#and ghost looks like a person who never grew out of his teenaged emo phase
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My Ghost and Price sim are finished, so that means Task Force 141 is officially done! Iâm pretty happy with all of them. đ
#price looks like papa smurf#and ghost looks like a person who never grew out of his teenaged emo phase#so i would say mission accomplished đ#my sims#my screenshots#task force 141 save#john price#simon ghost riley#the sims 3#ts3 screenshots#ts3#ts3cc#call of duty modern warfare#call of duty modern warfare 2#ghost call of duty#cod#call of duty#captain price#captain john price#simon riley
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Tim Burton and the Cult of the White Freaks
by Archita Mittra (20), India
I almost didnât write this article. When I was 12 or 13, I went through an intense punk phase, complete with electric blue highlights, ripped jeans, inscribing Green Day lyrics on the walls of my room, and a vocabulary of extremely colourful expletives. I was a devoted rebel without a cause. I was suffering from a severe identity crisis. Iâve always been a weird person. Iâve always liked the strange and eccentric characters. I took to writing emo poetry and creating morbid art, because I couldnât speak, because for the most part of my childhood and my teenage years, I didnât have the right words, the right face, the right personality, to fucking speak. Iâm 20 now, and I still make morbid stuff, and things have changed, but only a bit. I close my eyes and Iâm back there in that dark room with no light, a child with sewn lips, trying to articulate a trauma that knows no language. Somewhere in that demented darkness, I discovered, among other things, the films of Tim Burton. I fell in love with him and just some months back, I think, he betrayed me. This is why I almost didnât write this article. Let me tell you why I fell for him in the first place. My skinâs brown as a dried walnut, and Iâve resigned myself to the fact that itâs going to stay that way, even if in my fantasies Iâm white as Mia Wasikowaskaâs Alice exploring a Gothic wonderland and having tea with a Mad Hatter wearing too much of white face paint. And, for as long as I could remember, that was a problem to everyone else. Why wasnât my skin tone as fair as my parents, all my relatives would whine at every wedding and social gathering that my shy and introverted self was forced to attend. In holiday pictures, people teased me by asking if I was adopted. My classmates and I would play a game where the person with the lightest skin tone would win. During the annual school play, I was supposed to be grateful because I was getting to wear an expensive and exquisitely beautiful gown, pretending to be a spoilt stepsister and not the beautiful and oh-so-white Cinderella. Hey, at least I got the limelight for a bit. And yeah, itâs so okay, that even the colour pencils I use to make my art, label the peachy-pink tone as âskinâ and my brown flesh as well, just brown. Brown as tree bark, I suppose. For a long time, I kept telling myself that my shyness, my social anxiety, my crippling depression wasnât because of all the bullying I had to endure at school, wasnât because I was darker than everyone else around me, that it was just a manufacturing defect. Isnât it normal for people to make fun of those who st-st-stammer? Isnât it abnormal to st-st-stammer when youâre talking about the things you love and the things you fear? So, I did the only thing I could. I stopped talking. I wrote instead, but even that frightened me. Tim Burton was the best friend I never had. Because his films with all their Gothic visuals and macabre aesthetics, were about people supposedly like me. Beetlejuice wasnât my first Tim Burton film but it is significant in two respects. One, it was Burtonâs breakthrough film that landed him the offer to direct the blockbuster Batman films and kick-start the superhero industry. Two, it introduced to the world what is now regarded as the popular stereotype of the Goth girl: the charming Lydia Deetz. For my depressed 14 year old self who was tired of making up imaginary friends to play with and slitting wrists, the black-clad, eye-liner-wearing psychic and photography enthusiast became both my role model and my mirror image. She was introverted (yay), creative, super duper depressed and could talk to ghosts. She was me! Of course there was something strikingly wrong with this image and I tried to ignore it by smearing a shit load of face powder on my brown brown face: she was white. Years later, Tim Burtonâs trademark vision gave way to the pastiche dark fantasy comedy Dark Shadows, which although failed commercially, greatly pleased me aesthetically. Johnny Depp was playing a delicious vampire, fashion icon Helena Bonham Carter was a psychologist, a sassy teenage girl was later revealed to be a werewolf, the whole family was as dysfunctional as mine and the soundtrack included both the Carpenters and Alice Cooper. What else could a lonely POC girl, steadily losing her mind in a world of Gothic films that reflected back her own emptiness and strangeness, ask for? And even now, despite everything that has happened to me, Edward Scissorhands still remains as one of my favourite films, and although I pride myself as the type of person who doesnât cry while watching a movie, my eyes were watery by the time Edward and Kim had parted ways and Edward remained in that dark castle, lonely as he ever was, making snow with his scissor hands. I was simultaneously Edward, this misfit-monster abandoned by God and his parent, and Kim, the suburban girl, slowly tasting what it is to love a stranger whose heart is so familiar and to dance for the first time in snow. And I thought, as I watched the pain in Edwardâs eyes that it was Burton and not Edward, who was pleading to the audience to look beyond appearances and voicing for the first time, his childhood issues of alienation and misrepresentation. Soon after watching the film, my diary entries (I kept several journals because I didnât have âreal lifeâ friends to talk to) began to be addressed to a mysterious man named Edward while the Johnny Depp fan art I made bore the note âthe only Edward I ever lovedâ much to the annoyance of my Twlight-obsessed classmates. The movie wasnât perfect, but then again, most beautiful things never are. And Iâd long outgrown my fangirly love for Depp, long before those allegations about abusing Amber Heard began. But the love story with Tim Burton doesnât end here. In 2010, when Alice having slain the Jabberwocky is preparing to leave, the Hatter softly requests her to stay. Alice promises to come back but the Hatter is unconvinced, saying she wonât remember him. Alice was not ready to comprehend the implications of that exchange, but I did and it terrified me to death. Tim Burtonâs movies were the wonderland I would run away to, to escape my harsh reality, to forget this world that wouldnât treat me as one of them, because I wasnât fair enough, because fuck it, I wasnât normal enough. I was trapped in the world of the Mad Hatter, a dream concocted by Alice, a world that is fragile and ephemeral, a world that disappears the moment Alice wakes up and forgets her dream. Iâll come back to this later, but for now, let me tell you the final lesson I learnt from watching Tim Burtonâs movies: I learned to hope. In his delightful stop-motion animated feature Frankenweenie, Victor attempts to bring his dead pet dog Sparky back to life and he does so with disastrous consequences. Watching it and remembering all the pets Iâd loved who died and would sell my soul to bring back, I was filled with a childlike sense of hope and the realization that I wasnât alone for believing in and desperately hoping for impossible things, I wasnât alone in being misunderstood and misrepresented. For once being the weird kid in class and scribbling poems and doodles on the sly, didnât matter. Not having people to connect to, or appreciating me for the messed-up person I was, didnât matter. I was okay. I didnât have to be normal like everyone else, because there were people like Tim Burton who could totally get me. At least thatâs what I felt when he said stuff like, âI think a lot of kids feel alone and slightly isolated and in their own world.â And as much morbid a Tim Burton film may appear to a first time viewer (especially if itâs Corpse Bride), Burtonâs characteristic brand of Gothic-ness wasnât so much as a celebration of death, as it was a celebration of life. Working within the Hollywood system, Tim Burton has managed to retain his personality and also be, subversive. And that was so fucking inspiring to me. Why then did this man, who dresses up in black, whose films have tried to teach me to fall in love with myself and to believe in magic, miracles and impossible things, suddenly, betray me? Miss Peregrineâs Home For Peculiar Children should have been my perfect film. After all, itâs a film about kids who are eccentric and donât fit in, has time travel and a love story thrown in the mix and a secret house where they can be themselves. It is exactly the stuff I relate to and enthusiastically devour. But this is what Tim Burton did. When asked about the lack of diversity in his films, he said âNowadays, people are talking about it more. But things either call for things, or they donât. I remember back when I was a child watching The Brady Bunch and they started to get all politically correct, like, OK, letâs have an Asian child and a blackâââI used to get more offended by that than justâââI grew up watching blaxploitation movies, right? And I said, thatâs great. I didnât go like, OK, there should be more white people in these movies.â In that singular moment, my whole carefully-constructed illusion came crashing down, so efficiently, I didnât even realize it. Okay, I told myself, Iâm a POC and Iâm not âcalled forâ. All through my life I have been worshipping a man in whose imagination, I have no space, I do not exist. Iâm the Mad Hatter in Aliceâs world, alive for a short time, useful as a plot device and erased out of the narrative, the moment Alice returns to the real world. Is this the kind of space WE occupy in the white imagination? Okay, I tell myself. At least unlike Steven Moffat, he isnât famous for saying a string of problematic things. Okay, perhaps it was someone elseâs fault- maybe Ransom Riggs or a Disney executive didnât want too much tampering with the too-white source material( Never mind what he did with Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by adding a back story to Willy Wonka that I totally loved). Plus if he really suffers from Aspergerâs Syndrome, as his ex-partner Helena Bonham Carter claimed, we shouldnât take his words to heart. Maybe he didnât mean it. Itâs just one blunder, I told myself. It doesnât change anything. But it did. It changed everything. I couldnât make any more excuses. Taking a look at his entire filmography-a career spanning over three decades- I realized that casting white, pale-as-death people is his artistic and directorial choice. Itâs his fucking personal and creative choice. He just said that out loud. And itâs shoved into my face that this is a world running on white privilege and racism and hate crimes. That itâs the discrimination that POC face on a daily basis both from the whites and the communities who have internalized such values is the reason why Iâm too afraid to even consider studying abroad in the UK or USA because Brexit and Trump administration yada yada, why Iâm never âpretty enoughâ to be considered to take part in college fashion shows built on patriarchal beauty conventions, why I still spend a part of my earnings on cosmetics that promise me âfairâ skin. My skin color isnât an issue, most charming hypocrites will claim, itâs my shyness and weirdness and my lack of fucking ânormal-nessâ thatâs to blame. I wish someone would just tell me that I was born okay, that I am okay, that Iâm not some sort of manufacturing defect most people think I am. In other words, Tim Burtonâs niche audience wasnât as inclusive as I made it out to be. It had outsiders and misfits yes, but only the white ones. Tim Burtonâs fan club is a cult of white freaks, not Black freaks, not POC freaks, not any non-white freaks. I canât be a part of this fan club, because in their world, I donât exist. I am not âcalled for.â When Ash Davis responds to Burtonâs comment, she writes this brilliant article and says, âI write fanfiction for the people Tim Burton says are not âcalled forâ. My mind, likewise, is a movie theatre where I edit my favourite films and include myself in the lead. I change the endings, add more romance when Iâm lonely, put on costumes so outrageous that my mum wonât even let me wear on Halloween, deliver the dialogues my mouth will never speak, and feel a sense of belonging that is every bit delightful and artificial and illusory. In the films I direct in my mind, I look like the typical Tim Burton heroine. Iâm white, not brown. This is what the white gaze has done to me. When I fell in love with his films, I thought I was seeing myself reflected back in Jack Skellington, in Lydia Deetz, in Edward Scissorhands, in Ed Wood, in Willy Wonka, in the Mad Hatter, in young Victor, in the Corpse Bride, in Ichabod Crane, but I never saw myself. I only saw what I wished so desperately to be seen as. Do I stop watching Tim Burton films after that racist comment? No. A part of me still hopes heâll apologize or better yet include people who actually look like me in his next film. A fangirl, can hope, right? After all his films did help me to get through some dark times, albeit in a twisted way and I canât erase those tense growing-up years when his oddball characters were all I could hold onto. But at the end of the day, he belongs to the mold of white film directors who make white movies for a predominantly white audience and think diversity POC-narratives arenât important at all. But do Tim Burton films help me feel less lonely and less marginalized and less threatened by the big bad world out there? Not a bit.
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