Our
culture seems to be fascinated with superheroes lately. This year at the movies
it has been the X-men, Captain America, and Spiderman, and before that it was The
Avengers, Superman, and Batman…and the list goes on and on. And those are just
the heroes wearing the snazzy costumes. Anytime we watch a movie where the fate
of the world…or the fate of an individual…depends on the strength and courage
of one person—that’s a superhero movie. But is it just our society that is so
captivated with the superhero? And is this fascination really such a recent
event? Of course not.
The
superhero appears in cultures around the world and as far back in history as
people have been telling each other stories; way before writing was invented,
and way, way before movies.
The
ancient cultures all had their hero stories. The Greeks and Romans liked to
tell of Hercules whose hardships were so extreme and whose deeds were so mighty,
that when he died, he was brought up to Mount Olympus to live with the gods. In
India, they told of Rama, who rescues his wife from the ten-headed,
twenty-armed demon-king, Ravana. And in Mexico, the ancient Aztecs were all
familiar with Quetzalcoatl, who transforms himself into a black ant and
journeys deep into the earth in search of food for his beloved humans.
These
heroes are the archetypes, or the original models, for our action heroes today.
Their stories reflect timeless values, such as courage and honor, and deal with
universal ideas such as good and evil, life and death.
It’s
not the stories that have changed so much over the centuries; it’s just the way
we are telling them.
Take
for instance an early archetype of the beautiful, yet strong female hero
figure: Brynhild; the original “bad girl” of Norse Mythology. She is the
daughter of Odin and leader of the Valkyries, who rides on wolf back among the
dead and dying in battle to choose the bravest warriors for the afterlife of
Valhalla. However, she gets in trouble with her dad when she defeats a king
that Odin had promised victory.
As
punishment, her dad tells her that she has to get married, but since Brynhild has
sworn she will only marry a man who is fearless, Odin places her on a high mountain
surrounded by a circle of fire where she must sleep until a hero with no fear
can ride through the flames to rescue her. When the hero, Sigurd, does, the two
fall passionately in love and he promises to return and marry her. On his way
back though, Sigurd is distracted by another beautiful woman who slips him a
love potion and he forgets all about his promise to Brynhild. In her heartbreak
and jealous rage… Brynhild has Sigurd killed.
Okay,
so she overreacts a little, but you just don’t want to break this woman’s
heart.
More
important, is what this story tells us about the people who told it; they
valued
Brynhild’s
qualities: she is strong, smart, sexy, brave, and above all, honorable.
Qualities the American author, Nathaniel Hawthorn wrote about thousands of
years later in The Scarlet Letter.
His hero, Hester Prynne, is a beautiful unmarried woman convicted of adultery
in colonial Boston. She is condemned to wear the scarlet letter "A"
on her chest as a permanent sign of her sin and brought before the entire
community with her child and commanded to reveal the identity of the baby’s
father. She refuses. He remains silent. Over the course of the novel, as the
child’s father slowly self-destructs in shame, Hester steadily regains her
dignity and the respect of the community.
A
century and a half later, this same character appears in the movie Juno.
Although the film is about a beautiful, intelligent, independently minded young
woman who gets pregnant and is not married, and it may share some themes with The Scarlet Letter—it is definitely not
the same story. But the hero of the story, Juno MacGuff, is the same
archetypical character as Hester Prynne, a woman who is self confident enough
to stand on her own, face up to her responsibilities, and make difficult
decisions. Juno decides to give her baby up for adoption at the end of the
move, because in her heart, she knows it is the right thing to do.
Not
exciting enough for you? How about the modern movie version of our Valkyrie,
Brynhild, as the character of “The Bride” in Quentin Tarantino’s bloody revenge
epic, Kill Bill? After surviving a
gunshot to the head and five years in a coma, this woman goes on a mission of
revenge to kill the man who betrayed her. Her bloody—and I mean bloody—journey
of vengeance takes her around the world where she finally catches up with her
would-be assassin, only to discover that the child she was pregnant with and
thought she had lost in the shooting is alive and well and waiting to be
rescued from the film’s smooth-talking villain.
Making
these kinds of connections over time and among different cultures is not just a
nerdy game of trivia for movie buffs or high school English teachers; it is
part of our basic need as humans to communicate.
This
is what is truly important in life: one’s ability to communicate. True
communication requires empathy; seeing through another’s eyes, walking in
another’s shoes. Whether the stories are spoken around a campfire late at
night, read silently from the pages of a book, viewed in the cool dark of a
crowded movie theatre, or watched from the living room couch at home,
storytelling accomplishes this. Our shared experiences make this happen. Our
stories connect us to the past, the present, the future… and to every other
human being on this earth.
We
need to make these connections. And the superhero story is one way we continue
to do so. Remember, above all, stories reveal the values, hopes, fears, and
dreams of the people who are telling them. A good superhero story, with its
fantastic characters, impossible settings, and despicable villains, seems to
get right to the heart of the matter, because what these stories are really
telling us is how a culture sees itself.
Think
about your favorite superheroes. What is it that you admire most in them? Is it
their incredible strength, their power to fly, or their ability to turn
invisible? Is it their x-ray vision? Or is it that when things are at their
worst, when all seems lost, and all hope is gone, when anyone else would call
it quits… crawl home… pull up the covers and turn out the lights… our super
heroes keep going. Their greatest power, after all, is their courage and their
honor. These heroes, pushed to the limits of their powers, find the
self-confidence to stand on their own, face up to their responsibilities, and make
those difficult decisions. This is because what we admire most in our
superheroes is really what we want to admire most… in ourselves.
--Philip Hoy
--Philip Hoy
No comments:
Post a Comment