I hope that some ultraconservative group will hear about this
film and encourage the world to boycott it. That way more people
will go see it.
I first read Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta, about
a masked freedom fighter terrorizing a fascist near-future British
government, as a teenager. Having read it again a few months
ago, I went to the film adaptation worried that updating the
original story and pandering to current political correctness
would deaden the power of the narrative. After the 2005 bombing
of the London Underground, would Warner Bros. balk at antihero
V’s highly destructive acts of terror? Would they let
the director James McTeigue (veteran of the Matrix movies,
Attack of the Clones and Dark City, among others)
and The Matrix’s Wachowski brothers make V a terrorist/freedom
fighter? Or would they water down the story to make him a squeaky
clean hero, or to make the government seem either not so bad
or horribly worse than in the graphic novel?
I needn’t have worried. It’s true that limited
nuclear strikes become targeted germ warfare, bombing targets
change, and riots are replaced with more symbolic civil disobedience,
but this is not a neutered version of Moore's and David Lloyd’s
brilliant comic. It is a focused adaptation tailored for the
screen. Some of the details have changed, but the spirit remains
the same. It is about a government that took power in a time
of great upheaval and uses the populace’s own fear to
control it.
Hugo Weaving does a fantastic job as the terrorist V, despite
the mask that hides his face. This isn’t the Power Rangers-esque
Green Goblin mask of Spider-Man. Subtle changes in lighting
alter its expression, even though it is the same mask throughout
the movie. Weaving commands our attention from his first alliterative
appearance.
V befriends young Evey (Natalie Portman), a young woman who
comes of age as she, like the rest of England, discovers the
yoke of tyranny — tyranny she barely acknowledges until
V points out that people have the power to change the status
quo. Portman’s performance is flawless, giving a human
face to the cause of the anarchic, vengeful V.
Stephen Rea does an admirable job of portraying government agent
Finch, even though it is sometimes difficult to telling the agents
apart. Keeping track of the government agents is particularly
difficult when reading the comic book, but the film focuses Finch,
making it easier to remember who’s on V’s tail.
And what’s a totalitarian government without a figurehead
to lead the people? John Hurt’s real-life counterparts may
not appreciate his “keep the people down” dialogue,
but he does a brilliant job of making us believe that he is a
politician who will do anything to hold onto power.
V for Vendetta is no screed. If you want to see a sci-fi
action film packed with explosions, gunfire, knife-throwing
and a man who is more than human fighting against insurmountable
odds, then you can happily enjoy this movie and ignore its political
implications.
But for those who have any interest in politics, V for Vendetta
is an allegory for our times, a call to arms for all those
who, like Evey and V, would see the world change to become a
place where the people are no longer herded like cattle along
the paths the government sets forth; a world where people tell
the government how things are going to be.
If anything, the greatest problem with V for Vendetta is
that few of the people who should be seeing its political
message will even think about seeing the movie. If you value
freedom and democracy, go see V for Vendetta and form
your own opinion. Then write your nearest government representative
and encourage him or her to come out publicly against this film.
We need a national dialogue framed around a graphic novel to
continue to inform the public that comics and comic-based films
aren’t just for kids anymore — and that, as V says,
“People shouldn’t fear their governments. Governments
should fear their people.”