"Wonder Wheel"
Rating
SupportConsume If Free
Feminism
Neo-Marxism
I have mixed feelings about Allan Konigsberg. Revelations about his sexual proclivities as well as my own awakening to the directorโ€™s participation in a massive tribal project of hostile culture distortion make it impossible for me to like โ€œWoody Allenโ€ the way I did when I was younger; but it would be dishonest of me to pretend that his body of work did not influence my intellectual development. Coming from a blue-collar Midwestern background, Konigsbergโ€™s stories of New York sophisticates were exotic and illuminating. His movies made me want to become a literate person so that I could be witty and impress complicated women. And โ€“ as much as I dislike to concede it โ€“ he has continued to produce worthwhile entertainment well into his decrepit years. Wonder Wheel is no exception, and offers exactly what those familiar with the writer-directorโ€™s filmography have come to expect. Its tawdry tale of two shiksas โ€“ older, married woman Kate Winslet and naรฏve stepdaughter Juno Temple โ€“ who both fall for sophisticated and handsome Jewish aspiring playwright Justin Timberlake contains a great deal of Hebraic wish-fulfillment, particularly with Jim Belushi portraying the boorish and slovenly goy alternative. Set in the bustling Coney Island of the 1950s, Wonder Wheel is both a rather painful melodrama and a comfortable nostalgia piece, evoking fondness both for Americaโ€™s past and for Konigsbergโ€™s, so that the whole experience seems like old times. Ideological Content Analysis indicates that Wonder Wheel is worth seeing if viewers can do so without putting any money into the filmmakerโ€™s probably candy-filled pockets. Also: Anti-drug. Looming over Ginny (Winslet) and Humpty (Belushi) throughout is the specter of alcoholism which threatens to reassert itself over their wills in times of stress. Ginny embarrasses herself in a drunken state at the end of the film. Borderline pedophiliac. Juno Temple, like previous Konigsberg muses Mariel Hemingway and Christina Ricci, evinces a childlike presence despite her experience. The word โ€œToysโ€ is visible in a shop window in a scene in which Mickey (Timberlake) picks up Carolina (Temple) to give her a ride, slyly emphasizing her youth. Anti-family, anti-marriage. โ€œDonโ€™t ever have kids,โ€ Ginny advises. Marriage, too, is โ€œscaryโ€. Ginny is only โ€œgoing through the motions of lovemakingโ€ while she has โ€œso much to giveโ€ to a smart and beautiful Jewish boy. Ginny also insinuates that Humpty has incestuous inclinations toward his daughter when she accuses him, โ€œYou treat her like a girlfriend.โ€ Anti-white. Carolina rejects the โ€œdull, colorless, boring guysโ€ her father would have preferred she marry. Instead, she falls in love with a tribesman. There is a sort of malicious glee in Konigsbergโ€™s decision to name the head of the household โ€œHumptyโ€, presenting the American father of yesteryear as a gruff and abusive but fragile figure destined to fall and never to be restored to his previous station. Humpty distrusts the influence of movies and radio โ€“ i.e., the Jewish-dominated mass media โ€“ on his family, calls psychology a โ€œphony head doctorโ€ racket, and is probably therefore suspect in Konigsbergโ€™s imagination as a potential anti-Semite. Carolinaโ€™s son (Jack Gore), meanwhile, is a little pyromaniac โ€“ symbolic of the potential of every goy boy to grow up to perpetrate the worldโ€™s next Holocaust. Sadly, waitress Carolina must endure the indignity of serving โ€œredneck clownsโ€ in her clam house โ€“ representing the ever-present threat posed by rustic deplorables infiltrating and crudely stinking up the nice, respectable, kosher stronghold of New York City.  
Aug 26th 2018
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