Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Which Is the Greater Threat to Humanity: Northern California or Southern California?
Joe-Mathews
By Joe Mathews
Published 1 year ago on
August 11, 2023

Share

Sure, these are entertaining films about a physicist and a doll. But both movies are also global nightmares full of warnings about the damage that Northern and Southern California can do when we send our ideas out into the world.

Photo of Joe Mathews

Joe Mathews

Opinion

Oppenheimer is the Northern California nightmare. While much of Christopher Nolan’s film takes place in New Mexico, the most important moments occur at Berkeley, where J. Robert Oppenheimer was a professor from 1929 to 1943 There he meets the Manhattan Project’s military chief, Leslie Groves, and collaborates physicist Ernest Lawrence (the Lawrence of the Lawrence Livermore National Lab).

In fact, the lab in New Mexico that produced the nuclear bombs was managed by the University of California.

The Manhattan Project was a quintessential Bay Area enterprise. Very smart people from around the world came together to create a disruptive technology, without fully appreciating its perils and complications until it’s too late. Oppenheimer has inspired comparisons to Silicon Valley’s current promotion of artificial intelligence, without fully understanding its dangers.

Among the nuclear age’s cultural and commercial products was Barbie (born in 1959). She, and the new film about her, are Los Angeles nightmares.

Together, “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” offer a two-part scenario for the end of humanity. First, we grow divided and isolated from each other because of the unattainable lifestyles and cultural expectations that Southern California creates and promotes. Second, we kill ourselves with the technologies masterminded by Northern California. (Shutterstock)

The director Greta Gerwig is a Sacramento kid who shares her home city’s loathing of all things L.A. So, her film pins most of the damage that Barbie has done on Southern California, where she was invented and manufactured.

Barbie, like Los Angeles itself, is a sun-splashed comedy with a dark noir heart.

The central joke of the film is that when Barbie, in unexpected existential crisis, leaves the seeming perfection of Barbieland for “Reality,” that reality turns out to be L.A. Amidst the city’s most unreal Westside precincts (especially Venice), Barbie learns of the impossible expectations her example places on women.

Barbie’s would-be boyfriend Ken, who is confined to hanging around the beach in Barbieland, discovers the possibilities of patriarchy after he falls in love with the phallic glass office towers of Century City. And when Ken takes those supposed Southern California values back to Barbieland, that utopia of feminism (with a set design that resembles Palm Springs) collapses. Soon, the various Ken dolls have imposed a bizarro dictatorship of men, who subjugate the various Barbies, who’d previously served as president and controlled the Supreme Court.

It might be wrong to think too hard about a movie as addled and antic as Barbie, but the film does reflect the Hollywood work realities of the women who made the movie. Gerwig, star-producer Margot Robbie, and their colleagues have had to navigate an entertainment industry dominated by dim-witted Kens. (The rest of L.A., thank goodness, is a bit more egalitarian, as Mayor Karen Bass and the all-female Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors can tell you.)

Both films, however, feel more than a little soulless. Barbie, for all its righteous feminism, is a corporate vehicle for selling dolls. It misses opportunities to make light of the cynicism of this American moment, when corporations try to talk like social movements, and social movements often behave like corporations. The anxieties of Barbie are firmly upper-middle-class and higher; none of the women or men of the film worry about what worries most Angelenos — scratching out a living in a too-expensive place.

Oppenheimer is even more callous. It’s a film about nuclear weapons that doesn’t show their victims. We never see the human horror of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (which is why the film can’t get screened in Japan), or the damage people endured because of their proximity to the testing of such weapons, from the South Pacific to Central Asia.

This distance from real-life human concerns is what makes both films so unsettling — and so convincing as apocalyptic documents.

Together, they offer a two-part scenario for the end of humanity. First, we grow divided and isolated from each other because of the unattainable lifestyles and cultural expectations that Southern California creates and promotes. Second, we kill ourselves with the technologies masterminded by Northern California.

About the Author

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Republicans Target Social Sciences to Curb Ideas They Don’t Like

DON'T MISS

Gaetz Withdraws as Trump’s Pick for Attorney General

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Men Arrested in Armed Robbery Near Sanger High, Sanger Academy

DON'T MISS

Newsom Heads to Fresno, a County That Voted for Trump

DON'T MISS

Conservative Professors and Students Are Suing California’s Community Colleges, and Winning

DON'T MISS

How Trump Can Earn a Place in History That He Did Not Expect

DON'T MISS

Love Seeks Redemption as Packers Prepare for 49ers Rematch

DON'T MISS

Suspect Arrested After Oakhurst Crime Spree Leaves K9 Injured

DON'T MISS

Top War-Crimes Court Issues Arrest Warrants for Netanyahu and Hamas Officials

DON'T MISS

With or Without Lockridge, Can Bulldogs Get Out of Their Own Way to Become Bowl Eligible?

UP NEXT

Gaetz Withdraws as Trump’s Pick for Attorney General

UP NEXT

Fresno County Men Arrested in Armed Robbery Near Sanger High, Sanger Academy

UP NEXT

Newsom Heads to Fresno, a County That Voted for Trump

UP NEXT

Conservative Professors and Students Are Suing California’s Community Colleges, and Winning

UP NEXT

How Trump Can Earn a Place in History That He Did Not Expect

UP NEXT

Love Seeks Redemption as Packers Prepare for 49ers Rematch

UP NEXT

Suspect Arrested After Oakhurst Crime Spree Leaves K9 Injured

UP NEXT

Top War-Crimes Court Issues Arrest Warrants for Netanyahu and Hamas Officials

UP NEXT

With or Without Lockridge, Can Bulldogs Get Out of Their Own Way to Become Bowl Eligible?

UP NEXT

Classes for Cannabis? UC Merced Extension Launching Weed Workforce Training

Newsom Heads to Fresno, a County That Voted for Trump

48 minutes ago

Conservative Professors and Students Are Suing California’s Community Colleges, and Winning

1 hour ago

How Trump Can Earn a Place in History That He Did Not Expect

2 hours ago

Love Seeks Redemption as Packers Prepare for 49ers Rematch

2 hours ago

Suspect Arrested After Oakhurst Crime Spree Leaves K9 Injured

2 hours ago

Top War-Crimes Court Issues Arrest Warrants for Netanyahu and Hamas Officials

2 hours ago

With or Without Lockridge, Can Bulldogs Get Out of Their Own Way to Become Bowl Eligible?

6 hours ago

Classes for Cannabis? UC Merced Extension Launching Weed Workforce Training

6 hours ago

This Kitty Seeks a Quiet Home to Call Her Own

6 hours ago

‘Woke’ Terminology Not Commonly Used by Americans: YouGov Survey

6 hours ago

Republicans Target Social Sciences to Curb Ideas They Don’t Like

Several years ago, to attract more students, Jean Muteba Rahier spiced up the name of his introduction to the anthropology of religion cours...

2 minutes ago

2 minutes ago

Republicans Target Social Sciences to Curb Ideas They Don’t Like

34 minutes ago

Gaetz Withdraws as Trump’s Pick for Attorney General

34 minutes ago

Fresno County Men Arrested in Armed Robbery Near Sanger High, Sanger Academy

48 minutes ago

Newsom Heads to Fresno, a County That Voted for Trump

1 hour ago

Conservative Professors and Students Are Suing California’s Community Colleges, and Winning

President Donald Trump with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in Washington, Sept. 15, 2020. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
2 hours ago

How Trump Can Earn a Place in History That He Did Not Expect

2 hours ago

Love Seeks Redemption as Packers Prepare for 49ers Rematch

A Mariposa man was arrested after a violent crime spree in Oakhurst, injuring a sheriff's K9 and prompting multiple investigations. (Instagram/FresnoDAIA))
2 hours ago

Suspect Arrested After Oakhurst Crime Spree Leaves K9 Injured

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend