured locally made products, from car adverts found in old magazines mounted (which had the men going through the bin), to these popular hand made journals out of favorite books that were falling apart.
In the same way, the owner, or manager and others use retro postcards to make memo pads, here is a selection of the memo pads.
Some of the items are marketed, from larger companies, but focus in the same theme, here are the journals from Harlequin.
They do a great trade with oilcloth, selling it by the meter ($12) in a variety of colours and retro patterns. They also use it to reupholster furniture and a set of three chairs in the window was already sold. As were some of the bike Panniers, while some were on sale. The manager couldn’t keep up with the sales in making them.

While we were there a couple came and wanted this ‘nice purple oilcloth’ for the birds. The manager explained that the oilcloth was actually for the day of the dead and there were skulls and skeletons wearing bicycles in the dark patterns (can you see them?). She only found this out after people had made picnic clothes and come back going, “Why are there skeletons in my nice tablecloth?” Of course after overhearing this we got some ‘ends’ for $3.50 and have lots, but immediately made a non-slide cover for my food.

There are so many retro products everywhere, in every cranny that I know I missed a lot, since I didn’t even notice the wonder woman clock at ALL until it was pointed out by the manager.
She said they had a lot of Wonder Woman at first but it had flown out, all that was left was the clock and the travel case/make-up case in the window (because of course wonder woman needs perfect hair spray and make-up!).

Don’t worry, there was Batman stuff as well, though most of it was sold out.
I was very impressed by the Superman board game (I had the Battlestar Galactica Board Game as a kid, AND the Star Wars Board game, AND the Emergency One board game – Linda had the Muppets board game – which ones did you have?). And the holder. The manager was completely baffled (not having made these) on what purpose they served. She said, “I sold one to a woman as a tin to keep cookies in, or was it for baking cookies?”

I said, “What about using it to keep your Superman/Batman Comics? You know, all in one Place?”
She was blown away but this wild idea but thought it might work. Um, hey, I might have only been allowed Christian Archie Comics (Oh yeah, they exist!) and Richie Rich but I know a comic book holder when I see one.

Which reminds me, the theme of the Comi-Con this Year seems to be ‘40+ year old men lament and relive their youth’ That is actually the plot of three of the five nominated manga (including 2 where one goes back in time to 14 called Distant Neighborhood (on the wish list) and the other called 20th Century Boys goes between six male friends growing up in the late 70’s to them coming together now to save the world). 8 Eisner nominations go to ‘Old Man Logan’, about Wolverine 40 years on, sort of how now the Hulk, Fantastic Four and the rest have gone through so many variations that they seem lost (ergo Watchmen). ‘Old Man Logan’ is about how Wolverine deals with looking back and dealing with the past catching up to him (on wishlist).

Now for those who are not into guys with claws, there is Curious George, who can forget his unusual approach to puzzle pieces and what happens? – sort of a huge cautionary tale against eating them.

There is also a Kawaii/Cute Tea Set of Madeline, which was just SO cute and made me want to buy it right there, and have a tea party with plushies. One advantage of dying I guess is early memories are strong (like having tea with plushies). Sadly Linda said, “I’d never even heard of her until the movie.”

THE MOVIE! Oh my, the whole lost childhood of reading Madeline books, sigh, it is just so tragic to think about.

There were some postcard boxes to look through including one off postcards or vintage postcards. I managed to find a couple that appealed to me and I thought might appeal to some reader, I mean, who doesn’t like a girl who not only knows her knots but also her guns. I will note that she knows about as many knots as I do, since isn’t that a bowline or a granny which is why she is holding it in her teeth, to stop him from kicking loose (My grandfather from the navy knew some knots but I was not as good at them).

My favorite was this postcard, simply because (let’s be honest now), many of us had a feeling like this toward our scout leader, or older and those nose in the air so proper, so often correcting older scouts. This girl however manages to take action with some pretty no nonsense shoes. I sigh in envy of her wild abandon. Now truthfully, who had this feeling? Never? Loved selling cookies? Loved people telling you around everyday and getting wildly exciting about things like edible plant identification? Or better yet, ‘Betterment Projects’ like cleaning up garbage on a beach or the like? Loved the songs and singing?

Leaving the store what drives in, at speed but a roadster from some arcane age, with collector plates (meaning it is a real restored or original car), with a police car in pursuit, who immediately boxes the car in. But no ticket, just another car lover.

12 comments:

Lene Andersen said...

I'm still waiting to get the DVD from Amazon, but I hear it's a good reflection of the book. Which is relentless and fierce, just like Lisbeth. I remember reading an article or review about it somewhere where the writer made a comment about how they sure seemed to be an awful lot of sexual abuse in Sweden and if I hadn't been hurting too much to write at the time, I would've e-mailed them with some statistics about sexual abuse in the US. The blindness of people...

That store is incredible! I've seen the journals before, found a link somewhere and was quite taken with them. Fantastic gift idea and the covers allow you to personalize it. And that postcard of the Girl Scout? Awesome! Felt like it summed up the rebel in me, but I'm sure a lot of people have that feeling.

Lorna, Bob and Liam said...

Ok, I'm somewhat deficient in the "loving retro" gene, I confess.

But as someone who was essentially fired from Brownies when I was about 11 (and I was a SIXER! I had advanced through the ranks) because I asked if we could do more relevant stuff than knitting... that one postcard is THE BEST.

Glad you were able to get out and have some fun, although I'm amazed you managed the heat. I've been getting up at about 5:00 a.m. to run around shutting windows (and therefore the cool night air in) and living like a mole in the dark the last two days. LOL.

Neil said...

I just started reading "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo" last night. Only got through the first six pages before I fell asleep, but it has me hooked already. Were you watching the Swedish version, or has the American version come out yet?

I remember Ritchie Rich! But not Christian Archie... Did you know that Wonder Woman has had an update? She now has a more urban (although some say '80s) look, and has a new past to go with it. http://www.stylelist.com/2010/06/30/wonder-woman-new-look/ has the new image.

I'd have followed that lovely old car too! But then, I'd have followed you two into Lazy Susan, as well. Oh, sorry if that sounds a bit creepy; I just think that would be a cool store.

Love and zen hugs,
Neil

Elizabeth McClung said...

Lene: I am curious how you will see the film, I saw Flame and Citron a while ago, so it is interesting to see the '40 years later' aspect. Much sexual abuse here? Yeah, when just ONE church organization pays out for tens of thousands of cases, gee, maybe some sexual abuse here? And at RAINN you can see the 30+ states where rape within a family gets a reduced to no sentence at all (known as the 'incest loophole').

The ones that are the big display are made at the store, but they have a www online link. I am glad you liked that postcard, me too - I only wish I had been that uninhibited at that age.

Lorna, Bob, Liam: Oh well, not even a love of curious george?

Hahah, oh the great Canadian sin, asking for something more relevant than knitting (you weren't asking for cross stitch?). I can't believe they kicked you out, what about the whole unity and personal growth thing?

Yes, on the top floor of an apartment, the heat from below doesn't stop rising until about 2 am - and the building noise starts at 7:00 am - it is a challenge, I am weary of heat.

Neil: the Swedish Version, actually either they kept speaking french or latin or my swedish is a lot better than I thought (I did study it for two weeks full time), as I could tell what they were saying and the difference between that and the subtitles, at least part of the time. I very, very much hope they don't make a US version. All three films are out in Sweden, I think the second was released here in May.

That was quite the shop and the car, eh?

Raccoon said...

On the cover of "take it and like it," how does she keep her dress on?

Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, Power Boys... I remember them!

Find the name of the person who makes the panniers, maybe she could make a backpack or something out of the skeletons riding bicycles?

I read some of the Archie comics. Including the Christian ones. They are still being published; I read recently that Archie and Veronica are getting married...

"20th Century Boys" I first heard of as a trilogy of movies. The reason the friends get back together to save the world is because the world is turning out exactly like a comic that they use to draw.

One thing I don't like about Marvel/DC is how frozen the characters ages are. And, Wolverine? I still don't understand how he became so popular. Or Gambit, for that matter.

For some reason, talking about Madeleine brings to my mind "Harriet the Spy," which was also made into a movie, starring Michelle Trachtenberg, who became Dawn Summers in BtVS, a sorority girl in the remake of "Black Christmas," guest starred in a few episodes of "Gossip Girls," and is currently on some legal drama. I don't know why.

Speaking of postcards... I got my latest today!

SharonMV said...

Dear Beth,
I'm so glad you got out. I like the retro/vintage stuff at Lazy Susan. great journals & notepads - ideas for stuff to make.
I was never a brownie. I was a Campfire girl (cheaper &less prestigious than the Girl Scouts). We had to do tasks that would earn us a wooden bead to sew onto our vests (the extent of our "uniforms"), but I can't remember what these tasks were or what skills we learned. I'd have been happy to learn knitting. We did have one overnight camping trip - on my friend's property just a ways from town.

Sharon

coopernicus said...

Hey...long time no visit!! (for both of us) Thanx for stopping by. Good to see you still blogging.

Have not seen the movie but recently finished the book, which I thoroughly admired for its writing style and messages.

The retro shop looks kewl. Love stores like that...

wendryn said...

I don't think I can handle that book or movie for the moment. Sounds absolutely fascinating, but more than I can take right now. I'll put it on the back burner for sometime later...Thank you for the review!

The shop sounds amazing! I love the postcard - I was only a Girl Scout briefly, just until I found out that the particular troop I ended up in didn't do things like camping. Sigh. Oh, and I grew up reading the Madeline books. I may still even have some lying around somewhere. The roadster sounds like a perfect end to the visit.

Kate J said...

Hmmm, maybe I missed something. I tried - and failed - to read the book of Dragon tattoo... and saw only the opening few minutes of the film (I was working in the cinema, covering another movie, it wasn't that I walked out or anything) but I must say it didn't appeal. I just didn't see it as anything other than just another book and film treating violence against women as entertainment. Maybe I'll give the book another try (your recommendation carries weight with me!)
Love & peace

Neil said...

I'm on page 528 or 841 pages in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. So far, one character has convinced another that violence against women (her in particular) is a Very Bad Thing.

But it's also a murder mystery; kind of a cold-case investigation. And I'm totally hooked. The Girl Who Played With Fire is on sale at the local Extra Foods, and despite my aversion to buying books there, I may break down and buy it. Especially if it's not in the library. Curious; I haven't bothered to look for Larsson's others in the library yet. I'll have to do that when I finish this.

It has been hot here, finally. We've had cool, rainy weather since mid-May; farmers don't have enough seed in the ground because of the rain, and the crops that are planted are stressed from too much moisture. So of course we've had high humidity, heat, and the possibility of thunderstorms every day for a few weeks now. But at least it's warm outside. Yeah, sorry, Beth, but I'm a heat-loving person. Sorry, love, but it would never have worked out between us. :)

Love and zen hugs,
Neil

Neil said...

Raccoon, you asked how the dress stays up on the cover of Take It and Like It. My guess is that the artist has taken willing suspension of disbelief brought to a new level.

And apparently the dress is going along with the willing suspension part...

More zen hugs all around!
Neil

FridaWrites said...

I still want to watch the movie, but am forewarned about the trigger effect.

The vintage store is great!--I wonder if the oilcloth bags would work well for your wheelchair. You should try!

Retro stuff is so much fun. Still need to get the kids to one of those shops here.