Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Movie Essay - A Comparison of Satire in Voltaires Candide and the Film
Satire in Candide and Lexx       Voltaire's Candide is a story about a young man learning about the realities  of the world; realities he never could have believed to happen in life because  his education heavily involves the idea that this is the "best of all worlds."  Salter Street Films' Lexx is a story about a group of misfit adventurers and the  calamity that befalls them after they steal the Lexx, a Manhattan-sized insect  with the ability to destroy planets. Though the two stories have more in common  than one might expect, given the difference of medium, much more is different  between the two, even with satire present in both     The first and most obvious difference between Candide and Lexx is the setting  of the two. The Earth as visited by the Lexx is, in itself, unrealistic with its  portrayal of everything we consider 'normal' being completely outlandish to the  crew. It also follows that if the settings are drastically different, the  characters must be as well. Kai is not only an assassin and last of the  Brunnen-G, but he has been dead for six thousand years. Stanley Tweedle, captain  of the Lexx, has seen enough while traveling on the giant insect to know that  such is not the case. The characters between the two stories even journey with  different methods; while the cast of Lexx travels through the Light and Dark  Universes on an insect spaceship, the cast of Candide travels around the Earth  on foot or by transportation such as boats. Even the crew of the Lexx travels  around Earth not by such methods, but by using the giant Moths grown on their  ship.     The second, and perhaps most important difference between Candide and Lexx is  the methods by which the two stories satirize things. As typical of most mode...              ...asm comes when the Lexx has  finished its meal and, on its way back to orbiting the moon, lets out a burp and  licks its chops. The one exception to season four's satire is the series finale  during which, among other things, 790 fools the now-senile Lexx into destroying  the Earth. This is the ship's final shot before it passes on of old age.     Satire is nothing new. Things have been wrong in the world since recorded  history and there have always, and will always be people to criticize the flaws  in the way things work. While satire today is often told differently then that  of Voltaire's time, the principle is certainly the same.     Works Cited     Lexx. Screenplays by Paul Donovan, Lex Gigeroff, and Jeff Hirschfield. Sci-Fi  channel.     Produced by Salter Street Productions. 1997-2002.     Voltaire. Candide. Trans. Lowell Bair. Bantam Books. New York,  1959.                        
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