From Deseret News archives:

Those insulted at 'Thunder' don't get joke

Published: Friday, Aug. 22, 2008 12:14 a.m. MDT
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Political correctness has its place — but I'm beginning to think its place has been elevated to a ridiculous level.

Two recent complaints that seem a bit over the top are the movement to boycott the film "Tropic Thunder" because it allegedly demeans people who are mentally challenged, and last week the Deseret News printed a letter to the editor decrying the comic "Lio" because a specific Saturday strip "was degrading to women."

In both cases, what's being lampooned is Hollywood, not people with disabilities or women, respectively. And in both cases, the jokes have been misinterpreted.

In "Tropic Thunder" it's an elaborate gag about how to win an Oscar. If an actor wants an Academy Award, Robert Downey Jr. explains, he should play a mentally handicapped person with special abilities, such as Dustin Hoffman in "Rain Man" or Tom Hanks in "Forrest Gump." But if the actor plays someone who is mentally challenged without a special ability, such as Sean Penn in "I Am Sam," he's going to lose.

It's a dead-on spoof of something we've all noticed in Hollywood's self-congratulatory awards process.

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OK, I realize the protest is over the use of the word "retard," and I don't disagree that the word is offensive. But if that's all that bothers you about "Tropic Thunder," you haven't seen it. The film offers enough offensive material to be boycotted by a dozen different groups.

Let's also remember that "Tropic Thunder" is rated R, so, in theory, young people who might hear the word and repeat it shouldn't be seeing the film in the first place. Besides, there is so much more in the movie that you don't want your kids to see, it shouldn't even be up for debate.

"Lio" owes a debt to Charles Addams' New Yorker cartoons ("The Addams Family"), with the title character portrayed as a precocious young grade-schooler who loves monsters and horror. And the comic strip often lampoons old movies about mummies, vampires, etc.

In the one that was cited as "degrading to women," Lio is in his yard sitting behind a makeshift desk labeled "Lio's Lost and Found." The Creature From the Black Lagoon comes to the desk and Lio gives him a woman, and the creature carries her off.

This is meant to spoof Hollywood's penchant for having movie monsters pursue women, which harks all the way back to "King Kong" and perhaps even earlier. It's something that often shows up in posters, and there's a classic poster for "The Creature From the Black Lagoon" that shows the creature carrying off Julia Adams.

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