A laugh in a laughless world

August 23, 2007
Issue 

Simpsons Movie

Directed by David Silverman

Written by James Brooks & Matt Groening

With Dan Castellaneta & Julie Kavner.

They're America's favourite TV family, and they're making their first feature appearance on the big screen.

The Simpsons have come a long way from the scribbly, wavering shorts on the Tracey Ullman Show, now replete with multimillion-dollar product tie-ins including 7-Elevens turned into Kwik-E-Marts and Krusty the Clown challenging the Burger King King (the King wins). After 18 years in circulation and with millions of fans around the world, the Simpsons Movie had a tall, yellow order to fill.

While it probably isn't exactly all that the eager Simpsons fanatic might have hoped for, the Simpsons family movie offered some red-letter moments that break all the "family movie" boundaries.

They include full-frontal male nudity, the denigration of the Bible ("This book has no answers!" exclaims Homer as his father speaks in tongues and rolls on the church floor), a drunk 10-year-old, and a man who appears to be in love with a pig. The jokes in the Simpsons Movie don't come as fast and furious as you'd wish for, but when they do, they are really funny.

The same could be said of the series as well. The show has slowed down a bit over the last couple of years. The Simpsons hit their stride a few years into the series, as creator Matt Groening jam-packed each half-hour installment with non-stop laughs and layers of plot twists and turns.

We came to know and love a whole town of characters, learned where they came from and all their many facets. Barney the drunk is a belching stool sitter but also shows his potential as a sorrowful and compelling filmmaker. Moe the bartender over and again shows his amazing potential for cruelty but also deep loneliness. Nelson the bully, over time, shows his soft and sensitive side — and his lovely singing voice.

Unfortunately, the movie gives short shrift to many of these favourite characters, instead focusing most of the action on the family. All these characters appear, but largely in mob scenes.

Over the years, The Simpsons has taken up the important topics of the day, some of them very political in nature — it has supported same-sex marriage, opposed the war in Iraq ("Operation Enduring Occupation"), had a strike at the nuclear power plant, poked fun at the political system, taken on organised religion (Christianity in particular) and bitten the hand that feeds it (the Fox network). And for the most part, The Simpsons always came out on the right side.

The key to The Simpsons' success is the Simpson family itself, and what it says about families in general. All the horrors of family life are splayed out in exaggerated form — a father who drinks to excess, regularly strangles his son and is always in the centre of some sort of catastrophe; a juvenile delinquent son; an overachieving daughter held back by her family; the long-suffering mother and wife; and then there's the baby (who can kill at will).

In the movie, the Simpsons face a number of key crises — the possibilities of complete environmental devastation, of the destruction of their hometown of Springfield, but most importantly the destruction of the Simpson family itself.

The end is clear. This family does everything wrong, yet they need one another to survive, whether it makes any sense or not. While the situations might be outlandish, there's nothing outlandish about the fact that a woman like Marge should drop Homer like a hot potato, but doesn't. Or that Bart should want a dad who plays catch with him, not a warped and dangerous game of truth or dare.

The fact is that while the walls in the Simpsons home may house a little bit of hell; there's a little bit of heaven, too. That explains a lot of real families pretty well.

[Abridged from US Socialist Worker <http://www.socialistworker.org>]

You need Green Left, and we need you!

Green Left is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.