From my upcoming review in The American Conservative:
A film  critic would have to hate George W. Bush awfully bad to praise publicly the  ludicrous yet humorless "V for Vendetta," in which a disguised  superhero blows up the Houses of Parliament to overthrow the clerico-fascist  despotism ruling Britain in 2020. Yet, a big majority of movie reviewers have  given their thumbs-up to "V for Vendetta," even though it is just  another masochist's fantasy masquerading as a profound political allegory from  the Wachowski Siblings, the frauteurs who were to blame for the  "Matrix" trilogy.
"V for Vendetta" started out in the 1980s as a "graphic  novel" (an expensive, pretentious comic book) by Alan Moore (League  of Extraordinary Gentlemen) about how Margaret Thatcher would turn  England into a totalitarian dystopia by 1997. Well, that didn't exactly happen,  so now the Wachowskis have rewritten it as a post-9/11 fable implying that  President Chimpy McHitlerBushton will crush all dissent Real Soon Now.  Personally, I'd rather endure a Bush press conference than see this movie again.
Remember director Ridley Scott's famous "1984" Super Bowl commercial  introducing the Apple Macintosh? Now, imagine that 45-second spot dragged out  over 132 minutes. In "V for Vendetta," the Big Brother tyrant ranting  about unity and security from a vast video screen is played by John Hurt  ("Alien"). An ambitious, deeply religious Conservative politician, he  had imposed martial law in the wake of a terrorist virus attack, putting society  under the thumb of fanatical Church of England bishops. (According to Google,  the phrase "fanatical Church of England bishops" has never been seen  before.) The government dispatched all Muslims and homosexuals to concentration  camps (although the film forgets to mention how these two victimized minorities  got along on the inside).
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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