Spoiler-free STAR WARS review


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

tfa_poster_wide_header_adb92fa0

J.J. Abrams has come into his own as a film maker here, creating a film much better than both SUPER 8 and STAR TREK. It is pretty clear he sat down for a few months, broke down the STAR WARS movies into little bits, saved the juicy kernels, and threw out the chaff. He has reverse engineered and rebuilt a film series that needed it badly. Three and a half decades after EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, audiences finally get a sequel that is a worthy successor to what the late Irvin Kershner created in 1980, one of the best science fiction adventure films of that decade. A large amount of credit for this achievement lies with screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan, the scribe of EMPIRE, RETURN OF THE JEDI, and RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, he and Abrams have developed a tight, powerful story that keeps you glued to your seat. The special effects are brilliant, the camera work is tight, and the sets are magnificent.

The other part of why this is such a good movie is because George Lucas is not involved. If we are frank and brutally honest, the fact is that the man has some good story ideas but never was a good screenwriter. Indeed, Harrison Ford, who really owns this film, famously once told Lucas “you can write this sh*t but you can’t say it.” What happened with Lucas is actually a pretty instructional parable of ego gone berserk. When he made the original film, he was on a tight leash and had producers saying “no, George, we can’t do that” or “that is a ridiculous idea, George, get back to work.” This happened again on EMPIRE STRIKES BACK because Irvin Kershner, who was an old Hollywood pro, was able to have a respectful relationship with producer Lucas.

But after that, things really went south. Lucas became one of the most powerful people in the Hollywood Hills and no one could tell him he was wrong. THE RETURN OF THE JEDI was originally a massively different movie than what ended up on screen. Han Solo was supposed to die in the first act, Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia were not siblings, and the major action scenes were set on the Wookie home planet. The movie ended with the Emperor alive, Lando Calrissian dead, and Luke and Leia parting ways to create a new Jedi order and Republic, respectively. But then Lucas, who could never be wrong, insisted on these absurd rewrites that would conclude the series but also ruin the movie.

By the time Lucas got to the prequels, all hell broke loose. He hired a bunch of yes-men who would grant his every ridiculous wish and tell him he was a genius. “Sure George, a Jamaican Donald Duck is brilliant!” “Sure George, let’s turn Anakin Skywalker into a drop-out from Beverly Hills 90210, great idea!” “Sure George, why not turn the final battle between Obi-Wan Kenobi and Darth Vader into a Sega Genesis game, you are America’s Shakespeare!” But the sad fact is no one ever told him something that was right in front of his nose: you never turn a bit part Alec Guiness took for the money into the main character of his own movie series! For all his posturing nonsense about great narrative arcs from Joseph Campbell and banal analogies about the fall of the Roman Empire, Lucas never was able to create a protagonist in those movies who was actually likable. It is one thing to speculate about the life of Anakin Skywalker before he became Darth Vader, it is another thing to spend millions of dollars and close to ten years making three absolute clunkers that have as much appeal as an ingrown toenail.

All that is gone here, in fact word has it that Lucas feels burned because they threw out his original story and started from scratch. Instead of Ewoks or Gungans or Natalie Portman impersonating a bologna sandwich, we have the original cast in a genuinely exciting story that leaves you wanting more. Last month I wrote how THE PEANUTS MOVIE was a love letter to fans of that original work. This movie is more than that, it is the crazy make-up loving that every STAR WARS fan needs and the sequel we deserved.

kaGh5_patreon_name_and_message

A call to end violence against sex workers


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

2015-12-17 Sex Worker 001A vigil was held in Providence where the names of 41 murdered women were read aloud. They were all sex workers. One of the women, Ashley Masi, was murdered in Rhode Island.

The event was part of the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers, and this was the first time the event was marked in Rhode Island. Similar events were held in more than 20 other cities in the United States and 40 more cities internationally.

Bella Robinson, executive director of COYOTE RI, said in a press release that due to “criminalization and societal stigma sex workers experience extremely high levels of violence.”

2015-12-17 Sex Worker 003She added, “criminalization and stigma have created the perfect playground for bad cops and predators to continue to rob, rape and murder sex workers with impunity.”

Susan Roar, a writer-activist and mom has written for $pread Magazine, a quarterly magazine by and for sex workers and those who support their rights. She also said that, “sex workers face violence because of criminalization and social stigma.”

2015-12-17 Sex Worker 006Brown University professor Elena Shih said that the “least visible form of violence [against sex workers] is at the hands of the rescuing organizations.” She’s talking about big money international NGOs that work to get women out of sex work and into jobs making jewelry or sewing garments in factories. Women find themselves rescued from sex work only trained to do “menial and marginal work at low wages,” creating products that pay the salaries of NGO directors.

Sex workers, says Shih, don’t want to be rescued, they want to have their human rights protected, and their slogans and signs, such as “Rights Not Rescue” and “Solidarity not Sewing Machines” are pithy reminders that “sex work is work – a form of labor that people all over the world are choosing.”

Hannah, who is working on her Ph.D in anthropology, has researched Providence’s anti-trafficking task force. Made up of representatives from the police, FBI, local hospitals and local women’s organizations, the task force works on “removing girls and young woman from cases of sexual exploitation.” Every month the task force examines about 40 cases and determines “action plans.”

12375097_920474734708862_6205967338109620004_oAction plans may involve sting operations to “remove individuals from situations of perceived sexual exploitation” and the “subsequent rehousing and rehabilitation of the alleged victim.” Rehabilitation “may include counseling, trauma-informed yoga and preventing contact between the individual defined as the victim and individuals associated with his or her time in the sex industry, including friends and family.”

According to Hannah’s research, the lack of inclusion of sex workers in the anti-trafficking task force is problematic for two reasons. For one thing, sex workers are well placed to identify sexual exploitation in the sex industry. Researchers in India found that sex-worker self regulatory boards contributed to the reduction of minors in sex work in Songachi, Kolkata from 25 percent in 1992 to 2 percent in 2011.

Secondly, “anti-trafficking policy directly affects the safety and working conditions of sex workers,” so it makes sense that sex workers be included “in the creation and implementation of policy designed to reduce sexual exploitation.” As Hannah states, “Enacted with harm reduction in mind, anti-trafficking policy has the potential to negatively affect the safety of sex workers.”

Including sex workers on the task force, says Hannah,  “is essential if we are to produce an anti-trafficking strategy that minimizes harm, and promotes the safety and dignity of sex workers in the community.”

Bella Robinson says that sex workers “face more violence from the state than from customers.” She wants Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and the Providence Public Safety Commissioner Steven Paré to issue “a policy statement” that will allow, “sex workers to come forward and report crimes without fear of arrest.”

“No one expects approval,” says Robinson. She wants sex workers to be seen as “something other than victims.” The are mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, sons and daughters.

And they deserve human rights.

Patreon