Jan 21, 20226 min
The Incredibles 2 was a much-anticipated movie that came out in 2018. Even I looked forward to it because I liked the first one. Unfortunately, I left the theater with a headache from all the doublethink, hypocrisy, anti-blackness, and liberal propaganda.
When you google the writers of the Incredibles 2, you see the following:
FIGURES.
Why else would the movie have been be so tone-deaf on the race issues it tried to address? Why else would the movie have whored for mainstream feminism (via the girl-boss aesthetic) as hard as it did? How else could they have so crassly assessed what the negroes are upset about (this time)?
Why else would they think it was ok for one underrepresented group's narrative to supplant another's?
There are so many things wrong with this movie, but I'm going to focus on the 3 scenes that stood out to me below.
This scene? SMH.
Talk about adding insult to injury,
Scene 5- What's Next?
[Helen and Bob are sitting at the pool.]
Helen: "What are we gonna do?"
Bob: "I don't know. Maybe Dicker will find something?"
Helen: "Dicker is done, Bob. Any thought we had about being Supers again is fantasy. One of us has gotta get a job."
Bob: “One of us"?
Helen: "You did a long stint at Insuricare."
Bob: "Hated every minute of it."
Helen: "I know it was hard on you. Maybe it's my turn in the private sector and you take care of the kids..."
Bob: "No, I'm doing this. I need to do this. You know where my suit and ties are?'
Helen: 'Burned up when..."
Both: "The jet destroyed our house."
Helen: (chuckles) "Yeah. We can't count on anyone else now, Bob. It's just us. We can't wait for—" [Helen and Bob hear a door bang. They look around for a bit and see someone coming.]
Lucius: "No lifeguard on duty! Swim at your own risk."
Bob: "Oh, where'd you go today? I noticed you missed all the "fun"."
Lucius: "Don't be mad because I know when to leave a party. I'm just as illegal as you guys. Besides, I knew the cops would let you go."
Helen: "Yeah, in spite of Bob's best efforts."
Bob: "Yeah, yeah, yeah."
This was actually one of the nastiest scenes in the movie if you ask me. And it was rife with racist symbolism and microaggressions.
The scene starts with Jack Jack being up at night watching shows he's not supposed to be watching. He witnesses a robbery scene on TV. In the show, the robbers get away. This angers Jack Jack. Somehow, we are supposed to believe that this ugly-ass baby who can't even talk yet has a mind complex enough to a) have a moral compass, b) grasp what property is, c) think allegorically, d) grasp what theft is, and then e) have the wherewithal to use lethal force to defend "stolen" property. FOH.
Let's go through the symbolism in this scene:
Night Time: A time of inactivity, rest, quiet, fear, immorality, leisure and crime. The space in which the unknown envelops you. Danger lurks about.
TV: Entertainment; Programming; A medium for conditioning and learning
White Baby: White Innocence, Potential/the future, morality
Super Powers: Power in general
Mansion: Opulence, Wealth, Property
Garbage: Trash, Unwanted things, Disarray
Fight: A Battle or duel
Racoon: Racoons, also known as "coons" or "trash pandas" are often depicted as bandits, spies, or ninjas in cartoons. They are depicted this way because of how the rings on their tails and dark eyes resemble the traditional costumes of cartoon robbers (shown right). Also, the word "coon" is a racial slur for Black people. Some sources say that the slur "coon" is derived from from the word racoon. Others say that the racial slur originated from the word barracoon which is where
they used to detain people at slave ports before they were shipped to plantations (concentration camps). Ultimately, it's irrelevant which word the slur "coon" comes from. You know why? Because racists have made the link between them anyway. (Check out how some racists in Minnesota nailed a racoon near a Black Lives Matter sign.)
Fried Chicken: A food that is stereotypically said to be what Black people like to eat. (Another food that can be said to be microaggressive towards Black people is watermelon).
Now, let's put it all together so that we can understand the context of this scene:
(It's odd that the racoon must be treated as a thief, even though it is just looking for food in the trash. Basally, trash shouldn't "belong" to anyone, since its owner discarded it. But I digress.)
Some of you might be mumbling by now: "You're reading WAY too into this."
To you I say: poppycock. Think about it: what was the point of this scene in the movie if it didn't mean what I just told to you?
The scene would be totally useless because, if anything, it would be telling us things we already knew. We knew that Bob was overwhelmed with being a stay-at-home-dad. We already knew that his wayward children got into constant trouble without supervision. We already knew that Jack Jack had powers (even if Bob, who's a habitually oblivious man, didn't). These things were already illustrated in several other scenes in the movie, as well as in the movie's prequel.
This scene was an anti-Black response to the social unrest (BLM protests) that these racists compulsively inserted. Plain and simple.
Now, if you are intelligent, you'd be asking: "What was the ultimate messages in these scenes?"
I'll tell you:
It was: "With regards to the race issue, we support liberalism!"
Below is a summary of the unique messages in each scene:
Scene C's meaning boils down to the "Rude Version" below:
Talk about a scorched-earth policy.