On Movies, Immigration, Affirmative Action
By
Steve Sailer
How do mainstream Hollywood movies portray the
enormous phenomenon of post-1965 immigration?
To a remarkable degree, they just don't. No
doubt many socially-conscious filmmakers dream of
winning Oscars by exposing America's cruelty and racism
toward hard-working, family-oriented workers whose only
crime is that they don't happen to have any documents
etc., etc. But remarkably few movies about
modern immigration have actually been made.
Why not? Probably because there's simply no evidence
that they’d make money. The general public appears
either not interested or actively hostile.
I've spent several hours staring at a
list of the 255 movies that have broken the $100
million mark at the domestic box office. The
Ellis Island era did inspire some famous gangster
movies about earlier immigrants. But only one of the 255
films with a nine-digit gross was about a modern
immigrant: Eddie Murphy's sweet 1988 romantic comedy
Coming to America, about an African prince who runs
away from an arranged marriage to look for his future
queen in (where else?) Queens.
Of course, in the end Murphy takes his
African-American bride home to his fantasy kingdom. So
maybe he isn't really an immigrant after all.
Easily the most popular movies about modern
immigration—albeit in allegorical form—have been the two
Men in Black comedies. They feature hard-nosed
government agents whose job is to deal with illegal
aliens who are really alien. (Tommy
Lee Jones: There are approximately 1500
aliens in Manhattan. Will Smith: Cab drivers?
Tommy Lee Jones: Not as many as you think.)
The series' immigration-control subtext is brought to
the surface in the very first scene of the original
MIB: patrolling the
Mexican border, Tommie Lee Jones arrests a group of
illegal aliens
sneaking into the U.S. and unmasks the
extra-terrestrial hiding amongst them.
That's why
Slate denounced MIB as "fascist."
In effect, the MIB series asserts that
immigration offers opportunities to the host nation (or
planet) but also dangers that must be managed in an
aggressive, no-nonsense manner.
In contrast, consider the dopey Alien Nation
(I mean the 1988 movie, not Peter Brimelow’s immigration
book)[Peter
Brimelow
sighs: I have rotten luck with these
publisher-imposed titles. My
famous Canadian book was called
The Patriot Game. It was distinctly overshadowed
by Tom Clancy’s simultaneous thriller
Patriot Games] about uninvited
extraterrestrial immigration to Earth.
It
focused on how detective Jimmy Caan must overcome
his racism (species-ism?)
against the "Newcomers" who are taking over human jobs.
One “Newcomer” is his new partner, alien detective Mandy
Patinkin.
That lame PC message was no doubt a major reason
Alien Nation made only 1/17th as much money as the
MIB series.
Of course, Hollywood movies are full of moralizing in
favor of diversity. But post-1965 immigrant
groups—Hispanics and Asian—just don't seem to interest
the people who make or watch hit movies.
Asians have gotten a few lead roles in $100 million
movies: I come up with the wonderful Jackie Chan in the
Rush Hour comedies, Lucy Liu in Charlie's
Angels, Pat Morita in Karate Kid II, Michelle
Yeoh in the James Bond flick Tomorrow Never Dies,
and the entire cast of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Embarrassingly, though, every single one of those roles
involves kicking people. If Americans didn't like
martial arts, they'd apparently never pay big bucks to
see an East Asian star at all. (For whatever it's worth,
the Disney animated films Mulan and Lilo and
Stitch are about Asians or Pacific Islanders.)
The press has been trumpeting the arrival of
Hispanics in the mainstream of American pop culture
since that fine little movie La Bamba fifteen
years ago. But according to box office figures,
Hispanics still haven't arrived.
Among these top 255, I can identify only one film
with a Hispanic-dominated cast: director Richard
Rodriguez' fun children's fantasy Spy Kids. (And
that's assuming that its star
Antonio Banderas, a Spaniard,
qualifies as "Hispanic," a question that nobody in
the government seems to be sure about.) The drug
smuggling movie Traffic also had a number of
strong roles for Hispanics.
According to the hit movie list, in our imaginations,
America remains a
white and black country. When American moviegoers
think about "celebrating diversity," what they think
about are films with black cops and white cops learning
to overcome their differences as pursue the bad guys.
The black cop-white cop buddy movie genre goes back
to the 1967 Best Picture winner In the Heat of the
Night. It’s gotten awfully creaky over the last 15
years. But the MIB, Lethal Weapon, and
Beverly Hills Cop series, along with Wild Wild
West and Seven take up nine spots on the $100
million dollar list. And there are a large number of
other hit black/white movies like Jerry Maguire,
Independence Day, Sister Act, The
Green Mile, and
Driving Miss Daisy.
I think the movie box office data explains a lot
about why so little thought is given to immigration:
Americans just don't find modern immigrants as
interesting as they find African-Americans.
Consider affirmative action. No one ever defends
racial and ethnic quotas for newly-arrived immigrants.
The concept is just too absurd. But, no matter how
ridiculous, that's the law today.
Quotas for blacks are probably a very bad idea. But
because the number of African Americans is relatively
limited, the country could arguably afford black quotas,
just as it can afford giving
American Indians a racial right to operate casinos.
What we can't afford in the long run is continuing to
tell five billion foreigners that they'll be given
special privileges as soon as they
show up here.
So you'd think that
anti-quota activists would devote a lot of their
fire to denouncing
quotas for immigrants.
But they almost never do. Instead, they keep ramming
headfirst against affirmative action's strongest line of
defense: the case for the special treatment of the
descendents of American slaves.
Why? There are a lot of reasons, but one is that
white Americans just find African Americans, pro or con,
so much more interesting than the new immigrants.
It's our national
obsession. Unfortunately, it's blinding us to the
more significant changes that are happening now.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
September 22, 2002