National Times

Making stupidity a virtue in Hollywood is dumb

Thomas Caldwell
September 21, 2011

Opinion

In Hollywood, experts like the zookeeper from <i>Mr Popper's Penguins<./i>  have secret agendas while average dads just want to rediscover family values.

In Hollywood, experts like the zookeeper from Mr Popper's Penguins have secret agendas while average dads just want to rediscover family values.

Hollywood has a lot to answer for in its demonisation of experts.

In a Hollywood film there's a good chance that if somebody knows what they are talking about then they will turn out to be the villain.

Consider the family-friendly blockbuster Mr. Popper's Penguins. The hero is a wealthy real estate agent who wants to keep the penguins his late father left him so he can bond with his children. The bad guy is an experienced and knowledgeable zookeeper who wants to remove the penguins to care for them properly. In Hollywood, experts like the zookeeper have secret agendas while average dads just want to rediscover family values. We are living in an era in which expressions such as ''over-educated'' are used to mock those who have conducted years of research in a specific area and words such as ''intellectual'' and ''academic'' are terms of abuse.

Hollywood has a history of representing experts as the baddies, especially during the Cold War. Occasionally, in films such as The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), the professors wisely heeded the precautionary message from outer space. However, there were many more films in the vein of The Thing from Another World (1951), where the scientist is presented as a pointy head who prizes scientific inquiry over human life.

So why does so much popular culture demonise experts? Shouldn't we be grateful that they have done the hard work in particular fields so that we don't have to?

The innocent explanation is that experts are boring. Tales about an everyday person saving the world make compelling stories, feeding the myth that anybody can achieve greatness. Stories about studying really hard for long periods without any semblance of a social life are not nearly as sexy.

The fantasy of the heroic average person is further fuelled by reality television, in which people with no real talent are catapulted into the fame and fortune stratosphere for doing very little of actual merit.

Even in the original Harry Potter films the naturally gifted Harry was the hero while Hermione was a source of derision for being so studious. This reveals one of the notable exceptions to the rule. Being born talented is not seen as elitist as you can't help it, unlike working extremely hard to understand, analyse or master something above the capabilities of other people. ''Street smarts'' or excelling at sport are also acceptable forms of expertise.

Being trained in the art of war is one form of disciplined study Hollywood has no qualms with. Take the treatment of experts in the ideologically poisonous Transformers franchise. All government personnel are portrayed as egg-headed, bureaucratic fools. Attempts to understand a situation in order to respond with diplomacy and level-headedness are mocked and depicted as catastrophic. The heroes in Michael Bay's trilogy are good ol' soldier boys, an everyday kid and a generic hot chick.

This widespread discrediting of non-militaristic expert opinion in mainstream cinema is worrying and suggests the prevalent distrust of people who know what they are talking about. No wonder some commentators who were used to such values accused Avatar (2009) of left-wing bias simply because it made villains out of its ill-informed corporate and private security firm characters for trying to commit genocide.

Only in a climate where rational debate is stifled by appeals to be less smart could a centralist film like Avatar be seen as subversive.

Forrest Gump (1994) has a lot to answer for in terms of popularising ideas of stupidity being a virtue. Gump's simplistic and naive view of the world sets him up as a fictionalised pivotal figure in how American identity has been shaped. He is also obedient and happy to throw the occasional punch. Dumb, dutiful and violent - that's the Everyman that Hollywood served up to great acclaim in the '90s and he's been plaguing us since.

Expert opinion is seen as untrustworthy, as if it is out of touch with how the person on the street perceives issues. And to be fair, experts do often differ in how they perceive issues in their field when compared with the majority. That's because they have an insight that the rest of us lack since we don't have the time, resources or capacity to develop it ourselves.

So when somebody dismisses the findings of 97 per cent of the world's peer-reviewed climate scientists or claims sentencing by experienced judges is too lenient, challenge them as to why. There is a good chance that their refusal to trust the experts may be because they are far too impressionable when going to the movies.

Thomas Caldwell is a freelance writer and film critic.

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Comments

104 comments

In our current field of political opinion, scientists who carefully espouse the dangers of climate change and global warning are denigrated by populist politicians and rabid shock jocks, to the point where most people become completely bamboozled and shut out all arguments pertaining to the subject. In the land when learning and knowledge are suspect, ignorance reigns supreme.

cruiseabout | Broadbeach - September 21, 2011, 7:41AM

"Being There" with Peter Sellers - simple, naive guy suddenly turned into a guru....

"If you water the garden, it will grow".

BadSax | Erko - September 21, 2011, 8:02AM

You're over-analysing. Movies exist to make money. Making the people who pay to see your movies feel good about themselves is simply common sense.

Nicho | Sydney - September 21, 2011, 8:14AM

Yeah true.
Amazing how being an idiot is now considered cool. The stupider you act, drive or behave, and the more you stupify yourself with drink and drugs, and stun yourself blind with doof doof.
People now are expecting to be 'discovered' for just being alive & nobody wants to have one boring moment studying something, cos thats too incremental.. if its not handed to you for nothing its worthless?? lol.
And being stupid and clueless is a heroic thing now. Like Skeptoid podcast quotes: "someone has to stand up to these experts!"
Ignorance is a very safe place to be.

old fart of 40 | Sydney - September 21, 2011, 8:21AM

Not the message I got from the fine Mike Judge film "Idiocracy". Mind you, it is probably the reason it bombed at the box office.

mikespol@e.com | Canberra - September 21, 2011, 8:28AM

Or it could be that the experts lack any common sense or what used to be called "common knowledge" that allows them to balance their expertise in a very narrow field with the vast scope of the human experience from which they all too often isolate themselves.

I have met and heard too many experts who know everything about their chosen field but almost nothing about anything else. While they might be a whiz at one thing, they don't read broadly (i.e. outside specialist journals), they don't know seemingly obvious things, they know nothing of history, they can't express themselves adequately and they lack any empathy or tolerance for the rest of us mere mortals who are outside their narrow clique.
In times past we would have called them un-educated, but now we are expected to revere them and trust their judgement. However, judgement implies a broader understanding of the conditions by which an issue is framed and without that frame of reference a solution is simplistic at best and catastrophic at worst. (Cane Toads,anyone?).

Being human, experts all too often do have agendas, hidden or otherwise. When given opportunity to put their ideology into practice the temptation is hard to resist and does result in skewed outcomes.

I have vast respect for the knowledge, work and dedication of experts as it relates to their field, but I would hesitate to let one school of study be the sole arbiters of any decision that has broad implications for humanity.

Victor | Sydney - September 21, 2011, 8:27AM

This article is extremely timely for me. Last night we were at a friends house discussing the value of movies; my wife loves movies with happy endings. Me, I love quality films. The subject of stupidity as entertainment came up and how much I loathe it was remarked upon. I am in my 60's and have never liked Jerry Lewis' brand of manic stupidity while I do love that scene where he painted the tuxedo on himself.
I realise that what is good entertainment is in the eye and mind of the beholder, but I believe Hollywood has dummed down the viewing public to expect and accept a very low standard of excellence. Hollywood makes movies for the US public who are, as a generalisation, extremely uncomfortable with anything that questions them politically or their attitudes about themselves. We in Australia are just Americans in training and are adopting their view of the world more everyday.
I have grown to expect more from a film than the cliched, formulaic stuff that has been coming out of Hollywood since the 1980's. That does not mean that all movies that come out of the US are poor fare. There have been some excellent films but they are mostly made independently or by smaller studios out of the reach of Hollywood's number crunchers.

Crowsfeet | Melbourne - September 21, 2011, 8:36AM

Perhaps if they used their expertise for good and not evil .....

But seriously, the other side to the coin may be a growth in elitist behaviour amongst experts.

No one is ever right because they are an expert - they're right because they have an understanding of facts, theories and reasoning that may not be available to others.

When experts lose the desire to explain and educate in order to convince others then they also seem to lose the respect of others.

David | Bundoora - September 21, 2011, 8:44AM

Stupid is as stupid does. You can glorify stupidy all you like. But the results of enshrining stupidity speak for themselves.

Bug | Melbourne - September 21, 2011, 8:53AM

When I was young I could never understand why the characters on most children's TV shows I watched either hated school or were a geek/ nerd that no one liked. It now appears to me that this degradation of intellectual pursuit is across many forms of media aimed at all sections of society.

Kenny - September 21, 2011, 8:59AM

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