Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Queered Villainy Just Keeps Happening

While reading Shakespeare’s bloody “Titus Andronicus,” I couldn’t help but find a wellspring of commentary on harmful masculinity. For Rome and its patriarchy, Titus feels that he must kill Tamora’s son Alarbus at the beginning of the play, and this action sparks a revenge plot so twisted that by the end, for the patriarchy, Titus must kill his sullied daughter Lavinia to restore his entire family’s honor. Masculinity and patriarchy are the root of all evils.

So why hasn’t that message translated quite so well to the modern screen?

Of the men of the play, in terms of general terribleness, Chiron and Demetrius, Lavinia’s unrepentant rapists who are in it for the “fun,” top the list. In Titus (1999) they are depicted as Tamora’s golden boys, one with shoulder-length blond hair, and the other with short hair clearly bleached blonde. They embody 90’s era stereotypes about young goths (the black-wearing kind, not the long-gone civilization kind) as well as LGBTQ young men. They horse around, shout at each other, and even play video games – and if that last part doesn’t come straight out of theories about the Columbine shooting which took place earlier that year, I’ll eat my hat.


"Rape" even has moose antlers and blush.
It’s kind of incredible how de-masculinized they are in Titus, actually. In the play, the stage says that Chiron and Demetrius enter “braving,” presumably fighting with swords while arguing about Lavinia. It’s not hard to imagine a pair of knightly boys fencing over a woman, is it? Yet in the movie they are armed with tiny little daggers, and even rip their outer clothes off as they get into the fight, taking a bestial tone rather than a courtly one.

Then, to really hammer the nail in, they show up in their outfits for their mother’s cunning plan to trick Titus Andronicus. “Murder” appears in a tiger’s habit, and “Rape” appears in a bra and make-up, with an animal fur draped over his shoulders. They seem animalistic and feminine, especially next to Tamora (who really only resembles a very pointy knife-y Star Trek: Voyager Borg Queen). In plain words: they look really, really stereotypically weird-animal-queer.


Borg Queen on left, "Revenge" on right. See it?
So here’s my question to this adaptation of “Titus Andronicus.” Why are your rapists the most queer-coded characters in this story? Titus Andronicus is full of criticism of a heteronormative patriarchy. When you make Chiron and Demetrius deviant stereotypes, you take away some of the impact of that narrative, you know. Suddenly, there’s a force other than straight masculinity at play, and it’s not only doing harm, but it’s doing some of the most violent harm in the story.

Worse still, this cruelly mischaracterizes LGBTQ individuals, a problem which has been around in mainstream media for a while and shows no signs of going away.

The Silence of the Lambs (1991) features the serial killer Buffalo Bill, infamous for his (or her?) long, drawn out scene where he horrifically dons his make-up and dances in womens’ skin – violating their bodies in a whole new way. Modern procedural shows like Psych and NCIS often have large casts without a hint of LGBTQ representation but episodes where lesbians and trans women are murderers.

If Titus was going for something “modern” and “edgy” with its interpretation of Chiron and Demetrius, I’m gonna say it completely missed the mark, falling short of even Shakespeare's commentary on masculinity, written in Elizabethan times. This film just played into some nasty tropes that harm people instead. 

1 comment:

  1. I completely agree with your opinion on the perversion of Shakespeare's message, or theme in Titus Andronicus that takes place in the film adaptation that we watched in class (1999). I had realized that the film portrayed Chiron and Demetrius as more feminine and bestial than masculine, but I didn't grasp the meaning until you explained the connections that it has with movies like Silence of the Lambs and shows like NCIS. It has become a reoccurring theme to place homosexuality and the perpetration of violence side by side in popular culture when it was clear to me as well that in Titus Andronicus, the message did originally paint hyper masculinity in a negative light.

    ReplyDelete