DVD cover of FDR: American Badass

Just in time for the US election we look back at the greatest disabled American president

To celebrate Remembrance Day, sar and Jeff are joined by media studies legend Beth Haller to discuss the documentary FDR: American Badass. The film, a campy, over-the-top spoof, features Franklin D. Roosevelt as a werewolf-hunting president who contracts polio from a werewolf bite. Join us as we chat about some of the broader issues of disability representation in media, the challenges faced by disabled filmmakers, and the impact of ableism in Hollywood.

Listen at…


Grading the Film

As always, this film is reviewed with scores recorded in four main categories, with 1 being the best and 5 being the worst. Like the game of golf, the lower the score the better.

How accurate is the representation?

Jeff – 2 / 5

sar – 2 / 5

Beth – 2 / 5

Total – / 15

How difficult was it to watch the movie?

Jeff – 3 / 5

sar – 1 / 5

Beth – 1 / 5

Total – / 15

How often were things unintentionally funny?

Jeff – 1 / 5

sar – 1 / 5

Beth – 1 / 5

Total – / 15

How far back has it put disabled people?

Jeff – 2 / 5

sar – 2.5 / 5

Beth – 1 / 5

Total – / 15

The Verdict

Regrets, I have a few

Transcript – Part 1

[Episode begins with the trailer for FDR: American Badass!]

Jeff:

You are listening to invalid culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling media representations of disability. This podcast is all about staring into the abyss of pop culture, adjacent films that never quite broke through because well, they’re just awful. So buckle up folks. The following content is rated I for invalid.

[punk theme song plays, Mvll Crimes song “Arguing with Strangers on the Internet”]

I’m arguing with strangers on the internet. Not going out today because I’m feeling too upset, argue with strangers on the internet and I’m winning. And I’m winning!

Jeff:

Welcome back to another exciting day of invalid culture. As usual, I am your host, Jeff Preston, and as usual, I am joined by my co victim, Sarah Curry. How are you doing, Sarah?

sar:

Feeling really good to not be living in America. How are you?

Jeff:

Yeah, how about that election? Very surprising, very surprising outcome that happened. Sure.

sar:

It’s great that candidate won.

Jeff:

Yeah, we totally know who won the election and we’re very surprised by it. America will never be the same, I assume.

sar:

Hope my American friends aren’t significantly, entirely impacted by these results.

Jeff:

Yep. It is either the greatest of times or the blurt of times depending on what happened after we recorded this episode, but it is totally November and that means that we need to honor the troops and that is what we’re going to be doing here today. And to do that, we have brought an All-American superhero. We are joined by a real expert, someone who knows every single thing about America. You probably know her though, as journalist, disability media scholar, writer of fantastic books such as The Beloved Representative Disability and Ableist World by Line of Hope, the newspaper and magazine writings of Helen Cower. Great one. Relevant for next year and disabled people transforming media culture for a more inclusive world. A book that I think I have a blurb on. Welcome to the show, the one and only Beth Taylor. How you doing Beth?

Beth:

Hey, how’s it going everybody?

Jeff:

Yeah, so good to have you on. So I have a little bit of a background. Did I miss anything? Who are you, Beth?

Beth:

Oh, I also have a nonprofit called the Global Alliance for Disability and Media and Entertainment that I’m co-director of. And we’re doing exciting things to try to get more disability representation in media.

sar:

What do you ally against?

Beth:

Ableism.

sar:

Good answer.

Beth:

Ableism in general. I never heard it phrased that way. Ally against. Interesting.

sar:

Well you said it was an Alliance. I was like, I need to know what she’s ripping shit up for.

Beth:

Ableism, crud in media that shouldn’t be on TV or film.

sar:

Okay, so you’re probably a big Corey Doctorow

Beth:

Who?

sar:

The guy who did, he did post humanism, but he also came out with this theory that’s really hot right now called Ification of Media, usually applied to media conglomerates. Yeah,

Beth:

Yeah. Yep. We’re in the middle of leaders. See what’s happening now in November because Hollywood is struggling these days and don’t realize that no one wants to go to the movie theater anymore. There was an article in the New York Times about literally all the companies, they all have major losses except for Amazon Prime and Netflix.

sar:

Really?

Beth:

Even Disney only broke even. So circling the Toilet.

sar:

Who owns HBO?

Beth:

Oh, there’s only about six companies that own all of us media

Jeff:

Pretty much.

Beth:

HBO is allied with, I forget who, I don’t want to tell

Jeff:

I think it was with Hulu, maybe? I’m not sure.

Beth:

One of them is Warner Brothers. They’re streaming Max. I know they’re not part of Netflix, Hulu, or I think Paramount Plus is with Hulu now. I mean, it’s all collapsing. And these people in Hollywood don’t understand that we all don’t want to pay $7 a month for seven different streaming platforms. It’s true.

Jeff:

Yeah. I love that. We got the internet and the first instinct we had was to just reproduce cable. We’re like, let’s just make cable again. That’d be good, but make it more confusing. That’ll be perfect.

sar:

It’s more expensive too, for the number of channels you used to get on the Rogers package 20 years ago, you’d get 500 and something channels, for like $99. Now we get six or $99.

Beth:

I know I still have cable in my house in Maryland, which I can watch anywhere in the United States on my laptop. And the one reason I did keep it, everyone was talking about, oh, I’m cutting the cord with cable. I’m like, no, I don’t add more things. I mean, I pay a car payment for it every month, but at least I don’t have to go out finding stuff that I want to watch and need to watch because of my area of interest is watching TV and film. And so now some of the people that got rid of cable are really sorry. They did you know?

Jeff:

Right.

sar:

I was certainly sorry during the Olympics. Missed cable for that.

Jeff:

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Well, the good news is you don’t need to worry because break dancing has been canceled apparently. So you don’t need to watch the next Olympics because Santa Reigns supreme in the world of break dancing and all of these references are super topical in November right now. So the other thing that’s really topical for November right now is World War ii. That’s right, folks. We have decided to go back in time to honor the troops with a documentary film, which you may know as FDR American Badass now as a way of a little…

Beth:

Exclamation point.

Jeff:

Exclamation point!

sar:

Yes.

Jeff:

Yes. American Badass!

sar:

Yeah, that’s important.

Jeff:

That’s important. Now, by way of trivia, part of the reason this movie is on this show is because many years ago I was checking my mail and I opened my mailbox and there was an envelope there from one Beth Ha and inside the envelope was a DVD for a movie I had never heard of, which was called FDR American Badass. So Sarah and I actually got to watch a piece of media history when we’ve watched this film together. We’ve watched it from the original DVD that Beth sent to us. For those of you who have not watched this movie before from the box, FDR America Badass is quote, after contracting polio from a venomous werewolf bike, FDR won’t stop at single-handedly ending the depression and prohibition with the help of a team of historic failures. He must end World War II by exacting revenge on an army of Nazi werewolves from the comfort of his Albert Einstein design, wheelchair of death, an outrageous over the top spoof FDR America Badass is the untold story of our country’s greatest monster Hunter president. Does that match what you watched, Sarah? How would you say they did on the description?

sar:

I think important context for this episode is that I’m joined by two Americans who have some idea of what actually happened, and I took zero American history courses my entire life, so my American history is quite poor. So I was constantly asking Jeff throughout this movie, is that canon? Is that canon Even as it got more ridiculous, but I genuinely don’t know which parts are supposed to be based on real life. So I thought the whole thing was fun and I would love to be told which events were actually real.

Jeff:

Yeah. What do you think, Beth, does that sort of capture the movie?

Beth:

I have to do some Googling. When I was watching it as an American, that was my rewatching it. That was my question. Some of it seemed really accurate dates and things, and then other parts, and obviously the werewolf stuff wasn’t accurate, but I was like, wait, they might’ve gotten the right year for when FDR got polio and they might’ve done this and that. I was just hoping that the world that watches this in America, you can stream it on a platform called Crackle. So I watched part of it while I was in the car. This is like beyond excellent because it’s a better FDR than FDR was himself. Right?

Jeff:

Yeah.

sar:

That’s what we love in a memoir, always the best version. Right?

Beth:

Right. So it’s better than any actual factual account because he’s so badass.

Jeff:

Right. More true to the person through the hyperbole. Yeah.

Beth:

Fair. Just the camp, the highest level of camp is like perfection

Jeff:

And it’s extremely campy in part because it was written by and starring a bit of a tip movie legend, a man named Ross Patterson who has written a bunch of these, we’re going to call it spoof. I don’t know that that’s the right word, but I’m going to use the word spoof, including screwball, the Ted Whitfield story, Darnell Dawkins, Mel Guitar legend, and the eventual invalid culture movie, Helen Keller versus Night Wolves. Patterson also stars in this film. He is the hillbilly politician, Levon Buford.

sar:

Is that true?

Jeff:

That is him, yeah.

sar:

The director was Cleveland? The writer?

Jeff:

The writer was Cleveland.

sar:

Oh, the writer. Okay.

Jeff:

Yeah. Yeah. Ross Patterson. And he has a bit of a cult following for a character that he played in an earlier movie of his in which he played a character called St. James St. James. And a lot of people really love that character, and I think that was part of the draw for this film on the B-movie circuit. Most people wanted to see him in a movie again.

sar:

Well, that’s interesting because Cleveland Buford’s characters one of the more shocking characters than what is premised as a fairly shocking film. He kind of went balls to the wall on that film.

Jeff:

Pretty out there. Yep. So yeah, I’d say that’s the Ross Patterson classic. Now Patterson did not direct it. He was directed, sorry. He was joined by director Garrett Bra who has done a lot of movies with Ross Patterson. These are two guys that have done a lot together. Garrett Brawith has worked in lots of stuff. He’s also worked in lots of roles. He’s done everything from acting to editing. He’s even a stunt man. He also plays Bob Saggot in the Unauthorized Full House story. And so I thought that was pretty cool as well.

sar:

What a rock.

Jeff:

Yep. Now Brawith was asked about whether or not they were concerned about the offensiveness of this film. Entertainment Weekly asked him if he was worried that people would be offended. He responded, I’d be offended, but trust me, there’s no danger of that. Pretty much everyone gets it on the chin in this one. That’s how we get back to our audience by finding a way to piss off everyone at least once. You are welcome. So I thought that was an interesting little quote,

Beth:

Other tidbit about the cast. So Lynn Shaye, she who plays Eleanor Roosevelt in this film plays Helen Keller in Helen Keller versus The Night Wolves. Beautiful. They put together all these people that are fantastic actors specifically to do camp. I mean, I think that’s one of the reasons it’s so good is because it’s not like a struggling actor who just needs the paycheck doing this goofy movie. It’s people that really know how to do a kind of spoof, campy, rocky Horror Picture show is kind of like the grandparent of all those kinds of shows and show that you can have a fantastically cool cult movie.

sar:

Absolutely.

Beth:

If you make it well acted and goofy enough. I think even though some of their jokes and FDR American Badass exclamation point are a little bit goofy sometimes, but they sell it so well, you don’t even really think about how goofy it is because you’re just roaring with laughter or some other character. And I mean, the fact that you’ve got all these folks that are really good character actors too,

sar:

Which everyone will accuse Lynn Shaye of because even casual movie watching viewers probably know Lynn Shea as the protagonist of the Insidious Series from the last couple of years. She’s also Constance for my video gamers out there in The Quarry, the RPG video game that just came out a couple years ago. She is done a ton of horror. So if you find yourself a horror film buff, she’s done American Psycho. She did Penny Dreadful. She did the really bad remake of the call, but Lynn, she was not the reason why it was bad.

Jeff:

Yeah. Lynn, she has been in everything. Barry Boswick, who of course plays FDR, he’s been in almost 200 things. The actor credits in almost 200 roles. I would say his most famous has got to be Rocky Horror. What I did not know is that Barry Boswick has also an accomplished stage actor and he won a Tony for the play, the Robert Bridegroom. I did not know that. That was fun.

sar:

Really?

Jeff:

Yeah. Abraham Lincoln is played by Kevin Sorbo, who you probably know as TV’s Hercules or maybe you know him from his transition into an alt-right tool. Pretty much everyone in this movie has a decent IMDB page and there were a lot of people in it, even though it only feels like there was maybe five or six actors, there was a lot of people in it. Even the Butler, George, FDRs Butler in the White House? George is played by the guy who played Kenny on the Cosby Show.

sar:

Hell yeah.

Jeff:

Everybody here is connected. It’s unbelievable. The cast that they drew together, and it was a really, really small budget. You can tell sort of, but the number of actors they have is you would imagine that would’ve ballooned.

sar:

It gave me the impression of one of those Adam Sandler hits for people my age where Adam Sandler basically calls up his homies and says, you want to fly to Hawaii and make a fifth rom-com? And they all go, sure man. So he’s got a $50 million cast, but there’s no way he even paid half that for them because they’re all his buddies. I would think the casting for this film went something like that just for the budget alone. This movie spent 10 times its budget in just the names they had, so they either weren’t charging or something more insidious.

Jeff:

I think that’s probably a fair assumption. A rumor is that Boswick apparently took the role as FDR several days before the begin filming, so very last minute. I think the other really important thing to note, it’s an independent film, has a very low budget, but it was actually largely pushed forward into production based off of a viral movie trailer. So they actually made a trailer that was kind of like a joke trailer about what this movie might look like. It did very well. It went semi viral at the time. So much so that the Phoenix New Times reports that when the film premiered at the Phoenix Film Festival, there was a packed house. People filled the theater to see it based on having seen the trailer be interested in the concept and knowing people that were in it and wanting to see them perform this. And so I am actually a little surprised that this movie has remained as under the radar as it has because there’s lots of star power. There’s a viral element to it, and it’s fun. I mean, it’s super silly, but it’s also kind of fun. So I’m actually kind of surprised that this thing didn’t become more of a cult classic than it has because quite a few years down the road now, and I haven’t heard anyone mention this movie in a long time.

sar:

Can I give you a counterpoint to that?

Jeff:

Please.

sar:

I think part of the reason this movie doesn’t have the kind of longevity of something like the Rocky Horror Picture Show is because A, it’s got the special unit problem of very its time humor that is sometimes super uncomfortable to watch now, which makes it interesting fodder for our show in so far as we can kind of pick a park and mock, which jokes don’t land anymore. But if you’re sitting through an hour and a half of that, I know why you wouldn’t enjoy it. I don’t think I’m very pearl and even I was a little bit uncomfortable at some of the being made in the film. So I think one, it’s got the special unit problem, two memes just as an ephemeral cultural item, don’t age well.

Jeff:

Right?

sar:

So something like Rocky Horror, I think surpasses being called a meme because it was kind of, and Beth can correct me on this, it was kind of encapsulating a cultural moment in greater film, whereas something like FDR American Badass Exclamation Point isn’t really capturing a mood so much as capturing a very specific subset of chronically online people. And I think it would do extremely well with chronically online people with 10-year-old humor, 10 years ago old, not 10-year-old. Well, maybe both

Jeff:

Both. Both.

Beth:

Disability community would love it if they had heard of it too, because I think about when I was introduced to a great series of videos from the Mickey Faust Club, these disabled performers in Florida, and one of the videos is called Annie Dearest. It is a parody of Helen Keller’s story, but the parody part is Annie Sullivan is evil, like the mother in mommy…

Jeff:

Like the horror movie

Beth:

Like the mommy dearest.

sar:

Oh, okay. So the joke is that she’s an awful person, right?

Beth:

So I think that if people come to it with knowledge that this is not meant to hurt anybody’s feelings, and I think all the characters are pretty empowered and it’s nice to have a film of FDR represented where he’s seen in his wheelchair. And so I just wonder why we haven’t gotten a bunch more interest in it in the disability community…

sar:

Of FDR with Rocket launching wheelchairs more there be more films of FDR with a rocket launching wheelchair.

Jeff:

More of this. So I think Beth, your tapping into something important that I want to draw attention to. So obviously we have our opinions of this movie, but there are people who are more legitimate, well, not more legitimate than Beth, but more legitimate than Jeff and Sarah in terms of our opinions on media culture. And these are of course the critical reviews, the reviewers that have put stuff out. And while the movie actually does fairly well with critical reviewers, particularly in the nerdy sort of seamster world, the sort of B film circuit, very rarely is disability actually mentioned at all in these reviews. That isn’t typically the focus. So for instance, LB Lu Baky writing for Dead Entertainment says the good everything, the characters, the humor, the dialogue, and the over the top action sequences props through Ross Patterson, one of the best indie filmmakers today, John Ambrose writing for Good News now also agrees FDR R America Badass, no exclamation mark for shame is a funny, subversive, irreverent comedy that has a surprisingly good cast.

But this is different than the other reviews that I tended to find when I was digging through. So some of the internet commentary about this film does actually really latch onto this question of disability. So for instance, on Reddit, one Reddit user commented on the movie, said, the shriveled up polio legs will live forever red Free in my mind, another Reddit user commented, I usually don’t go to the bar because fuck that shit. But the one time I did, I was accosted by some Jag off who vehemently unironically insisted that this movie is amazing. Never going to bars again. Apparently not a fan. Not a fan of. This is the divisive rhetoric of today. This is where we’re at nowadays. Back in the early twenties times,

sar:

You can tell what team someone is on by their vehement take on FDR: American Badass.

Jeff:

I definitely now from anytime I’m at a bar, I’m going to accost every single person and only talking about FDR American Badass.

sar:

Grab the microphone, it’s a karaoke bar: Look, I’m just doing a straw poll. I need to know your opinion.

Jeff:

FDR: American Badass,

Beth:

Bring in a VCR or a DVD player to the bar, attach to play it on stage.

Jeff:

Yeah, put the LCD projector on my chair. Just project it everywhere. I’m everywhere I go constantly projecting this film.

sar:

I’m actually not surprised that they’re getting behe kind of extraordinarily biased or polarized arguments about this. Because going back to the other point, if you’re like a huge B film buff or you went to film school or your school made you do a number of film courses, shout out to Laurier or you’re big into the spoof scene, I feel like you would really get something out of this kind of b-movie love letter to B movies and kind of like some of the other films we had this season, it is totally unconcerned. If you are not their core audience, they don’t give a fuck if you don’t like it. They don’t even want wide release release for this really. So it’s kind of promoting its own cultural dissonance in that I think a lot of the people who would shout in a bar, oh my God, I love the Werewolf World War II film. That’s the reaction they’re cultivating. They want people to start arguing with that guy,

Jeff:

Right.

Beth:

I want to bring up the year too, so, promo for my new book, which you can get for free as an ebook: Disabled People Transforming Media Culture for a More Inclusive World. One of the people I interviewed for that book was Teal Sheer who has a web series on YouTube called My Gimpy Life. She’d be a great person for your podcast

Jeff:

If you’re listening, come on the show.

Beth:

The timing of things became very interesting to me when I was writing this book because Teal, I consider kind of a pioneer and these kind of disability focused series, but it was in the kind of early years of YouTube and in fact that social media is how she got funding. She self-funded a pilot episode and her episodes were only 10 or 12 minutes, sometimes only five or seven, and then she put it out on Twitter and I think her major donor, and she did GoFundMe and stuff like that. Kickstarter, I think it was Kickstarter or not GoFundMe. But anyway, so she found a major part of her funding from, he might’ve been Canadian actually, somebody who developed an app or an algorithm I think to late money, what’s it called? From Canadian dollars to US dollars.

Jeff:

Oh, auto exchange.

Beth:

Auto Exchange thing. He wrote the algorithm for it. So that even shows us how plugged in the community is because they don’t know what’s coming later. So they still think people are going to be going to the movies and I see this as something that could be streaming on your paid YouTube channel subscription or anywhere like that. And the same with what Teal was doing. She was almost too early writing Netflix saying you should put this on your platform. A lot of these streaming platforms claim to have disability content, but they aren’t out there grabbing up the stuff that’s already been made. This would be like Teal series that could have been, if you like this, you will like this. So these kinds of things are media artifacts that are still being pushed to the side, and I think it’s because of Ableism because

sar:

Right. Jeff, how many of our movies this semester have been on Netflix? None.

Jeff:

I don’t think. Netflix? No. Oh no, we don’t go to Netflix.

Hey guys, Jeff’s here, editors don’t. We absolutely have done a Netflix movie this year, the Hill. So there is one film we’ve done this year that was on Netflix.

We’re hanging out in Tubie, my friends. That’s where we hang out.

Beth:

Crackle?

Jeff:

Crackle, baby.

sar:

What she’s saying, if you have to go to totally off brand platforms to even have a chance at finding this comment in your scroll marathon, maybe that’s saying something about what we’re funding or greenlighting or choosing to preserve or not preserve in our film history or what we think is film history. How many films, Beth, are disability related that are currently greenlit on the Blacklist trivia question? I don’t know the answer, but I would be thrilled to hear your take for viewers at home, the Blacklist is a screenplay list. I don’t remember who does it. Jeff can do a Google for that, but every year they write out the most promising screenplays and promising is never translated to mean going to be critically acclaimed. It’s the most people show interest in green lighting this, and these are usually the films that the Amazon studios and Netflix and Hulu pickup because they’re easy sell. I think that might have a relationship to how many disabled films are getting green lit vis a vis how many of them are ending up on the blacklist

Beth:

And also the kind of problems Hollywood has with actually letting a disabled person be in control of their content. That’s true. I know disabled filmmakers who have brilliant ideas, they even have scripts they’ve written, but they’re not going to give away. They’re not going to sell their script to some bozo in Hollywood who’s going to strip it clean of all the disability

Content, not higher disabled actor. I mean, there is more of a actors now and writers are now at least putting a clause into some of their scripts that they will only let you film it if you use a disabled actor for part. But I don’t know, I think Hollywood has lost so much money because of the pandemic. We’re talking billions and billions and billions of dollars that they were really poised to start having more disability representation. I actually gave a talk to the Lionsgate film studio in January of 2020 and they were so proud of what they were going to be doing. They had the movie run that was coming out, which has a main character who’s an actual wheelchair user, and it’s like a two person kind of thriller. And so she carried the whole movie and she was new to being, I think it was her first film anyway, it was like a Columbia University student in New York and it’s really good.

But I think the last movie I saw in a theater was that, and Crip Camp. I saw Crip camp at the Museum of Modern Art Theater, and I saw Run in a little tiny theater that Lionsgate has in Manhattan. I took my friend Emily Ladau to it because a wheelchair user and writes about disability and media sometimes. And so we watched it and gave them feedback and also Emily’s a journalist and we had trouble with them because when I asked that somebody uses a wheelchair come with me, not my disability, I said, she’s also a journalist and would love to interview the young woman who is the star of the show or the movie. And she used to be editor for Rooted in Rights and some other publications that were more disability focused. And literally they were like, oh no, we want to get it out in mainstream publications. And I’m like, this has been a problem for the promotion of film content for a long time too, is they don’t see disability publications as resonant with the society, which I think is totally opposite of what they should be doing. They should be putting all the articles that they want written by disabled people. Then you’re going to get the disability audience. But one last example from how, because my organization, the Global Alliance for Disability and Media Entertainment, we’d done some consulting up until the pandemic through everything for a loop. And that’s why I ended up being a speaker to the Lionsgate movie studio, the people that worked there because they had reached out and we were reading some of the scripts and stuff. The first problem was they would give us a script to read after they’d shot us the movie. Excellent, perfect. So that was a problem. And so we watched Run long after they, we saw a director’s cut, I think. Anyway, and so Emily and I had some suggestions. The one good thing was we got them to change the poster. We said, this is going to be super offensive.

Jeff:

Perfect. Oh no. Are you able to share what the original poster was?

Beth:

I don’t see why not. The original poster. It’s a very good thriller, so they’re trying to go for some kind of Hitchcockian poster and they made the stairwell look like a spine.

Jeff:

Oh, classic. Yeah. Yeah.

sar:

Nice.

Jeff:

That’s quite the trope.

Beth:

Emily were just like, no. And there was something they did at the end of the film that I won’t spoil for you.

Jeff:

Yeah, big spoiler on that one.

Beth:

Yeah.

sar:

Well, if I could apply you with theory for a second, do you think that especially around it got my mind going when you were saying that by the time they had showed you as a disability consultant, a film or an image or I dunno, clips from the motion picture. It was already between 60 to 80% done. And that struck me as very similar to the stuff they’re doing at the UK labs around schizophrenia research in so far as the LXP users that they have do consultations, and this is kind of picking up speed in America, but not anywhere to the extent it’s being used at the NIM initiative at the uk. They would consult them so late in the process of these huge implementations that it came off as kind of a convenient performative politeness act like, Hey, we’ve already pretty much implemented this, but could we get your sign off really quick?

And not at any part of the initial development process where they could have asked things like, Hey schizophrenics, do you think any part of this program might be feasibly helpful to you? Why or why not? It just does not seem to occur to any of these experts. Why don’t we just ask them between steps one to five instead of step 2 72 80, and then in the instance that they do get feedback that is less than favorable, they’ll be like, well, I mean fuck disabled people. They don’t know anyway. They’re not going to like anything we produce

Jeff:

And it’s not for them, right?

sar:

It feels like such an easy solution when you pick up a blacklist script, just have a consulting table right then and there. As soon as we pick the script and have people there with lived experience who are like, Hey, I’m going to tell you why that’s problematic and you can do what that information, what you will. The downside is that would make a podcast Jeff’s completely irrelevant impossible. Because now through that consultation process, we have nothing left to mock.

Jeff:

We’re not making movies like FDR American Badass,

sar:

But I thought that that was a really interesting similarity between kind of how things get developed and produced in Hollywood studios and how research disseminates in especially psychology, mental health, sociological trends, big UK publications.

Jeff:

I think what you’re really, that line that you’re kind of drawn here, that’s a really important one for us to hold on to is this notion that in the same way that I think academic research is predominantly done on and about disabled people and is being produced for non-disabled people, for other academics that are not disabled. I think so too. In the film world, I don’t know that Hollywood perceives disabled people as viable audience members, so they’re not making any of these films for us. They’re making it for what they perceive to be the buying audience. And so it’s like, well, yeah, so why are there so many inspiration porns? Why there’s so many horror disabled character? Well, because that’s what the non-disabled audience, I don’t want to say enjoys, but it animates the audience, the non-disabled audience member to be, oh, I feel sad for this disabled kid.

sar:

Or see, I would even contest that though, because every time I watch a mental illness movie, I get 30 people in my inbox asking, Hey, was this accurate? So they do want to know how much of

Jeff:

It is truthful. The audience does. I don’t disagree with that, but I don’t know that they’re getting that deep into it, strangers.

And thus concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for listening. I hope you enjoyed it or not. Either way, please take a second. If you haven’t to subscribe to our podcast on whatever platform you’re using, tell a friend, and better yet, do you want to be a victim on the podcast? Go on to our website, invalid culture.com, submit your name. We would love to terrorize you with a bad movie, have a bad movie of your own that you think that we should watch. Again, jump on our website, invalid culture.com, submit it, and we would love to watch the trash. Be sure to tune in again next week for part two where we will start to dig into the movie and find out whether or not it wins. The coveted Jerry Lewis seal of approval

[punk theme song plays, Mvll Crimes song “Arguing with Strangers on the Internet”]

Arguing with strangers on the internet. Everyone is wrong. I just haven’t told them yet.

Transcript – Part 2

Jeff:

You are listening to Invalid Culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling media representations of disability. This podcast is all about staring into the abyss of pop culture, adjacent films that never quite broke through because well, they’re just awful. So buckle up folks. The following content is rated I for invalid.

[Punk theme song, Mvll Crimes’ “Arguing with Strangers” plays to start the episode]

sar:

Going out today because I’m feeling too upset arguing with strangers on the internet. And I’m winning.

Jeff:

I’m winning. Welcome back to another thrilling episode of Invalid Culture, part two of FDR American Badass joined as always by co-hosts Sarah Cur and a media expert scholar all round. Amazing person. Beth Hayward here again, and I’m sure that we all would like to talk a little bit about the election, but I think we should move forward because we have to talk about a very deep film, which is of course FDR, American Badass. Okay, so let’s talk a little bit about the plot here. So for those of you who have not watched this film before, FDR American Badass begins with Franklin Delano Roosevelt out hunting with some friends when they’re attacked by a Roman werewolf common in the United States. Apparently FDR manages to kill the werewolf, but not before being bitten. Unlike the fabricated world of Teen Wolf where a werewolf fight turns you into a werewolf.

This historically accurate film explains that werewolf fights, in fact, have stricken FDRs legs with polio leaving them as shriveled floppy legs that quiver like meat Jello, FDR relieved that his penis still works, but devastated by his inability to walk meets a young disabled boy who inspires him to fight back against the polio and run for president of the United States. So I want to pick up where we left off there, Beth talking a little bit about this pivotal scene. So FDR is in bed and he’s upset about, needed a wheelchair, and then this Tim character comes in, which is usually sort of a point of mockery, often a terrible character. The sad, pitiful disabled child. They sort of vert this though, right?

Beth:

Definitely. I think I just love that scene because the child is basically as a wheelchair using child. He’s basically guiding the president forward in his journey, is now a disabled man and hopefully a disabled president because he wants to run it’s genius. And here, let me little fact background is that when Kenneth Branagh did this, a movie where he played FDR, that was from 2009 or something, Teal Sherer who was in that movie, she was in a disabled dance group in college that performed and then they saw that she wanted to be an actor. So she got hired to teach Kenneth Branagh how to use a wheelchair for his role as FDR in the non spoof movie of FDR non spoof.

Jeff:

Amazing

Beth:

My info for that Anyway, but I just found it, this was such a great kind of twist to make the disabled child, the powerful one in that relationship, the one with all the knowledge and then the newly disabled man who’s a governor of state like accepts that knowledge from him and says, okay, this is what we’re going to do. And then the secretary finds his hot dog legs sexy. So

Jeff:

Right, right.

Beth:

It’s all good. I mean, this should be on Netflix. It should be, and I think back to your point Sarah too, about whether people are cringing through it. I think if going into it and Netflix and some of the other ones have that little two sentences about it or you can watch the trailer or whatever, I think people that are into that kind of comedy, they can’t find it because they don’t know about it on Crackle or wherever. But if it was on one of the major streaming platforms, then people that love that could see this different disability kind of discourse where this is an empowered president basically because of his wheelchair and not before. I’m not talking about when he under understands that he can still be president as someone who uses a wheelchair. That is a really empowering statement that probably only a parody could really address because in real life, like we talked about, he hid his wheelchair at all times.

Jeff:

Right. Which was not even a part of this discussion. Right? See?

sar:

But he wouldn’t have hit it if it was the Delano wheelchair.

Jeff:

Right? It was the Delano 2000.

sar:

I would’ve to every press conference, look at this, this is what you’re up against.

Beth:

Have you seen the real flamethrower wheelchair that exist?

Jeff:

I’m a very big fan, the real ones. Did you say there are wheelchairs that people made flamethrowers for? Yes,

sar:

Oh my God!

Jeff:

It’s amazing. Very cool.

Beth:

It has like tractor wheels.

Jeff:

Yeah. Tank Tracks.

Beth:

They’re all-terrain, wheelchair, and someone attached a flamethrowers.

sar:

Okay if we are talking about act ones, I actually really love that Beth brought up the empowerment angle because this movie, for everything that I could fault it for actually does that bit really well. Disability is a total non-issue in the way that sexism and racism and homophobia are just total non-issues and shifts,

Jeff:

Also non-issues

sar:

In this alternative universe where he jumps into that wicker chair and no one gives a shit and he didn’t even really seem to give a shit apart from waking up in the hospital and asking if his dick still worked.

Jeff:

That was the primary concern.

sar:

Beyond that, he was like, alright, I’m fine, whatever, let’s get in the chair and go.

Beth:

And I think that actually may be part of the empowerment of a person, the actual person of FDR who was raised as a wealthy person and so does not see any problem he can’t handle because he was raised as very, and I think he has even a regal look with that extended cigarette holder that he used in real life. So I think part of it is also the personality of someone who was raised in wealth and kind of knows, doesn’t know that they can’t do anything they want. And for this case that’s in particular because I see that a lot with people talking about white privilege and other areas of privilege, but we don’t talk about just economic privilege that sometimes a disabled person might have too. Absolutely. And so that’s not bad for FDR to be portrayed this way. And it’s not even bad that he might’ve been liked that way in real life because somebody with white privilege and wealth in the 1930s still might’ve been knocked down by suddenly having polio and not being able to move forward with their political career. And the real FDR did not do that. He embraced that and apparently he had no problem interpersonally, interpersonally with everybody who interacted with him and came to the White House. He was in his wheelchair. Did they

sar:

Even show scenes of him in the plantation south? And I thought it was kind of unrealistic that nobody was commenting at all on his wheelchair even when they got into the hot tub. And I was like, okay. Right.

Jeff:

How did they get in that hot tub?

sar:

Yeah, right. Fine. Now that you’ve added the regality angle and the additional context of it honestly would not have occurred to him that people would make fun of him for that or that they would think that he was incapable of doing something. I think it adds an extra layer to some of those scenes where I was kind of sitting there outside of context going like, why aren’t we talking about this?

Jeff:

Right? Yeah. I think it’s probably unintentionally clever. I don’t know that they were necessarily thinking about that when they made the film, but it does actually land for illiterate in some ways. Right.

Beth:

The hot tub is fantastic because right before you get to that scene where Cleon is introduced,

Jeff:

Well, let’s do that because that’s our next step. So we’ll start there. We’ll come back to it

sar:

Oh is this act 2?

Jeff:

Yeah. I didn’t know how to cut this up. So this is how I cut it up. Okay. So back to the story. So FDR goes on a cross east coast of the United States tour to meet with working class folk and learn about the impacts of the Great Depression. On his travels, FDR will then meet up with a southern gentleman and re pube congressman named Cleon Bay Bridge, Beford, who was also bit by a werewolf and survived. They’ve become fast friends sharing meals and his wife with Beauford promising to help secure FDA’s victory in the coming election. A victory that is celebrated by the entire family, active foolishly ud, some vase pooping. Yeah, this is where it’s very much that sort of 13-year-old humor. Meanwhile, in Europe, werewolf Hitler, werewolf Mussolini and Werewolf Hirohito are screaming to take down America. The plan is simple, poison alcohol with werewolf blood through and then through the Italian mafia bootleggers, this will make you into a vampire. So they’re poison in the water with blood, you drink the blood, you become a werewolf. And now America has been colonized by the werewolves, I suppose.

Beth:

I thought they were only poisoning through the liquor.

Jeff:

Yeah, through the alcohol. Yeah. FDR isn’t going to let this happen. Of course, he is outfitted with Einstein’s Gallo, 2000 a rocket launcher machine, gun wheelchair being the second weapon read wheelchair that appears this season on invalid culture. Nice. Now, Sarah, what is the favorite of the weaponized wheelchairs? You team Delano 2000 or are you team Mr. Do legs

sar:

And I’m using a lot of Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon references just because the House of the Dragon finale was really recently, but it kind of gave Targaron versus Lannister, those two chairs. The Lannister chair is definitely the Delano chair. It’s gold. It’s got the insets, it’s got multi-port exits for the rocket launchers. You can actually see him load it at one point, which Mr. No Legs didn’t bother with. Mr. No Legs has more of the proletarian special, which I like to think is more rugged because the message, the social message. But I think I’d have to go with the Lannister, obviously.

Jeff:

Yeah, you’re a Delano 2000 fan. Yeah, fair enough.

Beth:

Yeah, I think the other thing that’s interesting is so Warm Springs was a real place that he actually bought FDR actually bought it. He found this, it’s in Georgia. He found the warm springs so helpful to his polio.

sar:

Can you do that? Can you just buy regions?

Jeff:

You can if you’re a Roosevelt.

Beth:

No Warm Springs…it’s like a spring place.

sar:

Like a state?

Beth:

Yeah, or more just like a springs place. I went to a state park that had springs. So this is him just buying a farm that he’s putting, not a farm, but buying something that was already used for the warm springs that he could afford to keep running. And of course people, a lot of people had polio starting in the twenties through the fifties till the vaccines. So it would be a place where everybody that had polio could come and you go and there’s actually a warm springs picture of him in a wheelchair where he’s talking to a little girl who’s standing next to her. I can’t remember if she had braces or not on her legs. But anyway, so I mean that’s like campy gold to take this actual resort and distill it down to being a hot tub. Also financial assist because you don’t have to go film anywhere outside. They probably need somebody who actually owned that. So I think that’s super interesting.

sar:

That’s a cool piece of context.

Beth:

I think we have to Google it, but I think one of the first things he did when he became president was throwing out prohibition and suddenly alcohol was legal. So that was defeating the werewolf Nazis by doing that.

sar:

That’s right.

Jeff:

I will say so in the description on the box, they talk about right off the rip about how FDR ends the great depression and prohibition, but those actually were barely parts of this movie. That’s the first 20 minutes, maybe not even 20 minutes, they just sort of brush it aside. I honestly think they should have spent more time talking about that little bit of his history.

sar:

We are in misalignment here. I think if your team Mussolini Hirohito, my man Hitler, the werewolves of course, that was actually central to their plan of taking over America. The alcohol only worked because it was prohibited in America. So they controlled all the streams of entry, which is how they were poisoning millions and millions of people at once. And then one of the throwaway jokes is that nobody actually drank the sake because it was for women and sissies.

Jeff:

But I don’t think that we really heard doubt. There could have been this moment of FDR being like, I know the way to stop this. I’m going to legalize alcohol again. That was just not really addressed. But it’s like that would’ve been a moment. I think that could have tied back to the history to be like, oh, remember when he did this? This is why he did it. He did it because of the werewolves, which with a fly. But for a non-American literate audience, maybe not as obvious. Now I do need to ask Cleveland Bay Bridge. Buford is not a real person, correct?

Beth:

I don’t think so.

Jeff:

I don’t believe that is a real congressman. I looked everywhere. Please, if I’m wrong, Americans let me know. I do not believe Cleveland porridge. Buford is a real person. I think that was made up American.

sar:

Is there a CBB Congressman and they just changed the names?

Jeff:

I don’t believe so. I think this was just fully made out by belief.

sar:

Composite Character?

Jeff:

Yeah, composite of all sort of southern Republicans. Maybe.

Beth:

If he did go to Georgia, he’s not going to meet many Democrats back then.

Jeff:

Yeah, no,

Beth:

Except for black people who loved FDR because he helped get them to work too. His policies to get the US out of depression, out of the Great Depression included all people, all citizens,

Jeff:

Right? Yeah.

sar:

Was that why there were so many scenes with the random black basketball? He was invited to voting night and he was playing basketball in a ton of scenes that he really had no business being in. And the Southerners, I think called him their slave. But FDR himself never refers to him that way. He seems to just be chill with the presence.

Jeff:

I think it was the other way. I think that the Northerners were like, he’s a slave. And then there was a huge fight over that. And then the joke reveal is that he’s not. He works there. He’s educated that it was actually the Northerners that had sort of the wrong idea or the racist understanding, I think was sort of the joke that they tried to land. But this is the thing, unless it’s a dick joke, they struggle mightily to land other jokes. They really can only land sex jokes and drug jokes. In my opinion, I don’t know that a lot of the other people landed in many ways. So after foiling the Italian mafia with his tricked out wheelchair, FDR is left to make a decision about how best to repay the fascists in Europe and Japan. Meeting with in Churchill, FDR explains his reservations for getting directly involved in the conflict.

He explains that the American people just won’t stand for it. FDR has an affair with the secretary for whatever reason. I guess that’s a shout out to the real FDR. There’s the sex scene with the ketchup up of mustard. This then leads to a barely returned to B plot where FDR and LNR are having a bit of a lover spat after learning that the access forces are taking over Europe and getting high with the ghost of Lincoln. FDR decides it is time for the US get involved in the war. Pearl Harbor never happened. You heard here first. This will lead to our thrilling conclusion in which FDR takes his Delano 2000 Airborne. He attacks Europe, conveniently killing Hitler and Mussolini were on the front lines of the battle, which is of course, as we know in exactly how World War II ended.

sar:

Well, Churchill and FDR were also on the front lines. So they had the medieval style, the big homies right up there at the front. Bannerman.

Jeff:

Yeah. Yeah. And that’s exactly what happened. You’re welcome troops. Thank you for your service. Now that’s our movie in a nutshell. Those of you who have listened to this podcast before will know that we have a fully rigorous peer reviewed, completely scientific rating system, which we call the Inval Culture Scale, which we use to determine whether or not this film passes muster. Now, as you know, we played this game a little bit like golf. The lower the score, the better the film is. Okay, first up, on a scale of one to five, with five being the least accurate, how accurately does this film portray disability?

Beth:

I say two just because of the empowerment scenario. I mean, it’s a spoof, but this is a wheelchair user in almost every scene after he gets polio from the werewolf that he is using his wheelchair as part of his life and it’s no big deal. After he decides and then he gets tricked out by Einstein, and now it’s a way to win World War ii. So even though it’s a spoof, it’s a spoof of empowerment, not a spoof of inspiration porn or ableism.

sar:

I agreed with Beth. I also went with two, and a lot of it was for the empowerment reason. I like to put this in contention like I did earlier with special unit, which was a film that was also ostensibly a parody, but we couldn’t stop talking about how it was laughing at the disabled people instead of laughing with the disabled people. And I think contrary wise, this film does a pretty good job. One of the reviewers said of laughing at everyone who appears, including the disabled individual. It was almost a total non-issue that he was a wheelchair user and they actually create boons for him as a result of having the disability. So I felt two was fair.

Jeff:

Yeah. Alright, well we are in copacetic alignment here. I also gave it a two for many of the same reasons I took Microsoft. I think the over-reliance on does my penis work? I mean, that’s super trope, I would say for sure. And yeah, I’d say it’s a two. I will say though, I want this on record, if this was a question of how accurately does this film portray werewolves, I would give this movie a Bloody five. It is wrong in every way about werewolves in every way, how werewolves work. I mean, there’s no reference to the moon. The Nazis and the fascist werewolves are always werewolves. They don’t transition back to humans. I’m very upset about this. So two on disability, five on werewolves. Okay. Scale of one to five, with five being the hardest, how hard was it to get through this film?

Beth:

One, it was a blast as a viewing experience. You don’t have to use many parts of your brain, but it’s like good comedy and every little tidbit kept me going, when are they going to spin the Batman, the bat cave presidential seal again? And it moves really fast. So the comedy, they don’t stick with one bit for a long time and milk it forever. So I think the quick pace helped with of the comedy that might’ve been a little bit goofy. And also the good acting. You really, I was bored when the werewolves were on the screen, so that would be the only thing that I would’ve cut back time on. I didn’t care about them. I wanted to see what FDR and his team were going to do, but I really felt like it was a fun watch. That’s why I wanted to get out there so more people can know about it.

sar:

I’m in total disagreement with that. We’re in agreement on the score. I also gave it a one, but the werewolf scenes were my favorite scenes regardless of historical accuracy in either the werewolf or the humans for which they were based. I had a lot of fun, and I dunno if that means I’m a secret fascist or I’m a Nazi or something. But I think some of the most fun scenes in the film was the kind of outright mocking of totalitarianism and the bone headedness of their schemes.

Beth:

Yeah, yeah. All for that. I’m all for that.

sar:

Oh yeah. There was a bit they kept doing where as soon as an assistant would finish helping one of the leaders, they would shoot them in the head and get another assistant, which feels very reminiscent of kind of Putin’s Russia right now. So something’s never changed. I love those, but I tend to parody of political systems more than I like Scatological humor and dick jokes. Those really just don’t land for me. So I found a lot of this film. I was petting Jeff’s dogs. I was kind of absentmindedly looking at the screen, but I had enough fun with it and I totally agree with it. Agree with you about the pacing. It was quick. So one,

Beth:

Yeah, I think the thing, I’m not a supporter of Nazi werewolves or ves or Mussolini werewolves, but for me, I guess I’m more of a vampire girl. Werewolf never be for me. Oh, you needed to see the Lincoln movie. I was wondering. It came out the same year.

Jeff:

Yeah, this was all connected.

Beth:

I wondered if it was referencing when they kept talking about what Abraham Lincoln did, they were referencing

sar:

It’s an AU.

Beth:

I saw that one, but it’s not a parody. It’s an actual

Jeff:

Well sort of, yeah.

sar:

Oh, Lincoln was canonically a vampire.

Beth:

No, Vampire killer. Abraham Lincoln Vampire Killer.

Jeff:

Vampire killer. Yeah, he killed the vampires Sarah. He was on the side of justice.

Beth:

They would reference Abraham Lincoln. All I could think of was that movie. And I was like, but that was vampires.

Jeff:

Yeah. So this movie of course comes out when there’s this whole revisionist history thing happening in movies and books.

sar:

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

Jeff:

Exactly. It’s the exact same type as all that, right?

sar:

Oh my God,

Jeff:

I think they were definitely nodding. So I’m going to be the outlier on this one. I gave it a three. And this is deeply personal to me. This is not actually, it’s the werewolf thing again. It’s the werewolf thing again. No. So when I watched this, I was really amped up to watch this. I thought I was going to really, really enjoy it. And it’s not that I didn’t enjoy it, but I did find the level of the humor really got tired fast for me

That it was just sort of the same thing over and over again. And I’m like, I understand why this is probably funny if you’re half wasted and you’re with your bunch of friends and you’re filming this thing together. And it’s just like, wouldn’t it be funny if these historic figures that are well regarded sort of historical figures are these sort of plotty mouth, whatever. I’m not saying you can’t do that. I’m not saying you shouldn’t do that. I’m not saying you won’t enjoy that, but I found it was just a little thin. I thought it was going to give me a little more. So I thought the worst film I’ve ever seen, I mean there are way worse films that I’ve watched for this stupid podcast, but I actually found myself enjoying some of the other movies that we watched this season more where I was a little bit watching. I was checking my watch toward the end of this one.

Beth:

Was there any difference between when you watched it back when I sent it to you?

Jeff:

Yeah. I liked it more the first time I saw it, but it was like 10 years ago. I was a baby back then.

sar:

He’s a different person now.

Jeff:

I’m much more sophisticated now that you see I’m a real…I’m the eldest boy now.

sar:

Oh, here we go, Kendall.

Jeff:

Okay, so my first little favorite question, on a scale of one to five, with five being the maximum, how often did you laugh at things that were not supposed to be funny?

Beth:

Yeah, I think that for me, I rarely because I thought everything was meant to be funny. So that’s why I gave it a one. So when I interpret this as when humor was not intended was that it was directed at something that it shouldn’t have been directed at. So I’m probably misinterpreting the question like you said, you that’s a totally valid interpretation.

Jeff:

That’s exactly what we’re asking.

Beth:

This nonstop comedy, what I wouldn’t say was nonstop laughing, but I did chuckle at certain things because it’d been so long since I saw it that it was basically a first viewing for me. And so all the cleverness I think works really well on the first viewing, but you don’t need to watch it a second time.

sar:

No, not necessary.

Beth:

So that’s why I put a one because I just felt like everything was planned. And even some of the references that maybe a Canadian wouldn’t get the hot tub in place of Warm Springs resort, that kind of fun stuff, or some people might not know what the spinning thing was from. So you’ve had me at spinning bat cave presidential White House. It was just so nostalgic for me for a lot of the kind of old goofy boobies that America used to have because I think in addition to being this spoof for parody, it’s also kind of part of the B movie genre that was really big. And in the thirties, forties and fifties. And also movies were really big in the Great Depression because

Jeff:

Right, huge.

Beth:

They cost 5 cents. And so if you could scrape up five pennies, you could go probably into an air conditioning environment and watch movies all day for 5 cents. So there was that B movie level of quality that I just thought was there, and that was why I was going to give it the one because

sar:

I think that’s a great answer. I agreed with you, but I was coming from the opposite spectrum. Like you said, I am really not the target audience for this film. I wasn’t alive when any of this happened. I don’t know anyone who was alive when any of this happened. I know basically nothing about American history. I have no relationship really to American politics pre-Obama. So 2012, I’m two years out of high school at that point. I think that’s when I started getting into Obama. But that’s my cultural touchpoint for any kind of relationship with American politics. So this film is really not for me in any way. And I still found myself enjoying it, but I don’t think enjoying it for a lot of the more clever references. When Beth was talking about the cigarette that I thought was, because I’ve seen it on people like Groucho Marx or these forties feminist figureheads from historical films.

I thought it was mocking him. I didn’t know about his background. I didn’t really get the hot tub scene. I found the totalitarian jokes kind of funny, but highbrow humor here was really lost on me. The other problem with this film, and I don’t even think that me not being the target audience was a problem necessarily, but it does impact my score. It had a really absurd jokes per minute in the screenplay, which is something we talked about with special unit where if you’re throwing enough jokes per minute at the wall, something’s going to land. But it’s also going to frustrate the audience if too many of them, and I think I’m speaking for Jeff A. Little bit here. We were both a little frustrated by the end of the film at how many in a row weren’t landing. So that’s kind of the core dice roll of putting that many jokes into a screenplay. Right? So one.

Jeff:

Yeah, again, I think we’re all aligned on this one. I also gave it a one I laughed, and when I did it was at things that were obviously intended to be funny. They were clearly trying to get a laugh out of these things. There wasn’t really any moments where I saw something that was just so absurd or so silly that was not intended to be, I mean, that the entire thing is intended to be silly. And so in some ways they’re kind of protected a little bit, I think, which is interesting. Last, but certainly not least, on a scale of one to five, with five being the most, how many steps back has this film put disabled people?

Beth:

Since I was watching it kind of with fresh eyes, I don’t think it puts disabled people back at all. So I gave it a one. Yeah, I could have done without the Scatological stuff or whatever, but I actually think the sexual content is really important because FDR is presented as a sexual being. And for most of the movie, he is a wheelchair user. So in a lot of sense they hit on truth and parody because they were just trying to break all the tropes. They ended up making this movie that did not pander, did not have pity, did not do anything insulting because I could see to disabled people,

sar:

I’m going to go right in the middle with 2.5. I think on its face, there is not anything really disastrously wrong with this film. And I do really agree, and I said to Beth earlier that I really like the empowerment take this film has where it almost gives you this shit’s creek alternate universe of what if nobody gave a fuck about wheelchairs kind of thing. And it does kind of hit that home. What I think the problem is, which is kind of related, you can’t talk about this film without talking about special unit because it’s on a different side of the spectrum with what both these films were trying to achieve as satirical vehicles for disability culture. I think if this became a kind of symbol of disability on film, that would be a problem because it’s kind of defined by nonstory making complete misunderstandings of history and stupid lowbrow jokes that people will think, oh, that’s what disabled people understand and think is funny. And I don’t think that’s what they tried to do, but if you make this film emblematic, that is what people are going to take away from it. In the same way that, and I’m going to bang my drum on this a little bit here. When a Beautiful Mind became emblematic, we started associating traits with that film, with traits of mental disability in general. Right now, swap out a Beautiful Mind for FDR American Badass. I think that would be disappointing at best. 2.5.

Jeff:

Yeah. Fair. Yeah. So I’m right in the middle of you guys. I’m going to give it a two. I’ve waffled a little bit between 2.5 or 1.5 and two. I think that light, Beth mentioned disability is such a non-factor in this film that I kind of love that and in a way that I don’t think that they were intentionally ignoring it by any means. It wasn’t your typical same old joke like, oh, he can’t walk. That wasn’t sort of the ongoing low hanging fruit joke. Having said that, I was really struck by the volume of comments online about polio legs and about specifically his polio legs in people that were commented on the film. And so clearly that polio legs, they landed with people. And I think it landed in a way that the center of that joke was look at how gross they are and look at how creepy it is. And then that becomes sort of the root of the sexual scene with the ketchup of mustard in that it’s this grosso humor is sort of what they’re going for. And so I’m like I, you’re right up against the line there. I think you’re right up on the line in that, I’m not saying you shouldn’t do it, but I am saying that this does continue a long line of this idea of disabled bodies are gross in some way, but I think that’s actually a relatively minor sin in a movie that got werewolves so wrong, so, so wrong. We’re back to the werewolves guys not letting it go.

sar:

We also have to underline if we’re going to do parody, it’s not fair to say for a whole group of people that’s not funny or that didn’t hit because when we were talking about special unit, we agreed, there is a group that thinks this movie is very funny and they are a disabled audience. That group is not us, but they’re out there.

Jeff:

And I think this movie is the exact same. I think there’s a large group of people that I might not say this is the best movie I’ve ever seen, but I think based on our scale, this movie is actually pretty good. And if we tabulate our total drum roll, FDR, American Badass on the Invalid Culture Scale gets a 19.5, which puts it at the high end of the second top of the list Regrets of I have a few, which seems pretty fair.

sar:

Yeah, I think that worked out. I think it’s in no way a serial offender. It makes all the same couple mistakes over and over and over again.

Jeff:

Right? Yeah. And even if they’re, I don’t know that they’re necessarily mistakes. It’s true.

Beth:

Yeah. One thing I would add is the lack of authenticity. I mean, I think we haven’t talked about that, but none of your questions got that. So if had one more question, of course. Not that I know of. Anybody involved with this production had a disability.

Jeff:

Yeah

Beth:

Why I recommend people watch things like My Gimpy life or any dearest, which you can find on YouTube, both of them, because then you see comedy coming from the disability community, which it would be good for people to have kind of contrast. I think this is a very funny movie. They’re not intending any harm toward disabled people and they’re playing with tropes that need to be crushed about disability. But still, I think it would’ve been a different film. And so now we just need a disabled crew to remake this movie. Yeah, make a Broadway show. Broadway show with songs.

Jeff:

Yeah. I would honestly…

Beth:

Off Broadway show…with songs.

Jeff:

put Zach Anner in this. I would love to see what someone like Zach Anner would do with this film. So yeah, Ross Patterson, if you’re watching, get Zach Anner got a couple other cool dudes. You could still be Buford, that’s fine. But then let’s do it up and let’s raise the humor up like half a bar. Not even a full bar, just half a bar up a little bit. Maybe just the pooping in the face thing. I don’t think anyone found that funny. So maybe cut that.

Beth:

I don’t even know why that was in there.

Jeff:

Yeah, it was a weird, I think it’s just Poop is funny. Maybe. I don’t know.

Beth:

I think it was the Gross Out era too. 2012. More the Gross Out era.

Jeff:

Oh big time, big time product of its time. Just as we are all products of our time. And it has been a lovely time. Sarah, to you. Beth, thank you so much for coming on the podcast.

Beth:

Thank you. So happy to be here.

Jeff:

You totally survived. We survived. And I think that probably you should come back again next year because we should talk about Helen Keller.

sar:

We’re dying to do that film with you.

Beth:

Yay. That’d be awesome.

Jeff:

Thank you. We should totally do it. And with that, this is the end of our season of Invalid Culture sort of. We have one episode left. It is our Christmas episode, our holiday episode. We don’t know what to call it. Episode it is coming out in December. It’s special. It’s different. We’re not going to be talking about invalid films. Instead we’re going to give you guys a bunch of little presents. So tune in next month, check it out, and we will be back again with another fun season before you know it of invalid culture. Stay safe out there, folks.

And thus concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for listening. I hope you enjoyed it or not. Either way, please take a second. If you haven’t to subscribe to our podcast on whatever platform you’re using, tell a Friend, and better yet, do you want to be a victim on the podcast? Go on to our website, invalid culture.com, submit your name. We would love to terrorize you with a bad movie. Have a bad movie of your own that you think that we should watch. Again, jump on our website, invalid culture.com, submit it, and we would love to watch the trash

[Punk theme song, Mvll Crimes’ “Arguing with Strangers” plays to conclude the episode]

 

 

DVD cover of Quid Pro Quo

When you try to be super sexy but accidentally make a pro-abstinence film…

It isn’t every episode where we cover a movie with legitimate promise. A dark and sexy film about disability subculture? That could be amazing! But, unfortunately for society, Quid Pro Quo isn’t amazing. Instead, we get a psychological thriller that, at times, feels a bit like talking to your parents about sex — jaw-dropping but certainly not darkly erotic. To help us unpack this deeply upsetting film, we’re joined this month by the legendary Lawrence Carter-Long who regales us with tales about how Quid Pro Quo played an unexpected role in the NYC disability rights movement.

Listen at…

Grading the Film

As always, this film is reviewed with scores recorded in four main categories, with 1 being the best and 5 being the worst. Like the game of golf, the lower the score the better.

How accurate is the representation?

Jeff – 4 / 5

sar – 3 / 5

Lawrence – 5 / 5

Total – 12 / 15

How difficult was it to watch the movie?

sar – 2 / 5

Jeff – 3 / 5

Lawrence – 3 / 5

Total – 8 / 15

How often were things unintentionally funny?

Lawrence – 4 / 5

sar – 4 / 5

Jeff – 5 / 5

Total – 14 / 15

How far back has it put disabled people?

Jeff – 5 / 5

sar – 5 / 5

Lawrence – 5 / 5

Total – 15 / 15

The Verdict

The Jerry Lewis Seal of Approval

Transcript – Part 1

[Episode begins with the film trailer for Quid Pro Quo]

Jeff:

You are listening to invalid Culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling media representations of disability. This podcast is all about staring into the abyss of pop culture adjacent films that never quite broke through because well, they’re just awful. So buckle up folks. The following content is rated I for invalid.

Mvll Crimes (theme song):

I’m arguing with strangers on the internet. Not going out today because I’m feeling too upset. Arguing with strangers on the internet and I’m winning. And I’m winning!

Jeff:

Welcome back to another thrilling episode of Invalid Culture. As always, I am your host, Jeff, and I’m joined once again by co-host sarah. How are you doing, sarah?

sar:

Oh, I can’t wait to talk about this movie. How are you doing?

Jeff:

I am frigging thrilled to talk about this film. This was one of the first movies I’ve wanted to cover on this podcast. It was an insight incident and years later, here we are, we finally get to talk about it. But this is a special episode. This is a special movie, and so we thought we would bring in a special guest. So we are joined today. Sarah and I joined by the one, the only, the legendary Lawrence Carter-Long. How are you doing, Lawrence?

Lawrence:

Oh, I am thrilled to be here with you as part of this very special episode.

Jeff:

Yes, they’re all special, but this one is a little more special. Now, for those of you who don’t know, Lawrence is of course most famously, perhaps for some people, not for me. Most famously curator and founder of this film series that was running in New York in the early 2000s. I was co-hosted three different spotlights on disability and film on Turner Classic Movies. Get that on your cable box. And for me, most famously portrayed a police officer in a very special film about a really fun summer as far as I know.

Lawrence:

The Best Summer Ever. Yeah, The Best Summer Ever.

Jeff:

Can you tell us a little bit about your turn on film?

Lawrence:

Sure. I’d spent so much time talking about film critiquing, film analyzing film, battering people around the ears with film. But what folks probably don’t know is that I started out in my youth as an actor. So in high school and in college, I was on stage doing theta spelled with an RE at the end instead of ER and very, very serious about that and thought it was something that I might pursue, right? So I got out of college early nineties, moved to New York City and found it was similar somewhat in college, but everybody was casting me. Here I am 20, 21 years old full of piss and vinegar, and yet I’m getting cast as the old man or the neighborly grandfather type or that kind of thing. And I was like, nah, that’s not me. So I shifted my energies and my attentions to focus on media and media representation, but film was always near and dear to my heart.

It was the thing that I always went back to. I didn’t walk till I was five. I have cerebral palsy myself, didn’t walk till I was five. So I was weaned in the days before cable in the seventies on old Laurel and Hardy films and chaplain films on the independent PBS station there in Indianapolis where I grew up. So I always seemed to go back to film and had this idea around 2006 when I was the communications coordinator for public policy org in New York City called the Disabilities Network of New York City. And a lot of the older folks, folks who were older than me, I was in my late thirties, early forties at that time, started saying, where are the young people? Why aren’t young folks coming to our meetings? How can we not engage with the younger generations? We want to get some cross-pollination going.

And it was my thought that if you want to appeal to young people, people, then you have to do something that they’re going to be interested in. And so I started thinking, well, how can we get folks in the door? And I had this wackadoodle idea. I thought, well, everybody, most of the films that we see about disability are all sappy, safe, and sentimental. What if we showed films that are kind of edgy and in your face and hard to label or hard to categorize? And so got a space donated, got six month grant to license the films, bring in guest stars. We’re doing this little experiment called this film series, and it was sort of like a middle finger to the establishment. And the way that we talked about it was disability through a whole new lens. And so with that idea in mind, we started this experiment downtown, lower East side Manhattan, to just surprise people, sex, drugs, and rock and roll all with wheelchairs. And it was this six month experiment that lasted four years because they wouldn’t let us stop once people started coming, right?

People could get a beer there. We had a popcorn machine. People could move the chairs around the space. It was a place called the Old Firehouse where they film the TV version of the Democracy Now program, or at least did in those days. So it was just kind of this hip edgy thing. It really wasn’t anything else like it in 2006 in New York City. And what started out as kind of a showcase for some British short films had about 20, 25 people and then it had 40 people, then it had 60 people, then it had 75 people. By the end of the six months, we were right up to around a hundred people a month for these monthly screenings. And we thought, oh, well, we can’t stop now. My initial question was, will people show up if I show this stuff that isn’t sappy safe or sentimental?

Will it just be me sitting there drinking beer and eating popcorn by myself or will other people show? And they did. And so the second question for the second evolution, if you will of this was we learned during the first iteration that it was a really great idea to have a conversation about the film after we screened it. So we would bring in producers, directors, actors, social workers, film critics, whoever it was to talk about the significance of this film. And I thought, ah, that’s where the magic happens. The movie is the vehicle, but it’s that crosspollination sitting across aisle from somebody that you may never wouldn’t be in the same room with otherwise sort of having the same community experience. And so we thought, oh, we’re never going to show a film without a conversation again. And this was after the second screening. And so the question became for the second round, will this spark conversation? And so I would always try to program movies that would get people talking. And we were about two years, just a little bit into two years of that experiment when we started having filmmakers, film producers, film distributors come to us and say, this movie hasn’t been released yet, but they’d written about us in the New York Times and other places by that point. So we were getting up some buzz and we were getting known. And so people was like, would you be kind of our test audience, if you will, our focus group?

sar:

That’s amazing.

Lawrence:

And that’s how the film that we’ll be discussing over the next couple episodes came to my attention and eventually came to be screened as a part of dismiss.

sar:

Did Quid Pro Quo end your film series hosting career?

Lawrence:

I’ll tell you this, it nearly did. We were able to go for a couple of years after that when I got a federal job and had to move to New York City. But it was very interesting, so I’ll give you the backstory. So the producers came to us and said, we’d already had our screening booked for that particular month. And they were like, would you add an extra screening? We’ll rent the room, we’ll pay for whatever the sign language interpreters, whatever it is you need. We would love to get your honest feedback. And I said, well, send me a screener. Let me take a look at the film first, right? Is this us? I’m not sure. It looks like it might be, but who knows? Hadn’t seen it yet. And by this stage, we had a really sophisticated audience. There were people there that were unpacking and really looking at, they knew a bit about disability history.

They were certainly part of disability culture. They were thinking critically about, because we were doing repertory films, we were doing first run films. We were doing films that were shown overseas at that point but didn’t have us distribution. And so people had been, at this point, two years in exposed to a lot of different things, and we had our regulars first Wednesday of the month, every month. They didn’t even care what we were showing. They would show up in order to have that conversation. And so I said, you got to understand this is a sophisticated audience. We’re there to have fun, but people are thinking critically about this stuff and analyzing it. Oh, that’s exactly what we want. Okay, good. So I got the screener, watched it and was flabbergasted because for so many reasons and we’ll get it. I know the second part, we’ll get into all the reasons, but this was 2008, maybe late 2007 or early 2008 when this happened, film hadn’t been released yet. Basically nobody had seen it. And I remember thinking as I was watching, I tried to pay close attention to the moment when it just fell off a cliff when I was just like, and it was this hard right turn up until about the 46 minute mark. I had problems here and there issues, concerns. I was wondering about it, but it just took this hard turn at about the 46 minute mark halfway through the film and it never recovered.

sar:

I think it’s generous to give it 46. Yeah, that’s pretty generous. That’s incredibly generous.

Lawrence:

Well, I think I was, I’m an optimist by me, and so I think it was up until the 46 minute mark, I thought, maybe it’s redeemable. Maybe they can do something and surprise me, pull this out. I think the saddest thing about this film and the most bewildering mind blowing thing about this film is that it actually has potential. There’s a lot that they could have done with it if they had come to us a little bit sooner. If they had talked to folks like yourselves or me or anybody actually,

sar:

Yeah, anyone would’ve qualified.

Lawrence:

…they put the film out. And so I think that most of my kind of antipathy and anger, which is very strong toward this film, and I think it was also very strong from our audience, was really based on the fact that it could have been something, it could have been a contender, it could have been something. And it just, after it took that turn, there was just no redeeming it. And just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse by God, it did. And so we set up the screening and so I tried to diplomatically talked the distribution company out of it, which was Magnolia Pictures and their PR person, oh, I want to attend, but don’t announce me. I just want to be a fly on the wall in the back of the room. And I was like, we can do that. Are you sure? Well, absolutely. We’ll do that.

And so everybody was there. It was our first time. We’d done two screenings of two different films in one month, and I promoted that the film studio had come to us and it was very excited about getting their honesty actions. And I’d warned the PR person from the distribution company, you’re going to get it. And I knew what was coming. I could see it, the writing on the wall because I’d seen the film and I was just like, okay, well, this will be an interesting experiment. And it literally, Sarah, it literally was in the four years that we did the film series, no film at any point caused the type of blowback and visceral hatred did. People were just so angry and just throwing bombs at this thing. And I remember I would always lead discussions after the screening, and I remember about 15 minutes into it, I had noted at the beginning of the screening that the PR person had introduced herself to me before things began, and I noted where she sat and all of that, and I looked up, gone.

sar:

I was expecting you to say she had burst into tears crying her eyes.

Lawrence:

There might’ve been this little pile of dust or ash there at the bottom of the chair. I don’t recall, but she was just no longer in the room, and I remember trying to email her and talk because I felt kind of bad,

sar:

Deleted, unfollowed.

Lawrence:

She just disappeared off the face of name change.

sar:

Yeah, she actually changed countries. She’s no longer an American citizen. I actually would’ve paid real life money to have been there, preferably beside the Magnolia producer PR person. As soon as that movie ended and the energy in the room kicked off, I would pay concert ticket money to have been there in that moment. As soon as the movie,

Lawrence:

It was so funny, I would do a thing where as the lights went up, the credits start to roll and the lights would go up and I would stand in the front of the room. I had a bar stool. I kind of lean up against it and the first thing I’d always say was, so what did you think? Right? The booze, this chorus, this cacophony

sar:

Having the microphone: okay, guys, we’re going to do this one at a time.

Lawrence:

And I was like, well, yeah, I’m glad we don’t have tomatoes. I was just like, okay. And so I see that you didn’t like it and well, why? And the magic shoes and all of the people were just flabbergasted. But as I think back now, having literally just watched this because I’ve been putting it off, I want to tell you Jeff, I’d seen it in 2008. I was so scarred and traumatized by that experience. I had not watched it again in all these years. So we’re talking well over a decade. I was like, no, man, I don’t want to revisit that thing. But watching it again this morning and having the benefit of hindsight, I think the thing that frustrates me most about this film is that if they’d gone about it differently, they actually could have done something.

sar:

I actually totally agree with that. I think that a bunch of, I think Jeff said it was only one writer, but this guy had clearly encountered some entry level Crip theory and then was like, I think I could do something really subversive with this. And the movie wanted to be so critical, and it was trying to come up with new acronyms and new ways of looking at Crip theory in the moment, but they were also wasted and haha and blatantly offensive that every time it tries to have an inspired moment, it’s something like Welcome to Hell or Paralyze Yourself.

Jeff:

Yeah

Lawrence:

It was all this kind of this fun house mirror of Crip theory where it’s just distorted left and and up and down and where it’s almost recognizable, but not quite,

sar:

But not quite.

Lawrence:

And so you’re left sort of a little literally off balance watching this thing going. This is almost familiar, but this is some alternate universe that I’m not a part of where the streets look the same and they look like human beings, but something’s dangerously desperately off.

Jeff:

I think there’s an apt metaphor here. It almost feels like a movie about someone who is pretending to be disabled, and that is maybe fitting because…

sar:

Holy shit, Jeff,

Jeff:

That’s the film that we are talking about right now is of course the one and only Quid Pro Quo. Now, for those of you who have not seen Quid Pro Quo…

Lawrence:

Wait, congratulations. First off, congrats. Congratulations for not seeing it.

Jeff:

Yes, you have made a phenomenal choice with your life. That’s why we exist. You get to learn about these films without having to subject yourself to them. Okay, so what is quid pro quo? Well, according to the mixers of the film, it is a darkly erotic movie from the box. When a man walks into a hospital and offers a doctor $250,000 to amputate a perfectly healthy leg reporter, Isaac Knot Next all becomes intrigued, not who lost the use of his legs in a childhood car accident, finds his professional interests turn into personal business. Fiona Viga, a mysterious and sexy informant, offers him an odd exclusive, an introduction to the disturbing new subculture.

sar:

I think it’s even generous to call professional disability pretendianism a subculture. I really wouldn’t even reward it, that name.

Jeff:

Yeah. Okay. So if we take a step back, how does this box, does that accurately describe the movie that you were forced to watch here?

sar:

Not really.

Lawrence:

No. No, I don’t think so. And I think that is the problem with the film in general. If I were to narrow down and distill the issues with the film disability, not withstanding, which we’ll get into the nitty gritty about that in a bit, I was like, what does it want to be? It has this identity crisis. So it’s like not only do the characters have these identity crisises, but the film has an identity crisis. It’s sort of marketed as kind of a Cronenberg-esque or a David Lynchian kind of film. But as I was watching it, I’m seeing more Brian de Palma and shades of Michael Powell’s, The Red Shoes, even with the magic shoes and all of that business. And so what I think with the filmmaker is that either knowingly or not knowingly, I’m not sure. I think they directed and wrote it, had all these influences that had either subconsciously seeped into their brain or consciously tried to rip off all these other filmmakers but didn’t commit to any of it. So there’s this kind of half-assed touching on a theme or dropping a hint somewhere, but then never really committing to that theme or to that idea, which leaves you with this unsatisfying hodgepodge of what is going on here, what are we watching, and how did this film get made?

Jeff:

Yeah. Well, I mean, that is a great question. How did this film get made? Well, it was written and directed by a person named Carlos Brooks. Brooks would actually follow up this film with another writer, director, joint/calamity, which was titled Burning Bright. This was a film about a woman and her autistic brother that have to survive being trapped in a house with a tiger during the hurricane. So this is somebody who likes to mash stuff together.

sar:

That’s next week’s film.

Jeff:

Spoiler alert…

Lawrence:

God, just put it in a blender. Wow.

sar:

Okay. Yeah, I love it.

Jeff:

Spoiler alert, we will be doing this film next year.

Lawrence:

Wait, let’s just revisit this minute. We’ve got a hurricane, a tiger, single mother. Is it a single mother?

Jeff:

Sister.

Lawrence:

Sister, okay. And an autistic child.

Jeff:

Correct. Yeah. I think he is a teenager possibly, but yes. Yeah. Anyways, I am anxiously the DVD to arrive at my house, and we will be doing this film next year.

sar:

Life of Pi as visualized in a New York slum.

Jeff:

Yes. Yeah, it’s basically like Rain Man and Life of Pi slammed together with that Hurricane Heist movie. Yeah,

sar:

I like that he seems to think that slamming together two really iconic directorial styles is a film sub genre, and he is not even wrong. And the films that I would’ve used for Quid Pro Quo were kind of Mary Harran, American Psycho with anything by David Lynch, slammed together to try to make Disability Theory as visualized by American Psycho and Memento.

Lawrence:

And it did. It tried so hard at the beginning of the film, really.

sar:

It was a really earnest effort at Memento, American Psycho Crip Theory, and I really like how hard it tried, but it didn’t stick to the Landing.

Lawrence:

You’re five minutes in and he’s talking about ABs and PWDs

sar:

Table bodies.

Jeff:

Oh, man. Okay. So we are going to talk about the acronym nonsense in this film. I pitched to Sarah that we should do this entire episode just in acronyms. Yeah, because there were so many shot down. Now, part of the answer on why this may might not great is that it was produced in part by HD Net Films and Sanford Pillsbury Productions, I’m assuming Sanford Pillsbury Productions, I don’t know this, but I’m guessing is probably Carlos Brooks’s production company in which they produce two films, HD net films, mostly concert videos. So they have concert videos for Bush Newfound Glory sticks, Liza Minnelli. They have put out several dramas, including the architect and several horror movies, one of which is called S Ampersand Man, which apparently is known as Sandman, not S and M Man, which I think would’ve been way better as well as a movie called Bubble.

So I think there wasn’t a lot of production support, let’s say. But despite that, this film did draw two very big actors at the time. Nick Stall is our main character who plays Isaac Knotts. This is not his only disability related role. Nick Stall is also appeared in film’s life, A Man Without a Face, Thin Red Line, Sin City, Disturbing Behavior. While he was a bit of an A-lister at the time of this film, he’s sort of devolved into more of a B or possibly C list actor at this point. He just was in a thing called Knights of the Zodiac, which has nothing to do with the Zodiac Killer. Very disappointing. As well as,

Lawrence:

Or Knighthood maybe at all.

Jeff:

It’s like if you took the Marvel Universe and then you put it in the microwave for about an hour. And then of course Stall is also Beloved in HBO’s Carnival, which is a whole other disability conversation. Exactly. Entirely. Nick is mirrored by Vera Farmiga, who plays Fiona the love interest. Now, Vera is of course a legitimate actor who’s had a remarkable career, included Oscar movies like The Departed, Up in the Air, is in the billions of horror movies associated with the Conjuring-verse as Lorraine.

sar:

I was going to say: how are you naming anything but The Conjuring first?

Jeff:

All of the Conjuring. Yep. She’s also done well in television with Bates Motel.

sar:

Bates Motel. She’s actually playing the same role in this movie.

Jeff:

Pretty much. That’s what she disappeared to at the end.

Lawrence:

That’s kind of her archetype.

sar:

Yeah, she’s reprising her creepy, oddly sexy, but not sexy at all mother.

Jeff:

And so I have never seen both Bates Hotel. How much does ancient Chinese girls come up in that show?

sar:

Oh, absolutely none. Because America doesn’t observe other cultures, but there would definitely be more ancient Chinese women.

Jeff:

And last but certainly not least…that’s right, sports fans! You did see for a brief moment the beloved Amy Mullins as Isaac’s ex-girlfriend Raine. Now, interestingly, by my count, she has one scene in the entire movie. However, there are deleted scenes from this film that you could watch on the DVD, and most of them are scenes involving her character. So yes, this is true. The movie cut out almost all of the scenes that involved the actually disabled actor that was attached to this film.

Lawrence:

Which begs another question, Jeff. Now I have not had the pleasure of seeing these deleted scenes, but, and when director’s cut with these scenes included in context to the rest of the film, would you subject yourself to that?

Jeff:

Okay…we are going to put an enormous pin on that because I did subject myself and I did it for a very specific reason, which we’re going to talk about in about 15 minutes.

sar:

He actually did it to give me a textual blow by blow of every single deleted scene, which was appreciated because I didn’t have to watch.

Jeff:

I narrated it. Now, we obviously have our own opinions about these movies and they’re valid opinions, however, we are not the only ones. So let’s take a look at some of the critical response has been to this film. So I’ve got a couple quotes here from Rotten Tomatoes that we’ve pulled from movie critics. As you can imagine, this movie was not really beloved by the critical class. David Eldine has written. The first half of quid pro quo is amongst the most jaw dropping things I’ve ever seen. Who knew there was a closeted subculture of people pretending to be paraplegics…

sar:

Which to be, I want to be super clear about this. There’s not.

Jeff:

Who knew?

sar:

I feel like the movie that its chief fallacy is perpetuating the subculture of people faking disability, which is what everybody’s getting so mad about. If you haven’t seen the film and the fact that people are coming away, coming away with this saying, wow, I didn’t know so many people were faking disability is the problem with the film.

Jeff:

Every single one, every single person you’ve see in a wheelchair is actually probably a wannabe

sar:

They have been. Try to push them out because they’ll probably get up

Lawrence:

And Yeah, I guess when we’re doing the scene by scene, we can talk about this. There’s several scenes where they do that. They literally do that. They get up and they carry the chair

Jeff:

…the wheelchair away

sar:

This movie put the ADA back 20 years, and it was released in 2006.

Jeff:

Now, Rex Reed has a very interesting, I would love to hear what your thought is on Rex Reed’s comment. Rex Reed writes about this film. It certainly won’t be everyone’s cup of breakfast bitters, but you can’t dismiss it nonchalantly.

sar:

Oh, I can.

Lawrence:

Well, I got to tell you what, he was with me. I was with him completely until that last word. No, I don’t think you can dismiss it nonchalantly. I think you have to dismiss it vehemently. I think you have to dismiss it with all the passion that you can muster. So he had me, I was with him up until the nonchalant, and I’m like, you know what? I guess he’s right. You can’t dismiss it nonchalant because it does provoke such strong reactions.

Jeff:

Yeah. Now, Lawrence, it’s my understanding that you’ve also found some very intriguing references in terms of analysis of this film. What did you dig up for us?

Lawrence:

Yeah. One of the things that strikes me about this film that I did not recall from blanking it out and blocking it out, which for a movie about repressed memories, I guess that would be appropriate, but I was a radio show host and producer in New York City during time, and so part of my sort of mo in preparing for any interview, whether I’m a host or a guest, is to kind of do my research and kind of read the teale, see what people were talking about and what the reviews, basically what we’re doing now ran across this review, sort of this aside in the review in the San Francisco Chronicle, which says this, its biggest mystery is how quid pro quo was financed by Texas Trillionaire and Dallas Maverick owner Mark Cuban, no less, and selected for distribution.

Jeff:

Yes. This is a hundred percent accurate. He is in the credits.

sar:

Mark Cuban saw some form of this script or movie and was like, seems legit.

Jeff:

I’m in.

Lawrence:

I just want to know the origin story. I want to know how that meeting came to be. I want to know what was said during that meeting and how much he bankrolled. What was his buy literally?

sar:

I want to know if they got Mark Cuban via Vera Farmiga’s crip fantasy theory. I think that’s what would’ve sold him on it.

Jeff:

See, my theory is I think Mark Cuban is the reason we have these big name actors in the film. That’s my suspicion.

sar:

Thank Mark Cuban for Vera Farmiga.

Jeff:

My suspicion, I don’t want to say that you owe us as a community, but I think you owe us as a community, Mark Cuban, if you can bankroll one film, you should be required to bankroll the counterpoint to this film. I think.

sar:

What would the counterpoint to this film incredibly sexy, disabled people who weren’t faking it at all?

Lawrence:

What I’m kind of imagining is I would as a test, as an exercise to myself, a challenge, a challenge to myself. If I were given this film, I would try my best to leave everything as it was up until the 46 minute mark. And then the challenge, what would I change afterwards? And here’s what I think I would change after that 46 minute mark is I would have Mr. Magic shoes here, Nick Stall, suddenly because the only other Crip he knows is the priest, right? His buddy who

sar:

Father Basketbal

Jeff:

Father Basketball, that’s what we call him.

Lawrence:

His basketball buddy who’s in two quick scenes and that’s all. He’s supposed to be this old friend. But the only time we see or hear him or think about him, and you know that he dates Amy Mullins. He dated at least Amy Mullins character, but it doesn’t appear by my viewing of the film that he’s at all interested, invested or connected to disability culture at all. And so what I would like to see is that character, as he starts investigating this story, stumbling across a crew like the folks who used to come to this film series, and because we had disabled folks, trans folks, academics, activists, this whole spectrum of people that had their own reasons for being there that were wild, that they were always drinking. We had dance parties after the screenings. And so I’d like to see through no intention of his own, the guy kind of stumbling, pun intended across Crip culture, and then getting kind of jazzed by it and writing a different story, pursuing a different story. So instead of being fixated and hung up on the magic shoes, he gets turned on to Crip culture. He gets turned on to the people that we know and the people that we talk to, and it takes a turn. And he kind of embraces that

sar:

This is such a wholesome and earnest rewriting of this movie, and I love it, and it makes me really love Lawrence that he’s like, I love how this started and I just want him to meet Crip community and all of us can just love each other. My answer to that question was I wanted to go full mockery in the other direction.

Lawrence:

So like full blown satire

sar:

Walking into a university like, ha, check out my five degrees and all this walking, I can do down 15 building hallways and all of these meta stereotypes to ability, but done really s sardonically.

Jeff:

So Forrest Gump is what you wanted. You wanted this to become Forrest Gump.

sar:

Forrest Gump in a university.

Lawrence:

Well, and I could see a hybrid. So the Crips that he runs across, radicalize him, right? And then he decides he’s going to F with the system. I would love to see this merry band of Crips just running around New York City causing anarchy and just disrupting things left and right. That would be the movie. That’s the movie. This could have been, right?

sar:

You’re pushing the movie Newsies,

Jeff:

Crip Newsies.

sar:

It actually already exists

Lawrence:

Their own nonprofit media group, right? They’re going around. He had no issue getting into the taxi cab, right? There’s a scene. We’ll get into this, right? Yeah. I will say this. Every restaurant, every apartment building, every public space is accessible. Nobody, out of all the wannabe Crips, the real Crips, the who know Crips in the film, they never run across any access accommodations. They never that are not provided, right? They never bump into any obstacles that are the day-to-day realities that we face. And so it would be fun to see a bunch of Crips then take it upon themselves to, with Sledgehammers, create those curb cuts where they do not yet exist.

sar:

It’s true as a New York citizen, that New York City is actually a utopia for are paralyzed people and other Crip identity.

Lawrence:

Again, I think it was an alternate universe because that’s not the New York City that I experienced.

sar:

Am I to believe that New York City is actually a disability utopia?

Jeff:

Well, according to some other people, that might be the case because of course, lots of uppity people go to things like the New York Post and the Washington Post to get their culture. But the real ones know that the best critical analysis comes to us in the comment section, the IMDB and various websites. But I prefer Amazon and IMDB are my two preferred for just the best takes. So I have two that I for us to get into here. Our first one comes from Bernstein 3, 2, 9. He provided this film with a one out of 10 rating, the title being Garbola, which I like that. Zesty. Bernstein 3, 2, 9 says, this was probably the worst movie I have seen since the arrival and one of the worst films I’ve seen in my entire life having been suckered into renting this horrific piece of garbage. I left the movie experience feeling Ill, literally horrible, screenwriting, atrocious acting, contrived bullshit plots and unbelievable characters, magic shoes, ginger. Jake, am I expected to believe that someone who has been in a wheelchair for 20 years could just get up and start walking somehow? I don’t think the human body works that way.

sar:

That’s actually an unfair and incredibly hilarious review because there was actually an entire two minute montage dedicated to how hard it is to get up out of a wheelchair and walk immediately.

Lawrence:

And this guy had no physical therapy. I mean, he does talk a little bit about, well, I swim.

sar:

Yes. Oh, he does 17 sports.

Jeff:

He does 17 sports!

Lawrence:

But none of them which uses legs. And so he’s just able to rise up out of the chair via Jimmy Swaggart or whatever.

sar:

The sheer force of his masculinity allowed him to rise up and above using the magic shoes.

Jeff:

Yes, of course. So anyway, this one cracked me up, particularly because he identifies the reality that there is magic shoes in this universe, but he still refuses to believe that magic would be able to overcome disability, which I thought that was also fairly interesting. Even

sar:

A alternate universe, you’re going to need more than shoes, bud.

Jeff:

You’re trying to tell me that candle can just magic potion his way, and a Frodo is not a little person. Come on.

sar:

Which actually introduces a secondary more interesting conversation about what magic item would’ve been enough for him if he put on a magic suit of armor and able to walk.

Jeff:

A magic watch?

sar:

Is that enough magic to disability ratio that it cancels out?

Jeff:

Yeah. Well, yeah, you would need to go to a doctor to get that prescription. Sarah, obviously,

Lawrence:

Who is the sorcerer, which is duing out these magic clothing items, right? The capes, the coats, the belts.

sar:

He gave him a magic hat. Would he have accomplished the same montage?

Jeff:

And the source of said magic, of course, is a pawn shop where he found the shoes, which of course now, okay

sar:

Which implies that this is part of actually a whole series of people who used to be disabled, use the magic shoes are no longer disabled, and now they’re passing it on to the next poor disabled man who needs to get his girlfriend back. But his girlfriend implied, the one person must always walk in relationship rule

Jeff:

But we’re not going to give it to them. We’re going to put it in a pawn shop and hope they find it.

sar:

They’ll know If you’re looking for this, you’ll know.

Lawrence:

And I got to tell you what, as a viewer, again, with the benefit of hindsight, I was a little disappointed, and maybe it’s in those deleted scenes or those extra scenes, but I wholly expected upon seeing this again, that because he could walk and he had then met the criteria of one person in the relationship should be able to walk, that we would see the Amy Mullen’s character again at the end. But no, he was still obsessed with the gal that caused his injury in the first place. So I was a little disappointed by that. I thought, close this loop here, people.

Jeff:

So it turns out you actually might be an Nostradamus. So as I was going through the reviews, many of the positive reviews for this movie would make the same claim, which was, this movie was infinitely better if you included the deleted scenes. I’m not joking. Multiple comments said, you got to watch the deleted scenes. It makes this movie a million times better. You’ve just got to watch them. So that’s exactly what I did. I pulled up the old DVD and I found that there were in fact 10 minutes of deleted scenes, which largely consisted of Isaac reunited with rain, his ex who had dumped him for not being able to walk, but they reconcile once. He is now not a disabled person. My personal favorite though of the deleted scenes is one in which Isaac does go to a doctor to confirm if the shoes are in fact magic. And the doctor says, and I quote, yes, you could walk. I suspected it the minute you roll through that door, which is exactly how that could work. Exactly. A closed runner up was a scene in which he goes to visit and apologize to wheelchair, priest, basketball enthusiast, priest, Dave, father Dave. And at the end of the scene, he asks Isaac how he feels now that he’s able to walk. And Isaac responds like a bicycle, and then the scene ends. And I have zero idea what that means.

sar:

Father Basketball, you can’t do me like this.

Lawrence:

Yeah, come on. Come on, father.

Jeff:

What? Isaac feels like a bicycle now that he’s able to walk again. I don’t know, maybe that he’s getting ridden all the time now by his new girlfriend.

sar:

Okay. Funny. Okay.

Lawrence:

But that would be Raine, not the

sar:

Not Vera Farmiga, no, she gets canned in either scenario. Can I ask a possibly provocative question based on that?

Jeff:

I would love you to.

sar:

Are you feeling comfortable with me, Lawrence, to ask a possibly provocative question.

Lawrence:

I am seated. I’m strapped in. Let’s go in for the duration. Go for it.

sar:

I wonder if, because you said there were a number of reviews that said if you had included all these scenes where he spoke a little more on the shoes or got back together with the actually disabled character in the movie, it would feel like a better film. And I’m just thinking in the spur of the moment here, I feel like they kind of missed the point of the film because I feel like the point of the film was that all of these pretending are around him, and they’re all psychosomatically disabled, which is another way of saying they’re either doing it to themselves or it’s for some reason all in their heads, or it’s some kind of overcomeable circumstance by way of physical therapy, which this movie thinks is bullshit or regular therapy, which this movie also thinks is bullshit. And then the big reveal at the end of the movie, spoiler alert, is that he was psychosomatically disabled the whole time.

So if you wanted his resolution to be, oh, good, now he can get with the disabled girl, I feel like the reveal was lost on you because he actually belonged with all of these people the entire time. He was not the outlier and Vera, far Miga fantasizes about his psychoso, not the fact that he’s disabled. And she actually goes as far as applying that as far as she can go consciously upon herself. So if you want him to end up with this neat little love story resolution, did they not get the ending? Did they actually think the shoes were magic?

Lawrence:

Well, I think that’s the problem with the film. As we said earlier, it touches upon, it almost goes there. It alludes to, and it plants a seed, but then none of these things sprout. None of these things grow. And so you’re left with this hodgepodge, right? This mashup of things that could have been, that are never really actually realized, or I would say even pursued. So it just sells itself short on every conceivable level. It doesn’t commit to any of these things. And so you’re left being scratching your head and kind of frustrated by what it could have been.

Jeff:

And speaking of not committing, I am not going to commit to talking about this movie anymore this week. It’s time for us to end on a cliffhanger.

sar:

What a transition.

Jeff:

If you want to know more about this film for, I’m going to say sadomasochistic reasons, then you will need to tune in next week where we do a deep dive on Quid Pro quote

[Mvll Crimes theme song interlude]

Jeff:

And thus concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for listening. I hope you enjoyed it or not. Either way, please take a second. If you haven’t to subscribe to our podcast on whatever platform you’re using, tell a friend, and better yet, do you want to be a victim on the podcast? Go on to our website, invalid culture.com, submit your name. We would love to terrorize you with a bad movie, have a bad movie of your own that you think that we should watch. Again, jump on our website, invalid culture.com, submit it, and we would love to watch the trash. Be sure to tune in again next week for part two, where we will start to dig into the movie and find out whether or not it wins the coveted Jerry Lewis seal of approval

Mvll Crimes (theme song):

Arguing with strangers on the Internet. Everyone is wrong, I just haven’t told them yet.

Transcript – Part 2

Jeff:

Previously on invalid culture.

Fiona (Vera Farmiga):

People who get off on braces and wheelchairs are called devotees. They’re a joke. They’re the bottom rung. Above them are the pretenders. They wear the braces, they push the wheels, but they don’t belong to their chairs Still. If they want to fantasize, that’s their choice. Then there are the wannabes. You saw how crazy they are.

Isaac (Nick Stahl):

What makes you different than I wannabe or pretending?

Fiona (Vera Farmiga):

I’m a unique case. I don’t want to be paralyzed.

Isaac (Nick Stahl):

You don’t.

Fiona (Vera Farmiga):

I already am paralyzed. I’m just trapped in a walking person’s body.

Jeff:

You are listening to invalid culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling media representations of disability. This podcast is all about staring into the abyss of pop culture adjacent films that never quite broke through because well, they’re just awful. So buckle up folks. The following content is rated I for invalid.

Mvll Crimes (theme song):

I’m arguing with strangers on the internet not going out today because I’m feeling too upset with strangers on the, and I’m winning. I’m winning.

Jeff:

Welcome back to another thrilling day Invalid Culture, back with part two of Quid Pro Quo. Once again, we are joined by co-host, sarah, how are you doing this week, sarah?

sar:

I literally can’t wait to finish this conversation. Quid pro quo winning.

Jeff:

Are you a better or worse person a week later?

sar:

Probably better, but only because I had time to explore the darkly erotic depths of quid pro quo.

Jeff:

Yeah, that’s fair. And again, we are joined by our resident expert and quid pro quo enthusiast. Lauren Carter-Long.

Lawrence:

Yeah, it’s flipped me. I’ve, I’ve gone from somebody who was highly traumatized myself by this film to one who is imagining all the possibilities of what could have been, should have been, might’ve been if this had been handled differently. And congratulations, sarah, on exploring those dark recesses of yourself via this film. I’m glad to know it was good for something.

sar:

Thank you.

Jeff:

So what is quid pro quo for those of you who have not watched this film? Well, our dark, gritty and titillated tale that is extremely horny begins with the introduction of radio journalists, wheelchair user Isaac, who is totally not working for NPR. It is some other leftist New York talk radio station. It is not NPR

Introduced as a spicy new story. Apparently a man recently tried to bribe a surgeon to amputate his perfectly fine legs, Isaac getting over being dumped by his PWD girlfriend because he cannot walk, decides to take up the story because geez, it’s really tough being disabled because cops won’t pull over for you. And so why would someone want to do this after tugging on the frayed threads like a good noir Detective Isaac has tipped off on a literal dank basement meeting of a special group of people, the wannabes. It is here that Isaac learns. There is a whole constellation of abs, which apparently means able-bodied people who find the idea of disability, sexy and cool. These folks go around pretending to be disabled, trying to learn the PWDs way of life and and speaking so that they can pass in the culture of the pws. So basically this is a totally normal anthropology department at any coastal university.

sar:

It’s true. There’s some really inclusive commentary there about the type of people who study other people for a living, and I don’t think it was intentional, but it is funny.

Jeff:

Yeah, absolutely. Little jab, but are my anthropologist friends. Okay. So I think we probably need to start our conversation. Okay. I’m not even going to do, I don’t even know where to start. Where do we want to start on the start of

sar:

This film? Can I propose something?

Jeff:

Please save me.

sar:

I was struck in the first, I guess you’re doing thirds, the first third of this film, by how many times Stall has to tell you point blank to the viewership. I have sex. This guy has the ultimate broken masculinity, straight white male syndrome of, I need to tell you on a literally constant basis how much I’m getting it. One of his opening lines in this film, for those of you who hasn’t seen it, is I have sex. I just can’t get cabs, which I think is supposed to be sexy.

Lawrence:

We can go a little deeper with that, sarah, because as I watched it again in preparation for this conversation, the actual quote is, I can HAVE sex.

sar:

Oh my goodness.

Lawrence:

And so is this aspirational? Yes. Is my question.

sar:

I guess we’re asking, he wants to tell me every 20 minutes that he can have sex maybe because he’s telling himself

Lawrence:

Yes. Yes. I think that maybe this is aspirational for him that he can, whether or not he is, he can, but maybe he just is getting in his own way. And

Jeff:

There’s some evidence there. He does actually miss out on an opportunity for population moments later in which one of his absolutely not NPR coworkers sets him up on a date with ABHB and it doesn’t go well. Unfortunately, she does not wish to sleep with him because she, in his words, doesn’t want to be a good person that day. Which yeah, there is some gender politics stuff going on in this film, which is fascinating.

Lawrence:

Well, and the date, right? The date doesn’t even, again, it’s sort of this ends prematurely in that the date doesn’t even happen, right? No. He enters the restaurant strangely accessible. And I believe he asks for the name, says the name out loud to a bartender or a wait staff or something. And you see, I believe you see the person behind him kind of pay attention to that. And next thing you know, she’s at the curb hailing a cab. Right. Same cab that he can’t catch right?

Jeff:

Yeah. The obsession would not being able to catch a cab is throughout this film. And I found it particularly interesting. I mean, okay, full disclosure, I do not live in New York. I live in a small Canadian town, we’ll call it a village, the Village of London, Ontario. And my understanding of the problem with cabs, it’s not so much that they won’t pull over for you as the racial discrimination thing. It’s more that when you call for one, there are none that are accessible. That seems to be the issue.

Lawrence:

That is the issue. And I was the communications coordinator. I don’t think I’d quite been the executive director of the Disabilities Network of New York City by this point, but I was doing advocacy in New York City and it was all public policy work. We were engaging, the whole point of the organization was to engage with the mayor’s office to come up with public policies that would benefit disabled folks in New York City. That’s pretty cool. Taxi cabs was one of the issues that was a priority for us. And so we were doing forums with the Taxi and Limousine Commission. There were car services that theoretically speaking, pick people up if you’re not disabled. And I remember this was the same year, this came out 2008. That was the same year that I did an interview with Penn and Teller’s Bullshit television team. And the whole point in one of the scenes of the episode, I literally hailed down a taxi, had the camera crew hop in the taxi with me, and then talked about how out of millions of people in New York City and tens of thousands of taxis, only 25 were wheelchair accessible at that point. So you’d have a better chance of spotting a unicorn or Elvis at the Burger King than you would in getting an accessible taxi.

Jeff:

Now, another real New York culture question I have this film at the beginning of the film is extremely assertive, that there are specific phrases, specifically acronyms, that all disabled people use, including the assertion that disabled people refer to themselves as pws, that we refer to people that don’t have disabilities as abs as an able bodied. And that at times there are also addendums to this acronym based on the quality of the body. Specifically you are an HB as in a hot body. So you could be P-W-D-H-B, you could be an A-B-H-D, I myself am P-W-D-A-B-PhD.

sar:

Very good, very good.

Lawrence:

I think you win the acronym Olympics there. Yeah.

Jeff:

Is this a New York thing or is this a, I don’t actually know about disability culture thing.

Lawrence:

This is one of those, this is what I imagine disability culture to be without doing the actual homework is what this is.

sar:

This is kind of funny because acronyms are themselves extremely inaccessible. So it’s like the most inaccessible way of going about trying to make accessible, culture accessible, but in trying to be accessible about accessible culture, you’ve actually made it even more inaccessible than had you just said No, she’s able bodied.

Jeff:

Right.

Lawrence:

Well, I think it’s trying really hard to make it the subculture with its own lingo and its own in way of talking, but in a way that’s painful in a way that it’s like, I don’t know, akin to Sally Field saying, you like me, you really, really like me. It’s so awareness that you’re just like, oh, give me a freaking break in ways that it’s so transparent and so obvious that folks never really do. It’s those assumptions one makes about how people talk or what community is like. But having never really spent any time with those giving

sar:

Twitter academic activism, am I right?

Jeff:

It’s true. It’s so true. And the thing that that’s most jarring about the assertion of these phrases as common lingo is that there are actual phrases that are common lingo. It is not uncommon for us to refer to normies or walkies. We have these actual phrases that we actually use and the movie was like, Nope, I’m going to make up my own terms and I’m going to assert with authority that these are the terms they all use.

Lawrence:

And it’s a slightly askew, a warped version of those terms and phrases. So instead of saying, which maybe the generation or two before us would maybe say something about tabs or people who are temporarily able bodied. So it’s a bastardization of what kind of sort of did exist, but without having the context to get it right.

Jeff:

Yeah. Now, speaking of context, to get it right, we have to talk about this meeting in the basement.

sar:

I love the basement

Lawrence:

And I love that there’s this Mexican sit off as he starts to go into the room. We don’t know how he got down there, first off, because we learn later there’s a reveal. I’ll let you give the reveal, but we don’t know how the hell he gets to this room to start with at this stage in the story. But when he goes through the dark shadows and gets to the room and knocks on the door and sees them sort of in the distance in the shadows, they open the door and there’s kind of this a Mexican standoff where they’re kind of sizing up each other. Who’s the real, who are you? And you almost hear the Sergio Leone music playing in the background.

Jeff:

Yeah, absolutely.

sar:

This isn’t CDS gang. This is the handicap mafia.

Jeff:

So my question for all of you is this is apparently as the movie sets it up for us, this is a reg that we’re meeting of people who are wannabes. They want to be disabled, but they are not expecting a PWD as the movie says to a real one, a live one to walk into the room. So my question is, what in the ever living hell happens at this meeting on a regular basis? What do these people do at these meetings?

sar:

I have a theory and it’s a little bit bitter and it’s a little bit mean, but I do have a theory, and I do think it was intentional. I think Lawrence was kind of dead on with the anthropology quip, where if you get a bunch of these people where they really want to understand this culture and they’re really lusting after being accepted by that culture, by that community, and you see this a lot with people who talk about Russiaboos, Weeaboo kind of thing, where they’re not X thing, but they love X thing enough that they really want to be or become X thing. So they’re doing it with Crips. So he comes to the basement, a real live Crip with all of these academics who are studying this and want to be able to be an expert on this and want to be accepted in the community.

Sociology, anthropology, critical disability studies, all of these fields who are totally guilty of this, going and doing conferences about people with disabilities with no sense of irony that that’s not the terminology and hasn’t been for as long as I’ve been alive. And then when they encounter someone who has real claim to the identity, or at least passes better to have claim to the identity because the big reveal was that he also doesn’t, which is relevant, but if you’re in this room with all these people who are willing to revere you and put you on a pedestal as this person, I think that’s how you get cultures of academics who will circle jerk themselves, so to speak, about how much they know about a culture they’re not actually a part of, or observing from a distance or only engaging with parts that they’re comfortable with or only engaging with academics who are Crips kind of thing, instead of actually going out into not basement New York and meeting real scare quotes, disabled people who could teach them so much more. I think that was a really obvious literal, very much they’re hitting you on the head with this analogy for people who are either studying this or want really badly to be accepted by it as an expert.

Lawrence:

And I think you’re absolutely right. I mean, I do think that we’re probably giving this movie more credit than it deserves in that regard. But one of the things that strikes me, Sarah, as I listened to your astute analysis, is that these individuals really don’t care about real disabled people. What they’re interested in is their fantasy. What they’re interested in is the cosplay aspect, their notion of what disability is, and they don’t want to invite anything in that might disrupt that magical thinking that might disrupt that false impression that they have. So I think this is really more about being committed to the fantasy than it is about any real interest or inclination to find out about disability, culture, disability, community, even the issues that disabled people face, whether it’s being able to get into a damn taxi or not, those things can’t even broach the threshold of the topic because they all run the risk of disrupting the fantasy.

sar:

But that cosplay aspect is what so many not naming names and we’re not going to of disability, especially academic critical disability, are guilty of, right? They want to pass just enough to be one or be an expert or especially be loved or beloved as an expert.

Lawrence:

So yeah, you want to be sort of disabled adjacent without any of the headaches. Yeah, I think that’s what…

sar:

Yeah, those people who make tons of money doing UDL lectures, but all their information about UDL is wrong. That didn’t actually matter to them. They just want to be known for it because that’s associated with all of these great things about what your cosplay identity is. Look how much she cares. Look how EDI she is.

Lawrence:

Yes, exactly. And that’s why I think they have that face off when he opened. The door opens, there’s like, right, and he is coming into the room. He’s a threat to All right.

sar:

Yeah, absolutely.

Jeff:

And the realest part of the movie might be the one guy saying, I don’t feel comfortable doing this in front of him. And he pulls off his trach tube and they all leave. They pick their wheelchairs up and walk up a flight of stairs to meeting, there’s the reveal.

Lawrence:

So it appears right there in this dark musty, not particularly well lit basement, which says to me without overtly saying it, that this is not an official group in the way that a Alcoholics Anonymous group might meet. That they’re what? Sneaking into the church…

Jeff:

Right, they’re breaking in.

Lawrence:

…basement to have their, and the thing is, I’ve been in that building. That building is where back when I did animal protection work in New York City, that’s where group that worked to get animals spayed neutered would have their meetings. None of them were ever in the basement in a badly lit room. And so I’m like, is this an official get together? Is it not on the bulletin board of the church? Why is it that they then fold their wheelchairs up at the top of the stairs or the bottom of the stairs depending on where you are, and then go down and do their meeting? Right.

sar:

No. It’s giving pager location an hour before meetup.

Jeff:

It’s like the police were going to bust in the door and be like, no, you can’t be pretending that here. And they’re like, we’re not pretenders we are wannabes!

sar:

A cosplay. Police have busted this operation.

Jeff:

Now after the seedy underground meeting, Isaac continues to dig into this subculture and he is introduced to quote, I’m not making this up Ancient Chinese girl. It turns out to be neither ancient nor Chinese. It’s Vera.

Lawrence:

And we’re not certain about the girl part either at this point. Yeah, that’s true.

Jeff:

So Fiona is apparently an extremely wealthy restoration person who has a sexy secret. She likes to wear braces and lingerie. Fiona, it turns out, is not a wannabe at all. She is a P-W-D-H-B trapped in the body of an ABHB. And so if you don’t know what that means, well you’re not a part of the community. Isaac realizes that the best way to tell Fiona’s story is to form a sexual relationship with her to gain her trust and accessed her deepest, darkest, sexiest secrets like a good journalist who does not work for NPR.

sar:

We want to be clear about that.

Lawrence:

Yes. We want to be very, very clear about that.

sar:

The basement mafia was not a one-to-one to the MLA accessibility committee either.

Jeff:

So basically Isaac and Fiona formed this relationship, which is rooted in Fiona being attracted to Isaac’s disabledness. There’s a lot to unpack there.

sar:

There’s a weird relationship I couldn’t quite suss out, and maybe you guys can help me with this. I already brought up, I think a lot more people are more culturally familiar with kind of the wibu culture where you’re kind of fetishizing Asian, especially Japanese women and everything you think they do and anime and all this. But you think that these 30-year-old women are watching children’s cartoons on weekends, and that’s just radically incorrect. And I thought they were going to do something with the casual appropriation of ancient Chinese lady, and she has collections of mid-century, obviously Asian architecture. She had Ming Vs. In her house. There’s a deleted scene where she’s speaking Mandarin. She fetishizes this culture

Lawrence:

And she does, in one of the scenes that did make the cut right in the restaurant, she says, let’s go to a restaurant that neither of us have been to before, which happens to be a Chinese restaurant, and she does her order in Chinese.

sar:

It’s wild. I thought they were going to try to connect the kind of fetishization of culture visually explicitly with the fetishization. Vera Formiga has toward disablement more directly than they did. They didn’t go anywhere with that.

Jeff:

That’s the really interesting thing because on the one hand, you could read this as being a very self-aware critique about that this type of cultural appropriation is exactly what the wannabes and the pretenders are doing for disability. That’s the one possibility. The other possibility is that this movie is really leaning into Orientalism and is trying to use interest in Asian culture as another sexy facet of her identity

sar:

That reading…that’s so dark. It didn’t even cross my mind to tell you that.

Jeff:

Was it a darkly erotic reading, would you say?

sar:

Darkly erotic? Yeah. I mean, I’m not going to say it is not.

Jeff:

I don’t know what the answer is,

Lawrence:

But I would say it’s a fetishized attempt to be erotic. So it’s not true eroticism, you’re not totally owning the kink, right? It’s keeping the kink at arms length. So again, you really don’t invest in it in a way that somebody who let’s say is going to go all in for that kind of thing, might actually do. They’re

sar:

Kind of doing multiple layers of fetishization too, kind of simultaneously. And if this was a smarter film, I would give them credit for it. But this was obviously accidental because you’re a Amiga in the lunch scene. She’s looking around and saying, wow, look, they’re all looking at me. And she’s pretending to be annoyed by this, but you can tell she’s really enjoying the attention. And you think because of the juxtaposition of the scene before where she’s very obviously sexualizing her disabled ness that she’s getting off on it, but she could have also bitten on another level. The conversation we were having in the basement, been getting off on being associated with something that she so badly wants to look like she knows shit about. Which brings you back to the academic Crip critique of wanting to get off on your own knowledge and how other people perceive you seeing the world rather than having any actual

Lawrence:

Knowledge. And there’s a foreshadowing of this, if you remember just before they go to lunch, when they’re first meeting in the park, they’re sort of obsessed with the origin story. How did you become disabled? When did you become disabled? Where were you? What was the temperature of the time of day? All of that sense. And in part scene at one point he blurts out the word gimp and she smiles and then she even comments in a self-aware way that she’s smiling when he says the word gimp. And she asks if he’s kind of toying with her in that way. And so it does sort of foreshadow. I think if it was smarter and more committed, it does sort of foreshadow that possibility, but then drops it and doesn’t go any further.

Jeff:

So I have a theory about this and I’m going to agree with your original tape, Sarah, that I think this is really intentional. So several years before this movie came out, there was a fantastic documentary that was released that’s called Whole, so AC company this before, and this is about this disability I guess or something, this diagnosis of BIID, which is body integrity, sorry, body identity, integrity, dysmorphia, which now people would refer to as probably trans ability, which is this notion of people who identify as disabled. And in whole, one of my favorite things about whole is that they have a bunch of people that have BID, that self-disclose as having a BI. Many of them have been successful in amputating the limb that they felt was not a part of them. And what’s really fascinating about the film for me is that pretty much every person in that film, they ask them, they’re like, oh, so why do you want to be disabled?

Where did this come from? And they’re all like, I don’t know. And then several hours later in the film they’re like, yeah. So there was this time when I was a child and I was having this horrible childhood. My parents were abusing me and everything was terrible. And I had this neighbor who just happened to have the exact same amputation that I fetishized for, and he was beloved, and everyone in the community loved him, and they looked at him lovingly and he was a good father and he loved his children. But yeah, I have no idea why I want the exact same amputation as that person. And one of them had all of these sort of interesting stories where they were going through really rough patches in their life and they saw a disabled person and perceived them to be receivers of warmth and charity, that they were beloved, that they were cared for. And it was all of these things, this attention that wanted in their life and that performing the disability gave them access to these feelings of recognition that they wanted.

Lawrence:

They don’t even give themselves permission to be all those wonderful things without the disability. And that the other thing that really strikes me about the documentary, not quid pro quo, is that they are to the centimeter in terms of where that amputation needs to occur, right? Yeah.

sar:

With Vera Farmiga saying, I want to be T 12 disabled.

Lawrence:

Yes, exactly. T 11 won’t do it. T 10, no Uhuh, no got to be T 11. And so it’s this very sort of an obsession or a fixation on these imagined aspects about what disability is supposed to be that then become the compulsion or the motivation for whatever you’re seeing. Waiter, oh my God. It’s almost like, okay, so speculating. It’s almost like I believe that if, I would like to think like to think that if the director had seen that documentary that they would’ve gone a little bit more in depth and they would’ve, for lack of a better phrase, fleshed out the film better than they actually did. What I’m imagining is that they saw a blurb or a trailer for the documentary and they speculated everything else. They imagined everything else based on what the trailer or what the one paragraph blurb about the documentary would’ve said. Yeah,

Jeff:

That’s my theory as well. I think that they had some awareness if not of whole. There was also a series of articles in the press around the time that whole came out. So kind of 2004, 2005, which is probably right around the time he started writing the script. If the movie comes out in ’08, he probably was working on this thing in ’06, right?

sar:

Okay. Working with that theory, because that’s kind of a third level of socioemotional fetishization we’re now working with here. If we’re going from the kind of base sexual, then you move up to the kind of pseudo intellectual community acceptance, and then you move up toward the socio-emotional like, I belong nowhere else. This is the only place I belong. And I think you’re with me on the film’s concept until you cross the border from funny academic parody of intellectual fetish to toward people who have developed emotional fixations and disorders around not being who they say they are, particularly because you can’t talk about this without somebody then bringing up the trans community. Absolutely. But because this whole documentary, and I said this to Jeff yesterday when we were watching the movie, especially Vera Farmiga scenes where she’s quite literally sexually getting off on people looking at her. I’m like, this is kind of a republican fearmongering masterpiece. You can use this film as this definitive text of look at how many people fake disability for all these socioeconomic benefits and to feel better about themselves. This is why we won’t help any of them. And it does a fantastic job at that narrative. And I don’t think it meant to,

Lawrence:

In the incarnation of me after I left New York City, was to go immediately to Washington DC to work for the federal government. And my role there was for an independent federal agency called the National Council on Disability. That’s mandate is basically to recommend federal disability policy to the President Congress and other federal agencies. So I was basically as the comms lead for the agency, I was translating public policy speak and lawyer ease to the mass public, to the general public and turning it into plain language. And what is absolutely fascinating to me about that thesis right there, the assumption is that all someone has do is go on disability, which is what you fill out one piece of paper and then you take it into the Social security office and magically all your needs are met when in reality, 66% of all social security claims, like first social security claims are denied right off the bat. It’s a years long process whether or not you actually achieve the goal. I think your odds in getting, let’s say social security disability from the government in terms of government support go up, increase three times if you get an attorney, but most people can’t afford an attorney. And so they’re left in this limbo for years and years.

sar:

Oh, a hundred percent.

Lawrence:

And so the Republican fantasy is that all you have to do is say you’re disabled and then you get an accessible vehicle and you get somebody to come to your home and wipe your backside and you get an accessible apartment and everything is magically taken care of, quite like the magic shoes feeds into that fantasy ever with, ever without ever giving anybody the option to reality check it or to fact check it, right? It’s just presented as fact. It’s there in the ether and it’s there. That’s the ecosystem in this alternate universe in which this story takes place, and none of it is questioned as phony. It’s all accepted as fact.

sar:

But I think that’s the problem. It’s not marketing itself as an alternative universe. It’s positing itself in hyper reality and saying, look at all these bastards faking it. What are we going to do? And if I were a Republican candidate when this came out, I would be showing screenings of this film. If I were against socioeconomic policy and people getting support for disability, I would show this film every Saturday and try to get people to come see,

Lawrence:

Look these weirdos, look at these weirdos. Why do we have Medicare, Medicaid?

sar:

This is what we’re up against.

Lawrence:

This is what we’re up against. And scaring grandma. And sort of affirming air quotes here, or confirming every fantasy or every false notion about disability, because what is the narrative? The narrative is that people are going to game the system and that people don’t really need the supports and don’t really need the assistance, and that they’re taking advantage in some way of the kindness of society or those benefactors, which is anybody that’s ever had to apply for disability benefits can tell you it’s no walk in the park. And I wouldn’t wish that process on anybody. So it’s again, divorced from the reality that people face. But if you don’t know anything about it and you haven’t seen the sausage being made, you wouldn’t know the difference.

sar:

Yeah, a hundred percent. Your experience with this community is the basement handicap mafia. This is reality.

Lawrence:

Okay. Can I say one more thing too about her sort of fetishization of it, right? Some of the language that she uses and that is used in this portion of the film is very telling to me. I mean, one of the things she says that nervousness when she reveals herself to him goes into the other room. She comes back wearing what’s called a Milwaukee brace, and it’s kind of soft lighting and sexy, and you can imagine candles being burned, and she talks about being nervous to reveal herself to him. And then she says, nervousness is shame that somebody else catches you feeling. And in watching that scene, I was struck one, she’s got the leg braces on, but leg braces are designed anatomically to give weak legs, additional support for strength, for stamina, for balance, right? They’re usually locked at the ankles and they’re locked at the knees. These braces that she’s wearing are neither, she simply just saunters into the room without these braces doing the job that they were intended for

sar:

Kind of the ultimate visual metaphor of taking disability

Lawrence:

For the entire film!

sar:

Quid Pro Quo in general…

Lawrence:

If you haven’t lived it or if you haven’t done your homework, you wouldn’t notice those little details. But it’s those details, those nuances where you can actually spot a fake, right?

sar:

Well, she knows it too, because she’s so ready to share this really out there research on which vertebrae affects which muscles in your body. There’s no way she doesn’t know. No.

Lawrence:

Right? Absolutely. And then she basically jumps him, right? He does. Then she basically jumps him. So maybe, okay, you’re going to, are we going to find out if he can actually have sex at this point? He can sort of pushes back and says, wait, there’s somebody else. And here’s the gotcha, right? She’s actually paraplegic, right? And you see the wannabe kind of recoil in the way that you, I almost like Sunset Boulevard or something and the silent movie over the top. And so there’s this very, they go their whole little banter and start coming onto him again. And then they’re both in their wheelchairs making out and it’s getting the wheel steamy. And I’m like, wow, where are we going here? This is interesting.

sar:

They do the sexy wheelchairs spinning around each other wheel.

Lawrence:

And I remember thinking at this point, okay, maybe this film is redeemable, but before I’d seen the end like, oh, this is interesting. I’m curious to, and what does she do? Right in the middle of the hotness, she stands up and blows the mood

Jeff:

All while attempting to uncover the truth behind BIID. Isaac has been obsessing over a pair of fancy shoes that he sees at the window of a local pawn shop, buying them and trying them on a miracle occurs with the shoes Isaac can walk. Isaac begins to transition out of his PWD era and toward an ab era with his magic shoes, much to the chagrin of Fiona, who just doesn’t find Wiess sexy as their relationship phrase. Fiona steals the magic shoes and gives Isaac an ultimatum. If you want to walk again, you must disable me, Isaac. To investigate Fiona’s history, only to discover is shock and truth. Fiona, it turns out, was the young girl who caused the childhood car crash killing his parents and allegedly paralyzing him. But OMG guys, wait.

Lawrence:

Yes.

Jeff:

Isaac has hysterical paralysis for 20 years and is not actually disabled. No doctor ever told him. Fiona giving him the gift of his lives back then stares, longingly out his window before disappearing. And our 80 something minute episode of Touched by an Angel comes to a merciful end.

sar:

Excellent reference. That show was just heinous hysterical. Okay. I think the most interesting thing about the hysterical paralysis flash, psychosomatic injury arc was that this movie concedes pretty early on. It does not need any actual experts in the conversation. It doesn’t want lived experience experts. It doesn’t want cryp lifers, it doesn’t want anybody who’s in Crip community or academic community. It doesn’t even really want people who actually in big scare quotes are suffering from any of these BIID or et cetera, identity crises. They just want to have their experience in the moment entirely supplanted by anyone else’s approval or evidence. But the entire movie is about all of these people constantly wanting the approval of others. So there’s this kind of ironic injury, bit of, I think physical therapy is bullshit and magic Hughes are the answer, and I refuse to go see a doctor or I refuse to go see a psychiatrist. And all of those things would’ve literally fixed all my problems. But in lieu of that, I found that magic and being insanely selfish cured me all the same. That’s a dangerous message.

Lawrence:

Well, it’s an easy way out if you don’t have to do the homework. You don’t have to actually invest any time, effort, energy, or attention into the reality. You just make this shit up and then roll with it. And I think that’s what the problem with this film that you see over and over and over again, that it would set up these suppositions and then say, ah, logic be damned reality be damned. We’re just going to commit to this thing halfway half commit to it and then let you ascribe to it or attach to it, whatever you will. And there’s this, what you can see, I think that tug of war, that push pull that you’re talking that crisis of identity or conscience in the scene in the museum where she works, she’s a restorer of these artifacts or knickknacks.

And I love this because the knick stall character we’ve already established, he’s gone to work with crutches. He’s now not using the wheelchair. I believe he actually walks into the museum or wherever it is that she works using crutches or some sort of assistance. Is there a wheelchair? So you get to go a wheelchair, what happens, right? Yeah. But then you see him using the hospital issue, not his own wheelchair, but the hospital issue wheelchair, the one you can borrow at the museum if you get fatigued and then goes to visit her in her office and she’s got something she wants to tell him, he’s got something he wants to tell her. And then you literally have this role reversal with this, not ROLE, no, no, ROLL where he is what is getting up out of the wheelchair. And she then sits in it

sar:

Freaky Friday with the worst possible circumstances.

Lawrence:

And as he’s standing up, as he’s standing up and he’s excited, I can walk, it’s a miracle you’ll never walk alone. All this is happening. She’s going, no, no, no, no, no. And she’s kind of doing the here, no evil speak, no evil, see no evil thing. And she’s freaking out. She’s not at all interested in him or him walking or what his desires or needs are. She wants to maintain that fantasy, but

sar:

She wasn’t interested exactly the same way. So it really is the touched by an angel body change moment. Yeah,

Lawrence:

They were both guilty here, right? I mean they’re both doing the inverse of the same thing. Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

sar:

The moral of the story was if you are straight and white, shit will eventually just work out with you no matter how

Jeff:

That, yeah, I got to say the look of revulsion on her face when he gets up, sustains me because that was sort of the face I had watching this movie. Yeah.

Lawrence:

Finally I can identify with someone.

Jeff:

Yeah, I finally, this is my screen projection. I could put myself in her shoes. This is how I feel. So I think that the ultimate back stab of this movie, the ultimate sin of this text is the way that it presents disability in the first half as this cool hip subculture and then immediately betrays it in the second half by giving us another cure narrative. Where next all had to walk in the end. And as far as we know, Fiona does not end up disabling herself or may have jumped out a window. It’s very unclear what happened to her character. She vanishes

Lawrence:

Her neck, she literally throws him, there’s a big sort of face off, another face off right in her apartment and a conflict where she literally grabs him and throws him out of the wheelchair, throws him out of his wheelchair, and then poof, disappears. I can walk never

sar:

To be seen. We were debating whether or not she had died by suicide at the end of that, because I think, and I know the movie itself says, and then she moved away and everything was better. I dunno, I’m not convinced

Jeff:

By that. It does say that she couldn’t find her, that she asked, said he couldn’t find her.

Lawrence:

I never saw her again. That’s the last time, something like that.

Jeff:

Which is why I think she was an angel. So here’s my hot take. Are you ready for my hot take?

sar:

We’re not doing Touch by an Angel. That movie died at the end of the eighties for a reason.

Jeff:

My hot take is she also died in the car accident and she has been growing up as a ghost in this world, and that when she restored his walking ability, she was then allowed to leave this planet and finally transcended the after.

Lawrence:

So the director’s not only ripping off Cronenberg, Lynch, Michael Powell, Brian De Palma, but ripping off M. Night Shyamalan as well.

sar:

Isn’t everyone really ripping off Shyamalan?

Jeff:

Well, if only,

sar:

Okay, my rebuttal to that, A, the film just makes it fucking impossible if you haven’t seen it. She interacts with dozens of strangers and is not Haley, Joel Osmond. But B, I’ve been thinking the past couple minutes based on our conversation about the scene where she goes home with her, it’s a mom ex boyfriend, her mom, and they have that really weird conversation about, okay, mom, you are not the final arbiter on who gets to make great porcelain on Elephant. So that’s the thing she has in her basement for the reversal. And now I’m thinking, and this might also give the film way too much credit. What if that elephant, the only reason it got so much dialogue was to be kind of the central metaphor for that reversal scene. Because the whole thing was kind of an exploration of the ability part of disability and what so many abs abled people get so caught up in when they’re talking about disability.

It has to be about, well, what can you do? Or what are you able to do? Instead of any of the conversations Crips actually want to have about like, okay, well can you not just take that for granted, which is how you get stuff like ability achievement centers and shit that everybody thinks are so offensive. She’s doing that conversation with that stupid fucking porcelain elephant with her mom. And I didn’t connect it until right now where she’s saying, I don’t know who the fuck made you the arbiter of who gets to make great porcelain elephants.

Jeff:

But I think the amazing part of that scene is that the writer director is the Fiona character because somebody, his mother should have told him before making this film, you haven’t done a single drawing class. You cannot make a beautiful elephant.

sar:

There are actually arbiters of this and also ability and they’re called experts. And that’s what all of you need.

Jeff:

And it’s just wild to me that in this film, there’s this conversation of like, you can’t just manifest something. You have to actually work at something and learn about something in order to do it. And clearly the producers of this film didn’t do that work on disability community before making a film about disability community.

Lawrence:

It’s the overcoming narrative, right? You’re overcoming all these obstacles without any thought recognition or realization about the reality of any it, right? You just work hard enough or you will it into being right and it can be. So it’s the inspiration porn on steroids. Yeah,

Jeff:

Absolutely.

sar:

But with the flavor of all of these levels of ability, the sexual ability, the intellectual,

Lawrence:

Yeah,

sar:

Emotional ability,

Lawrence:

Which are hyper able, right?

sar:

Well, Nick Stall going to tell you, he’s hyper able.

Lawrence:

If the studio hadn’t butchered it up and cut out all of these scenes, Allah, magnificent Andersons, what could quid pro quo have been for audiences and the disability community?

Jeff:

Probably still garbage. But we have a way of determining this because here at Inval culture, of course, we have a fully empirical, rigorous scientific methodology which we use to evaluate the quality of the films that we have viewed. So let’s see how quid pro quo does on the invalid culture scale. Our first question, on a scale of one to five, with five being the least accurate, how accurately does this film portray disability?

Lawrence:

5.5.

sar:

You can’t do that. That’s against the rules.

Lawrence:

Five. All right. It’s five because they just got none of the details. None of them from our walking around without the braces locked to the magically appearing ramp. There’s a scene in the museum where she’s there talking to somebody and you see him arrive, show up from behind, he’s in the distance. There are four stairs there, and there’s a ramp. There is a ramp that they’ve added onto the stairs that are magically there, appear out of nowhere, that he’s then able to wheel down and then go over and see them. This is in the third act of the film. There are things like this. Nobody has an issue getting into a taxi cab. He talks about not being able to ride in a taxi, but then you see him in one. There’s so many inconsistencies throughout here that don’t speak true to reality. So I would say on this, I give it a five for those reasons.

sar:

Lawrence, the New York King, you know how I knew this was bullshit because of the cabs? Lemme tell you,

Alright, I’m going to give it, I’m going to give it a three. And I agree with Lawrence that they get just about everything wrong, but I think at least some of the time they’re very intentionally getting it wrong. And that’s when we were talking about kind of the levels of feta that were going on there, but I don’t think it sticks the landing. It wants to get some stuff wrong to try to start some of these actually pretty great conversations about the lengths of ability and how we arbit ability and all of these things. And it just does it so badly that I called it the Republican fearmongering masterpiece because it got a lot more to convince you that disabled people are trying to just pull one over on you at all times.

Jeff:

Yeah, I’m going to split the difference on this. I’ve even a four for basically all of the same reasons. I didn’t give it the full five because as host of this show, I have literally seen worse. And that is a staggering statement to say

sar:

Sobering,

Jeff:

Sobering thoughts with Jeff Preston. On a scale of one to five, with five being the hardest, how hard was it for you to get through this film?

Lawrence:

I got to give it a three because I was completely gobsmacked by it. And I remember thinking, how the hell are they going to end this thing? Just when I thought it couldn’t get any worse, it did. And I was completely fascinated by knowing that it probably wasn’t going to improve the film. It was a car crash of a movie. And I did find myself intellectually interested in just how they’re going to wrap this train wreck up. So I think I give that a three for those reasons.

sar:

I’m going to say a two. And that’s because when I’m doing a film theory for films that aren’t garbage, I’m actually a huge fan of Vera Amiga. I think she’s a really gifted horror film actress in particular, and she’s unstoppable in Bates Motel. So as soon as she came on, I went from casual disinterest in this movie to wrapped attention. I was paying attention to everything, trying to figure out some gem in the screenplay she apparently saw to sign onto this film and I never found it. But if she ever hears this honest to God dying to know,

Jeff:

I suspect that they were given the script one page at a time.

sar:

I’m already in. I’ve deposited the money,

Lawrence:

I signed the contract. I can’t get on now. I’m trapped. They’re going to take my leg braces away.

Jeff:

So I gave this a three. It’s not the worst thing I’ve ever watched, but lordy, this movie is so horny and I have never felt less aroused in my entire life. In fact, I think you could show this film to high school students and it might lead to abstinence. So I’m going to give this a three. It’s not the worst, but there are some painful moments. On a scale of one to five, with five being the maximum, how often did you laugh at things that were not supposed to be funny?

Lawrence:

Again, there’s the belly laughter, the guffaw, the I can’t believe how wrong that is. And then there’s kind of that shake my head laugh. Did that really just, did I just see that? Did they just say that kind of curiosity, right? With a raised eyebrow. So I think I was probably at a round a four there because after a certain point where it seemed like it was not, I held out hopes at the beginning that it was going to be redeemed. When it became clear that there was no redeeming this piece of trash, then I just was like, all right, enjoy the ride. See where this thing goes. And so yeah, I’d say that’s about four.

sar:

I think my bias is that whenever Jeff wants to watch a movie with me, the scale is irrevocably screwed because I know we’re not going to be watching a Hollywood blockbuster. So I kind of subdue my expectations as soon as Jeff says, okay, this is the one I want to watch. So I’m looking at between Christmas Evil to at Best Freaky Friday. So within that scale, I actually thought we did pretty well. I’ll give it a four. I was pretty entertained by this film, and I’ll give it the credit of, because I know a lot of my friends and Jeff’s friends are like legit disability theorists. This film does reward you for applying theory where you absolutely shouldn’t. We have two great conversations about where this could have gone.

Lawrence:

Yes, its own bizarro land Easter egg, right? Unintentional Easter egg for those who conceive of such things. Yeah.

Jeff:

Yeah. So I came in on a five on this one. I thought this movie was hilarious. And I don’t think it was trying to be, I think it was trying to be, as it says, it says it’s a darkly erotic tale. They were trying to be so sexy and cool and noir and this is bloody comedy. It is hilarious.

Lawrence:

So this could be sort of the disability equivalent of the room, Jeff, is that what you’re saying?

Jeff:

Oh man, it is dangerously close.

Lawrence:

Imagine. So yeah, imagine what the objects we would be that we’d bring into the screening to throw at the screen.

Jeff:

Oh God. Braces.

sar:

And everyone brings stuffed elephants. And when we went to the elephant scene, everybody stands up shaking it like I’m the elephant. I can arbit my own fate

Jeff:

Oh no…

Lawrence:

Don’t forget the shoes.

Jeff:

Oh yeah. You got to wear, wear your fancy shoes. Oh lord.

sar:

Jeff, we should unironically suggest to The Princess, who holds room viewings like five or six times a year, that we would host disability screenings of this film. Anytime.

Lawrence:

Alright, here is my pledge to you. If you can arrange this feat, this coup d’etat, if you can get the room to screen this film as a midnight movie, I will either by plane, train, boat, or donkey find a way to get there to be part of it.

Jeff:

Yes. Done. The challenge is out. And I think that this is now, I think the third or fourth GoFundMe that we have pitched on this podcast here. So open those wallets folks.

sar:

But that’s what I actually want.

Jeff:

Oh, I want all of them. Come on. You don’t want a sequel to Tiptoes? We need a sequel to Tiptoes.

Lawrence:

Oh SO right. Oh my God. We need to, yeah, we should make this a weekend. There’s so much that can be done here.

Jeff:

Absolutely. Last but not least, scale of one to five, with five being the most, how many steps back did this film put? Disabled people?

Lawrence:

You couldn’t call this the escalator, you couldn’t call this the, is the Mount Everest of films that set back disabled people. One, because none of it’s informed by actual experience of disabled people or disability community. As Sarah so rightly put, it’s all the imagined all the worst things that the worst Republicans bearing in mind that George W. Bush a Republican is who signed the a DA. But since that time, right? All the worst fantasies about disability that we’ve been conditioned to adopt or accept. And so I would say I don’t even, this goes to the moon and back. I don’t know that I can calculate the number of steps that this has set disability back. But I will say that if someone goes into it with sort of a literal mindset, that’s the case. However, if you are an imaginative personality, if you are someone who is somewhat seeped in disability history or disability culture or disability community, and you’re someone who likes to pull back the curtain and pay attention to whatever’s behind there and what’s taking place, I’d say that it’s a zero and that it’s a wealth of opportunity to explore and examine and to dissect.

I think ultimately it depends on the audience, but I would say since most people who have been exposed to this film are not in seeped in any of those wonderful things that I just mentioned, I’m going to give it a five.

sar:

Yeah, I think I said in the first episode that if this movie had come out before the ADA had passed, this would’ve introduced significant difficulty of the ADA becoming law which is impressive for one film to have that kind of power

Lawrence:

…that kind of power, right? Yeah.

sar:

It definitely strikes me as a film that would resonate strongly with people who were already suspicious of disability culture. So for that reason, I’d have to give it a five.

Jeff:

Yeah. I’m going to complete the triad. I gave this a five because watching this movie was the first time that I didn’t want to be disabled because I didn’t want to be a part of any of this. So because it undid my identity.

Lawrence:

So this film would’ve made you renounce.

Jeff:

I’ve renounced it all. If this is disability, I’ve renounce.

sar:

You don’t want to be in CDS gang. You want to be in handicap Mafia.

Jeff:

Yeah, sorry. Yes. Okay. Okay. I can, if there’s an opportunity for me to meet in a dank basement with the wannabes, I’ll hang out there. I guess.

sar:

You would do it. You would do it once.

Jeff:

Oh, you got to try it once.

sar:

Jeff Preston will do anything once. You got to try it once.

Jeff:

You haven’t lived until you’ve hung out in a basement with one of these.

sar:

So Jeff’s review is, this is the first piece of cultural media that made me actually regret being disabled. So is that a five?

Jeff:

That’s a five. That is a pure five.

sar:

Alright. You want to know the total? You want to give me a drum roll?

Jeff:

Yeah. Drum roll.

Lawrence:

[drum roll noises]

sar:

48

Jeff:

With a 48 Quid Pro Quo, unsurprisingly but very deservingly, has won the coveted Jerry Lewis seal of approval. We did it, gang.

sar:

That was it. As soon as this movie ended, I knew this was going to be a really funny episode.

Lawrence:

And to quote Mr. Lewis, right, those half persons imprisoned in their steel chairs,

Jeff:

They should just stay home if they don’t want to be pity.

Lawrence:

Right? If you don’t want to be pity, just stay home. Right. Or in the basement of a dank.

Jeff:

Yeah.

Lawrence:

Certain churches.

Jeff:

Yeah. Well, that concludes our episode. Thank you so much, Lawrence, for joining us. Thank you, Sarah, for being here. I’m really sorry that I’m your friend and thank you to the audience for joining us, and please do not watch this movie

Mvll Crimes (theme song):

Not going out today because I’m feeling too upset. Arguing with strangers on the Internet. Everyone is wrong, I just haven’t told them yet.

 

Come for the teen murder, stay for the harshest eulogy of all time.

What happens when the movie “Mean Girls” has a baby with the movie “Carrie”? You get the excessively strange Christian inspiration porn adjacent film “Touched By Grace”…apparently. Currently viewable for free on YouTube, this film follows teenager Cara’s evolution from high school bad girl to caring youth group member, a metamorphosis made possible by a special friendship with a young woman with down syndrome.

Join Erika and Jeff as they dive into promposals, questionable eulogies and possible crimes against humanity in another thrilling episode of Invalid Culture.

Listen at…

Grading the Film

As always, this film is reviewed with scores recorded in four main categories, with 1 being the best and 5 being the worst. Like the game of golf, the lower the score the better.

How accurate is the representation?

Jeff – 4 / 5

Erika – 4 / 5

Total – 8 / 10

How difficult was it to watch the movie?

Erika – 4 / 5

Jeff – 2 / 5

Total – 6 / 10

How often were things unintentionally funny?

Erika – 5 / 5

Jeff – 5 / 5

Total – 10 / 10

How far back has it put disabled people?

Jeff – 3.5 / 5

Erika – 4 / 5

Total – 7.5 / 10

The Verdict

A Crime May Have Been Committed

 

Erika:
Welcome to Invalid Culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling representations of disability in popular culture. Unlike other podcasts that review films you’ve probably heard of, Invalid Culture is all about the abyss of pop culture adjacent media that just never quite broke through because, well, they’re just awful. I’m your host, Erika.
Jeff:
I’m your other host, Jeff. It’s time now for us to think about some culture that might just be invalid.
[Theme song: “Arguing with Strangers” by Mvll Crimes, a choppy punk song with lyrics “I’m arguing with strangers on the internet – not going out today because I’m feeling too upset. Arguing with strangers on the internet and I’m winning. AND I’M WINNING!!”]
Erika:
Jeff, how are you doing today?
Jeff:
I am excited to be back. I feel like I haven’t watched a terrible movie in so long.
Erika:
Well, I would be able to say the same if I hadn’t just recently watched Touched by Grace. Safe to say I am happy to be back, coasting as we are, straight through the second full year. Are we into the third year of pandemic now? I’ve actually lost count.
Jeff:
I don’t know. I think we’re still in 2020, so we’ll just see where we pop out the other side.
Erika:
Perfect.
Jeff:
I think so. I think so. Speaking of what it feels like to be in a global pandemic, this episode, we watched a thrilling film called Touched by Grace, which had all of the same what is happening that we have experienced in COVID. Now, I’m all of our loyal listeners have listened to the, or have watched rather, the movie before, but in case you have not yet managed to watch this amazing film, let’s give you a little bit of a breakdown.
What is Touch by Grace? Well, Local mean girl, Cara is moving away from her best friends forever after pulling a totally sweet, albeit, fat shaming prank on a fellow youth. Now, in her new city, she has no friends, but it’s okay because Cara’s thirsty mom encourages her to befriend cafe worker and high school, 35-year-old senior Brandon, and eventually connects with the other local mean girls, Quinn and Skyler.
One day, went out taking pictures at a playground, for reasons, Cara meets and befriends Grace, a person with Down syndrome. Cara begins to become a better person or something, but still wants to impress her new friends. Skyler and Quinn, her new mean girlfriends decide then to play an epic senior prank modeled after a prank that Cara claims to have played at her own school, which includes getting Grace nominated prom queen and then humiliated her before the school by making her sing on stage.
But wait, Brandon, the cafe worker, and his brother Ben, who is essentially the Down syndrome version of Dr. Ruth, surprised Cara and Grace within awesome promposal that involves a gorilla costume and pop in a million balloons with a group of very cool Christian teens. The plan succeeds and eventually Grace will have some sort of attack of some version on stage while singing and legit dies.
Her preacher then gives an impassioned speech, repeatedly clarified that Grace was a broken blight on society. Lessons were learned, I suppose. No one is charged for manslaughter and the movie ends. Perhaps most importantly though, the box description of this movie explains it is inspired by real bullying events that our teenagers in our community have witnessed happening in their local high schools. Did we witness a murder, Erika?
Erika:
We witnessed some violence, that’s for sure.
Jeff:
I think that is completely fair. Okay, if we take a high view of the film, what were your general impressions of this beautiful piece of art?
Erika:
I think my most general impression was that I felt, in some ways, that we were watching a recap of season one of Invalid Culture. It was as though every theme we had discovered discussed during the first season was recapped for us in this film with, of course, some notable additions. I’m pretty pumped to be getting into those additions today, but yeah, I think just like your standard train wreck.
Jeff:
Yeah. I have to be honest with our viewers. I started watching this film a couple weeks before Erika and I watched it. I got about halfway through and I stopped it because I knew that this was going to be the first episode of our season because this movie is so ridiculous, so absurd, but yet, I don’t know, there’s something about this movie that brought me back that made me want to watch it again. Part of it was because I wanted to see some of the just borderline human rights violations that occurred in this film.
Number two, I was enamored with the fact that the film seemed to actually have a lot of insight into people with disabilities, but seem to have almost zero insight on people that do not have disabilities. This is, I think, the first film I’ve ever watched where I’m like, “Have you never met a non-disabled person ever,” because none of the non-disabled characters behaved like real people in this film. That, I thought, was just such a beautiful inversion. I knew we had to do it.
Erika:
Shall we get into some of what the critics had to say?
Jeff:
Yeah, absolutely. There are people much smarter than us that have words to say about this film.
Erika:
We are looking here exclusively at the popular critics. Shall we begin with Judy F. from Christian Cinema?
Jeff:
Absolutely.
Erika:
Judy F. gave this film five Stars and said, “What a wonderful movie. As a child that was teased due to my walking handicap, I saw an excellent lesson for all to watch and learn from. Thanks for the great movie.”
Jeff:
Now, I want to talk about this a lot more later, but what lesson did this film… I do not actually know what the lesson that is being learned by this film.
Erika:
No.
Jeff:
I have no idea.
Erika:
I was going to ask you the exact same question.
Jeff:
I actually am more partial with another Christian cinema reviewer. Two stars from iOSC. Yup, that is right, iOS is in the Mac operating system for your phone. iOSC, two stars, “I enjoyed the film.”
Erika:
Jeff, you found my review. That was me, iOSC, two stars, “I enjoyed the film.” Shall we move on to Amazon? Honestly, I mean, I guess Amazon has everything. Part of me is a little bit surprised that this film is on Amazon.
Jeff:
Yeah. It’s barely on Amazon. You can buy it on Amazon. It is very expensive, very expensive.
Erika:
Okay. That means that Amazon is aware of it but does not actually have it.
Jeff:
Precisely.
Erika:
All right. Another five star review. We have Carolyn Kowalski, “Yes. Great movie. Teaches kids to respect and appreciate each other. Also working with special ed kids and adults, which I do every day at the grocery store. Sara Cicilian was great in this movie. She was one my scouts in high school, so I was very anxious to own and watch one of her movies.”
Jeff:
I love this review because of this weird admission right in the middle. Why do you believe that Carolyn needed to disclose to us that they work with special ed kids and adults in grocery stores?
Erika:
I’m just having trouble processing what that means.
Jeff:
I wonder if this is an appeal to authority. I know disabled people, therefore, I can assess that this is a good film.
Erika:
Oh, yup, yup.
Jeff:
You know who has figured it out, is our reviewer Wimpy Charlie, four stars explains, “It’s an excellent movie, but perfect for teenagers. I would recommend this movies for teenagers to watch.” This is actually something we’ve seen a lot in a lot of the reviews. A lot of people believe that this is a film for teenagers, and I would strongly debate that point.
Erika:
Yeah. I would advise, I mean, I would not advise anyone to watch this movie, but especially not teenagers.
Jeff:
No. I think the lessons that teenagers would learn from this film is how to murder someone with Down Syndrome.
Erika:
How to murder, how make fun of. I just don’t, I mean, the film as we know it is called Touched by Grace, but the alternative title is the Senior Prank.
Jeff:
Yes. Yes. That’s a good point. The movie was originally going to be called, The Senior Prank. The Prank is the heart of the movie.
Erika:
Yeah. No, definitely not for teens.
Jeff:
We have one last review and this one I’m going to turn over to you, Erika. This one comes from the YouTube channel that is hosting this entire film free for you to watch right now, Christian Movies on YouTube.
Erika:
From Kate Pearson,” I absolutely loved this film. If only everyone could see the world through Grace’s eyes. I used to work and look after people with Down syndrome, and I always wanted to have a child with the condition too. The way they see life and the amount of love they have in their hearts, we see life and stress and worry about stupid things. We get upset and argue with others, but people who have this disability are so loving, pure and see life full of color and compassion as well as full of happiness.
God only gives children with disabilities to special parents. It makes me sad that, although, it was only a film, that there are so many judgmental people out there who are so sad and unsatisfied in their own lives that they have to be nasty and ugly to others because they see them as different, but God made us all different for a reason. He gave us compassion to use it. Some people say manners don’t cost anything. Well, neither does compassion or love. Use it.” Xxxx Kate Brit Flag xxxxx.
Jeff:
Okay. There is a lot going on. I don’t even know where to start.
Erika:
I strongly suspect that Kate Pearson had a role in creating this film.
Jeff:
Interesting. This is a hot take. Tell me more.
Erika:
I am hearing themes of the film that none of the other, let’s say “objective reviewers” have picked up on. The idea that the world is such a cruel place, which again, I am baffled that none of the other reviews picked up on this because that was probably the most striking feature of this film for me.
Jeff:
Should, absolutely, yes, absolutely.
Erika:
As we will unpack ourselves shortly, there really seems to be a description in this review from Kate about the way that disabled people are different in a very good, trust me, listen to me, honestly, I swear, very good way, but different, and that’s kind of what I was getting from the film as well.
Jeff:
Now, what do you think about the desire to have a child, the idea that almost like this has pet vibes to me, where it’s like, “Oh, I’ve always wanted a Corgi dog and I’ve always wanted a Down syndrome child.”
Erika:
Yup. I mean, right on brand for this kind of peculiar objectification that we see come through in this film. A bit of out of alignment with a message that came straight from the dialogue of the film where it is stated that disabled people, no matter how much people are willing to care for them, are actually extreme burdens on society.
Jeff:
Right. Yeah and what is perhaps the best eulogy of all time. I find that this really leans into this idea that people down syndrome are these sharabic, angelic, loving in all ways, simple people that see the best in life, which strikes me as the belief of someone who doesn’t actually have any sort of interactions with people without Down syndrome, which isn’t to say that they are monsters, but that people with Down syndrome are complex people because they’re people.
Erika:
Yeah. As I read this review, I think like, “Oh, I’ve heard this before. I’ve seen this represented before.” It’s not what I got from the film. It’s not what I get from real life, but I’ve definitely heard this narrative before.
Jeff:
Yeah. It feels like it comes from the Special Needs Mom “branded” TM. This idea that, it’s like this desire to make them valuable. Well, they’re not valuable in all the ways that we see other people valuable. Maybe they’re good spirited nature, that could be the way that they’re valuable and there’s a productive value in that because it helps us to be better people and to see the world through their eyes.
There was a lot of that, I think, in a lot of the other reviews as well. This idea of wanting to see the world in the way that Grace sees the world, which I find particularly bizarre in this film, where Grace doesn’t actually have that much of a role in the film other than being a friend, eventually being a date, talking about wanting to tell her to preach, to give her testimony as to her relationship with God and then dying. That’s Grace’s arc. I don’t really actually understand what people are learning from Grace in this film.
Erika:
No. I don’t think that Grace is a character, a properly developed character in this film. Grace is, I spent this whole film just wanting to know more about Grace and this film does not deliver on that in any way.
Jeff:
Hot take, hot counter argument, I thought the other character with Down syndrome, Ben, the brother of Brandon, I actually felt the kind of opposite. Ben actually kind of felt like what people were saying Grace is like. Ben was kind of loving and happy go lucky and was living his best life as a rocker. He was sort of doing all these things, but the movie is not Touched by Ben. It’s Touched by Grace. I wonder, because I think Touched by Ben is probably a very different Christian film probably.
Erika:
Whew. Yup. Yup. Just to yank us back on track here. I would agree with you fully, not all aspects, but I did overall really enjoy the Ben plot line character representation. I mean, what is that? What is that? What is it that the supporting actor has no depth of character and then this random side plot character has so much?
Jeff:
Yeah, it’s a huge question. Maybe this is just about actors, actor ability. Maybe Ben was just a better actor than Grace, but if you think about what we know about Ben, there’s actually a pretty good list of stuff, of things that we know about Ben, whereas Grace, we know that she is obsessed with a butterfly metaphor. This idea of the ugly caterpillar becoming a beautiful butterfly that is core to her personality. She appears to American Idol and she dies. She has many medical conditions, apparently.
Erika:
Yes, extremely ill despite appearing fine all of the time.
Jeff:
She has a bad heart. That’s like the most distinct of the medical problems that were given is that she has a bad heart and maybe asthma, but that’s never actually described. I’m not really sure. This movie was a train wreck, but it is time for us, I think, to get a little bit more analytical. To start our journey through this film, let’s play that old fun game of name that trope. Erika, what was a great disability trope that you found in this film?
Erika:
One of the clearest messages coming out of this portrayal is that the world is overtly hostile towards disabled people in the most extreme and dramatic ways. I don’t think in representation or in real life, have I ever seen more abject disablism.
Jeff:
Yeah.
Erika:
Including, I mean, this film also flashed me back to elementary school when I think some 20 to 30 years ago, the sort of public imagination about disability was maybe a little bit less educated, a little less PC and eight-year-olds were using the R word and certain hand gestures and of mocked slurred speech to make fun of each other. I really did not expect to see that from teenagers in a, what was this, 2014 production.
Jeff:
This was not an old movie, correct. Yes.
Erika:
Yes and not just teenagers, but the mother, the mother of the…
Jeff:
The mother-
Erika:
The protagonist mother has, just to the point that she sees disabled people walk into a restaurant and says, “We need to leave immediately.”
Jeff:
Yeah. She’s like, “What is this, a Special Olympics?” There was three disabled people. We’re not even talking, it was a small group of friends.
Erika:
She’s just appalled to find out that her daughter’s new friend has Down syndrome.
Jeff:
Horrified.
Erika:
How could you? How could you?
Jeff:
A shame on the family.
Erika:
Yeah.
Jeff:
Oh, 100%. The mother was hands down my favorite character in this film because her discrimination was both so kind of real, but also so extreme. This was cranked up to 13. No one would be able to watch this and not be like, “That was a horrible thing for you to do or say.” I’m like in equal parts honored and impressed by, but also kind of horrified by.
The level that this film decided to go at like stereotypes and discrimination against people with intellectual disabilities, because some of it is like, yeah, it’s dead on, but it’s always taken to the most extreme level, a level that I’m like, I actually don’t think, I mean, it’s bad up there for disabled people everywhere, yes, but I don’t think it’s ever this overtly and randomly and casually terrible.
Erika:
To the point that the actors, at some point, seem visibly uncomfortable with their character portrayals.
Jeff:
Okay. We have to address this great scene, my favorite scene, the scene that I paused the movie afterwards and immediately texted Erika, Skyler and Quinn start to do a pantomime and in a very brilliant way, I would argue. First, Quinn does what a century sounds like somebody with hearing loss or a deaf person trying to talk, sort of the slurred speech and Skyler is like, “No. You idiot. She’s not deaf. She’s this.” Then, does the Donald Trump cerebral palsy sort of hand beat it on the chest, this slurred version of the R word? If you look in these two actor’s eyes during the scene, you can see the exact moment they realize they’re going to hell.
Erika:
Which, I think that’s a beautiful segue into trope two, because I think that’s actually part of the point of this film, is using disability to find God, to find a path to redemption, and these mean girls that you were just describing, they’re the non-religious crew. This is kind of a clear setup in this film where we have the non-religious folks are extremely and overtly prejudiced towards disability. Then, the religious folks are extremely compassionate and caring.
Jeff:
Yeah. I mean, you kind of know what you’re getting into when you start a movie and it’s called Touched by Grace, we’re all about to be touched by this disabled person. Yes, but I think you’ve made a really interesting point though here too, that there’s actually two roles being played here. It’s not just about how is disabled person going to teach us how to be better people, but there seems to also be some clear instruction about the role that nondisabled people need to play in the lives of disabled people.
Erika:
Yeah. I was getting this strong able bodied saviorism where we have these non-disabled or non-apparently disabled main characters. Brandon is the dreamy, far too old to be in high school.
Jeff:
Easily 45 years old. That guy has a 401(k).
Erika:
Yeah. I mean, the mom knows this because the mom starts to hit on him immediately and then sort of realizes, “Oh shoot, are you a high school senior? I should be setting you up with my daughter, actually.”
Jeff:
Yeah. Phenomenal pivot there.
Erika:
Yeah. This is in the smoothie shop where Brandon works. We have, and Brandon, you mentioned the second character with Down syndrome is Ben, who it turns out to be Brandon’s brother. Brandon is the brother to men with Down syndrome and he knows Grace from the smoothie shop or from school, oh, I guess, from youth group.
Jeff:
It’s probably from youth group, yeah.
Erika:
Right. They’re all kind of connected. Brandon is just so impressed with the, I can’t remember his words exactly, but how naturally Cara is able to treat disabled people like equals. She assures him that it’s not…
Jeff:
Well, not-
Erika:
… natural at all for her and she’s trying very hard.
Jeff:
Which to be fair, I would also be impressed if my first introduction to you was your mother being like, “We have to leave this place. There’s a disabled person here.”
Erika:
Right. We watched this arc. I think really this is what the film is about. The arc of the main, the primary arc of this film is watching Cara’s evolution as a human away from this fat shaming bully to secular, fat shaming, bully to this found, saved, caring person, and we sort of rely on Grace in the film to help, to be able to see this evolution in Cara from sort of an ignorant hatred to this care, albeit a pity-laced care. There’s always sort of I’m doing it because I care for her, not because I actually see her as my equal, but because I understand that the good thing to do is to treat her as an equal.
Jeff:
That there’s value, because I will also get access to this understanding of a different way of seeing the world, but I will see this beauty, once you stop paying attention to the, and they say more than once, disgusting, hairy caterpillar into the beautiful butterfly…
Erika:
Yeah.
Jeff:
… which is maybe a puberty. Is this a puberty text? Is the hairy, disgusting caterpillar like puberty?
Erika:
I mean, okay, I think at face value, it seems that this butterfly metaphor, and for anyone who might not have watched the film yet, the only thing we know about Grace is that she really loves butterflies and is actively…
Jeff:
Harvesting.
Erika:
… fostering these caterpillars in their process of metamorphosis. On the surface, you have this noble message that it’s what’s on the inside that counts, but, I mean, ultimately it’s not really about inner beauty because it’s not like you have the beautiful thing that stays on the inside. It’s really about metamorphosis. It’s really about shedding this ugly interior and letting your inner beauty shine or as I read it, finding God.
Jeff:
Becoming sort of a beautiful, better person in the life of the Lord.
Erika:
I assume this is the direction that you were going in when you called this trope the disabled as patron saint.
Jeff:
Right. Yeah. Not quite spirit guide, exactly, but this totem that symbolizes or evokes or maybe materializes these deeper teachings, these deeper teachings of care and compassion and seeing the best in people and caring for people. I think looking at this through the lens of metamorphosis, kind of does explain this awkward moment at the very beginning of the film when Cara meets Grace for the first time and she sort of like doesn’t want to be friends with her, and then Grace mentions that she’s friends with Brandon and that she can help set Cara up with Brandon. Now, all of a sudden Cara’s like, “Yes, I will be your friend.”
Erika:
Okay. That’s just really interesting to juxtapose with Ben being the, how does he self-describe as the?
Jeff:
The doctor of love.
Erika:
The doctor of love. They’re both this sort of conduit to relationship or to love.
Jeff:
Yeah. They facilitate the relationships, despite the fact that central in the movie is Grace’s anxiety, literal to the point that she has some sort of medical attack that requires a puffer after she gets sprayed with a milkshake, but this anxiety that she will not find love and that no one will ever ask her to prom. Then, Brandon’s like, “Well, I do have someone who can ask you to prom,” but really it’s because now I’m able to ask Cara to prom.
It’s like I really do wonder how the Ben-Grace relationship acts as this way of sanitizing the life’s sexual desire of Cara and Brandon. Cara and Brandon want to pork, but you can’t because this is a Christian film. Instead, they’re going to go on this innocent date with Ben and Grace, because it’s obviously innocent. They have Down syndrome. They’re not sexual beings. Therefore, Brandon and Cara can also then go on this date and it’s safe and it’s not sexual because they’re all just friends in the Lord, but they would’ve porked probably if Grace hadn’t died.
Erika:
Yeah. That was the curve ball that no one saw coming. I mean, okay, looking back, the film is full of this gratuitous medicalization. The foreshadowing was 100% there. It just seemed so illogical. Yeah, we heard that she needs her meds, she needs her meds, she needs her meds…
Jeff:
And a new heart.
Erika:
… and a new heart. Her mom sort of shamefully draws attention to the medical equipment in her bedroom. “Oh, don’t look at that,” but do.
Jeff:
Which is sitting beside her butterflies.
Erika:
Oh.
Jeff:
Currently these are gross, hairy caterpillars, and that’s where the medical equipment is sitting.
Erika:
To be totally fair, the foreshadowing was there, but I think literally as we were watching it, we were saying, “No. No. They’re not. They’re not. They wouldn’t.” Then, flash forward, and you’re clearly at a funeral.
Jeff:
Yeah. This, I honestly, I’m going to go out on a limb here, this is one of the most shocking disability deaths at the end of a film, which we should have seen it coming, but the way the film is going and the tone of the film, you would never imagine that they were just going to slaughter this girl at the end. It felt like she would have trouble and she would make a recovery because of her faith in God, there was going to be this Christic pure movie. That’s really what it really felt like.
I really felt like all this, she’s sick and she’s sick and dying, felt like it was more setting up that, and then they were just like, “No. Rug pulled out. She dead.” I was thrilled, thrilled. I had cheered. I was so excited. I couldn’t believe it. I was like, I didn’t think I was going to get this, but once again, the disabled character must die.
Erika:
I don’t think I had time to be thrilled. I mean, I can’t say I would’ve been thrilled, but I don’t think I had time to before we launched straight into the eulogy to end all disabled eulogies.
Jeff:
We have to play this clip. We have to just let people hear it because it is the most beautiful eulogy that has ever been given for a disabled person. I have to tell you, I almost Graced at the end of this eulogy. I literally almost died watching this. If you’re driving right now, please pull over, just in case you also die.
Speaker 3:
Internationally renowned nurse and journalist, Claire Rayner, once stated that, “The hard facts are that it is costly in terms of human effort, compassion, energy, and finite resources such as money to care for individuals with handicaps. People who are not yet parents should ask themselves if they have the right to inflict such burdens on others; however, willing they are, themselves to take their share of the burden in the beginning.”
This philosophy has been echoed throughout most so-called advanced civilizations. In fact, because of this philosophy, over 90% of Down syndrome babies are aborted before they ever have a chance to take a breath, but we are here today because we believe in the words of First Corinthians 1:27, that God shows the foolish things of this world to shame the wise.
God shows the weak things of this world to shame the strong. We are here because one of the weak things, one of the least in this world, Grace Elizabeth Young touched our lives with the brightness of her strength and changed our lives forever with the light of Jesus shining in her smile. Let’s pray.
Erika:
He quotes a nurse, a nurse who says it’s expensive and requires a lot of human resources to care for people with handicaps and that those who are not yet parents should ask themselves whether they really have the right to inflict such burden on others.
Jeff:
Yeah, which then connects to the horrifying stat that we are regularly aborting people with Down syndrome. Then, he pivots again to repeatedly assure us that Grace is a weak, despicable person who is there to shame and humble the strong and intelligent, and that she did. She was a successful vessel for the message being sent by the Lord through this person. Then, it ends, and that’s all we get at the funeral.
Erika:
That was the point at which I went, “Oh, this is a pro-life propaganda film?” Now, I see, the whole time I’m wondering, but why disability? Why was disability in this film? Then, it was just like, “Oh, there’s the convergence.”
Jeff:
Yeah, but funny enough though, it’s like it’s dropped in there, but then it also isn’t really touched again really after either? I thought it was about to get really preachy after this, but it kind of doesn’t. I wonder, I’m starting to wonder if this was a funding thing. If in order to get this film that they wanted to tell this story about bullying and acceptance, but they also needed money to make this thing work to be able to do it.
I honestly wonder if they were, they applied to some point grant that was if money for pro-life propaganda films, and they were like, “Okay, well, we’ll just put this scene in there.” Why do you think that at no point did they decide that the eulogy should be complimentary of this person?
Erika:
Again, because I think in this film, Grace was never a person. Grace was always an object. What do you have to say about an object at its funeral? Only praise for what it did for the human people around it.
Jeff:
I know, I think this is interesting because in some ways then the film itself serve, there’s this meta thing happening in the film in which the film objectifies Grace in order to tell two different sort of, one sort of religiously motivated and one sort of more propaganda ideology motivated sort of lesson, that there’s these two lessons that are happening here, which is like pro-life, yes and beauty and compassion is the Christic way.
Then, if you step back even further, then you have this meta metaphor of Down syndrome becoming this useful tool in the arsenal of pro-life campaigners that Grace becomes this symbol of the problem with abortion, that we’re going to kill all these people, which again, the stats do say is actually fairly accurate, that people do actively choose to abort fetuses of disabled people, but yet the film never actually gives us any real understanding about why Grace’s life is valuable outside of how she is useful to showing people the way to God, basically.
This is like double objectification that’s happening of disabled people both within the text, beside the text, outside the text. It’s just like, it’s like a nesting doll of objectification.
Erika:
All right, why don’t we move on to our next segment, I’m sorry, can we talk about?
Jeff:
Yeah. I have a hot, a scorching hot take. After now, we have spent most of this podcast kind of pilfering this truly horrendous film, I have a hot take, and my hot take is that this film, I wonder, does this film perhaps almost certainly unintentionally provide a [inaudible 00:38:39] critique of the electing of disabled people as prom king or queen within high schools?
Many of you probably know it. If you don’t know, there’s this viral trend, right, where teenagers will elect often the person with Down syndrome, but not always, sometimes it’s other various disabilities, elect them as prom king, prom queen, and then it makes the news about how great it is that these local non-disabled children have given of themselves and seeing the inner beauty of these disabled people and made them prom king.
This movie, though, presents this inversion in which not only do they make them prom king and prom queen, but then they mock them to death at the end. Grace starts singing and everyone in the auditorium is dying of laughter. This is the funniest thing they have ever seen, and in some ways, I wonder, is this the perfect critique, the perfect critique of these prom king things where it’s never about the person with Down syndrome. It’s not about Ben being the doctor of love and loving rock and roll or Grace wanting to see the inner beauty or being a good singer, it’s all about the emotional enjoyment of the viewing audience and the voting audience.
Erika:
Jeff, I have a gift for you.
Jeff:
Oh, I cannot wait.
Erika:
I don’t know if this throws a wrench into your theory or helps it along, but when I looked on IMDB and I couldn’t find any information about Amber House, the actor who plays Grace, I did a little bit of poking around the web and you will not believe what I found. What I found was a headline, “Dream come true for family after daughter with Down syndrome is asked to the prom.”
Jeff:
What?
Erika:
Covered on both the dailymail.co.uk and Huffington Post.
Jeff:
What?
Erika:
It turns out…
Jeff:
No?
Erika:
… that according to Huffington Post, Amber’s mom actually ran a campaign. Amber’s mom desperately wanted Amber to be asked to the prom and felt that no one would ask her, and she just really wanted her to have that life experience. It was unsuccessful, but it turned out that unrelated to that, a choir friend had actually invited Grace to prom already.
Jeff:
Whoa! Wait a minute.
Erika:
Yes. It was a little hard, unfortunately, in my viewing area. I could not actually watch the live news clip. I just was able to read the article, which is a real shame because I really wanted to see the interview with the promposer. Interestingly, in the Huffington Post article, the articles about Amber and someone else who also got promposed and then was elected Queen, the prom queen. I just, I got the feeling reading this, did they find Amber as an actor through this media story?
Jeff:
Which came first? Did the movie come before the promposal?
Erika:
The promposal came first.
Jeff:
What? Okay, wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. These people saw this article and were like, “We should get this girl to be in our movie in which she gets elected prom queen and dies.”
Erika:
Yes, I believe that’s what happened.
Jeff:
This is the weirdest film of all time.
Erika:
Okay. The other little fun piece of trivia that I picked up on while researching actors was that the actor that played Ben, Frank Stephens is actually a fairly active advocate, including, conflict, I think he’s had some communication with Obama or was critiquing Ann Coulter about her use of slurs against mentally disabled people when referring to Obama.
Jeff:
What?
Erika:
I just found this really fascinating because I know in our first season when we sort of noticed some trends where when there were disabled actors involved in the film, there seemed to be some better representation we suspected because the actors were lending some critique to the film. I wondered, just given that the Ben/Frank actor is a seasoned advocate, if perhaps that’s how his character got to be, have a little more depth and be a bit of a cooler character where it seems that Amber’s not an experienced actor and perhaps maybe not as much experience in this kind of setting and not having say, the confidence to push back on the filmmakers to shape her character at all?
Jeff:
Unbelievable.
Erika:
I’m really sorry for hijacking your, I’m sorry, can we talk about, but-
Jeff:
No. I want to talk more about this. Okay, wait a minute. Okay. I’m sorry. I’m just processing this. I need to go back for half a second. Did you say that she had a date for the prom, but her mom was like, “No. She needs a better date for the prom?”
Erika:
No. No. Her mom, no, no, no, no, no. Her mom did not, okay, before, I guess before the household prom conversation comes up, because that’s a totally normal thing, before that came up, Mom actually led a campaign to try and find her daughter a date. To me, this just aligned miraculously with when we were talking earlier in the film about how that parent trope of my child is broken, but I to have to try and give this, redeem the value of my broken child.
According to the Huffington Post article, although, her parents said she never had a problem making friends, they were concerned she would have difficulty finding a date. Peggy’s mom started a campaign for a prom date a few months ahead. That was unsuccessful, but meanwhile, Amber already had a date and her mom just didn’t know about it yet.
Jeff:
That’s even better than my original suspicion…
Erika:
Yes.
Jeff:
… in some ways. I also like, what would you have done, Erika, if you’d found out that your mom had been running a campaign to find you a prom date when you were in high school? Would you have been touched by grace?
Erika:
I mean, I guess it might have been nice to have a prom date, but I just wanted to round that participation from mom out and actually, I want to just contrast in this Huffington Post article. Matt was the promoser. He said, “Grace was my number one choice. I know her from choir. I really like her. She’s awesome. She’s fun, great to hang out with.”
Mom said she was amazed. This is a quote, “I started crying. I’m just so proud of the young man who would step up and take her and that she’s able to do this and have that experience with all of her friends.” Whether my mom went out of her way to try and find me a prom date or not, I think the part that wouldn’t sit so well with me if my mom said that she was just so proud of the person who would step up and take me.
Jeff:
I’m pretty sad right now, actually, that during at my wedding that my parents didn’t get up during their speech and say how proud they were of my partner stepping up and taking me off their hands. Incredible. I find it, this is so tough because the response to this, we’re sort of laughing and cackling at this, and the response to this is always kind of the same, which is, “Well, you don’t get how hard it is. We do. We live it every day. We see what they go through,” which I’m not going to deny.
At the same time, I honestly really wonder, are these utterances really the deep, deep, genuine belief of these parents or are these parents merely playing out this script, the script that you have to play out if you’re going to get the coverage, which you want for reasons, reasons that actually probably actually translated into their daughter being at film in which she’s killed at prom. I really wonder that though.
I wonder how authentic are these or is it just people playing the part, playing the part that they’ve seen so far, playing the part of the hell has no fury, the special needs mom, or because that was a big thing in a movie that we’re going to hear from a little later this season in our Valentine’s special coming in several months or this trope right about, “Oh, my poor child is such the least of us.”
Erika:
I suspect most parents, probably their imagination of what a good life is relates to their own life experiences. If they want their child to have what they had, and the teen years are sort of a difficult, they’re their transitional point in life where life is directed largely by parents until the young person is getting to that point in their life where they’re able to lead their own life and really kind of center their own life around their own personality.
I wonder if this is sort a teenage, a bit of a teenage issue as well, or whether, I guess, it might be constrained a bit too by parental or societal perceptions of what’s appropriate for people at different ages, different life stages, or even different abilities.
We have done our deep dive into the themes. We’ve heard from the critics. Now, it’s time to get trivial. Let’s look at some fun facts about the film. Jeff, you want to kick us off?
Jeff:
Yeah. Our first little segment is, you might remember me from such films as, and if you were watching this film and thinking, “I feel like this Cara girl looks a little familiar.” This is, of course, our actor, Stacey Bradshaw, probably the most “famous in this film,” predominantly because of her appearances in several anti-choice films, including playing the lead in the understatement of the year, controversial film called Unplanned, which you may have heard of before.
Stacey has also been in other films that are anti-choice, such as a short film, which I’m trying to get my hands on, called Wheelchair. Stacey is not the star in this, but she does appear in it. This is a short film about a mother of a three-year-old who temporarily needs to use a wheelchair and is allegedly a “pro-life” mini film, which I have no idea what is going on there.
Erika:
Then, we also have Sara Cicilian, a former scout perhaps who plays mean girlfriend, Quinn, who interestingly enough is listed as Drunk Girl number one in The Dark Tower and was in a Fall Out Boy music video.
Jeff:
Two very different career paths for these two women.
Erika:
We didn’t get the actor’s name on this list, but character Skyler may or may not stunt double for Blake Lively.
Jeff:
Yeah, they definitely were looking for the great life brand, Blake Lively, for that character. Absolutely.
Erika:
Now, I know this is one of your favorite segments, the equipment facts, no wheelchairs to speak of in this film, so no quickie identifiers here, but we did have a couple of devices on Grace’s bedside table. What were they? Research and speculation can only get us so far.
Jeff:
I have no idea what these two things are. There is this gray device with a giant butterfly sticker on it, and I’m guessing that that butterfly sticker is covering the brand name, which means I could have probably figured it out, but they covered it. Then, there’s this tube thing, with a tube thing, with a tube, with a nipple on it and I just have no idea. I have never seen this device. I’m wondering if it’s a feeding device maybe, or if anybody knows what the heck these two devices are, please email us because I just have no idea.
Erika:
Yeah, I’m guessing that since Grace’s medical condition was entirely fabricated, the medical equipment on her bedside table was whatever the heck we could get our hands on that looks like it helps her breathe.
Jeff:
Sort of, yeah. It was sort of gestured as medicine and breathing apparatus. The gray device might be a suction device of some variety, but it does not look like any of the types of suction devices I’ve ever seen. I haven’t seen all of them. I’m not like a suction device aficionado. I mean, I have one, but I use, because I do have breathing problems and these are not the devices I would’ve seen.
Then, Grace also uses a puffer, which is also, I don’t understand because they say that she has problems breathing, that she has heart problems. Maybe they’re saying she has asthma. I’m not sure.
Erika:
Yeah. Is that the two times that she has unclear whether it’s an asthma attack or an anxiety attack and…
Jeff:
Or a heart attack.
Erika:
… it’s like, me, “Get her, her medicine. Where are your meds? Where are your meds?” It’s unclear what meds.
Jeff:
It’s a puffer, which, yeah. I don’t know what is happening in this whole situation. I also find it hard to believe that somebody who has “heart problems” wouldn’t have an EKG or some sort of heart monitoring device beside the bed.
Erika:
Yeah. Onto production facts, we have Donald Leow, producer, director of such Christian hits as For the Glory and Badge of Faith.
Jeff:
I really want to watch Badge of Faith. There are prop guns in Badge of Faith. I want to see it.
Erika:
Yeah. Well-
Jeff:
No disabled people that I know of.
Erika:
Yeah, that on your own time, I guess.
Jeff:
That one’s just for me, my private viewing.
Erika:
Then, we have, we really don’t have anything for production facts for this film. We know written by Chris and Katherine Craddock, who as far as research can tell us, have basically done nothing else.
Jeff:
Yeah. There is a reference throughout the text about a Christian youth group that seems to be very active in the United States. There are divisions of this youth group in Canada, but shockingly, none in our hometown in London, Ontario. We had no means of trying to find out anything really more about these people. I have no idea if they paid to be involved or if they paid to make the film maybe, but I will say I think every actor in this film had strong Sunday School, Christian Youth Group vibes, every single one of them, even like the adults. Would you say that’s fair, Erika?
Erika:
Yeah. Even the mean girls who notably were not wearing crosses around their necks, if they weren’t acting mean girl and were wearing crosses around their neck, they fit in well with the rest of the cast.
Jeff:
I wouldn’t be shocked if most of the people in this film are all a part of the same youth group.
Erika:
Yeah. Well, how else would they have multiple T-shirts in the film that have the youth group name on them.
Jeff:
It is that time, our favorite time of every episode where it is time for us to rate this film. For those of you who have not listened to the show before, we have our very own Invalid Culture scale, which measures the quality of film based on four scientifically designed questions. He puts his tongue firmly in cheek. The way this game works is like golf, the lower the score for the film, the better the film is.
Let’s start out with question number one. Question number one, Erika, on a scale of one to five, with five being the least accurate, how accurate does this film portray disability?
Erika:
I’m really torn on this one, but I think I’m going to go with a four out five. I am giving mercy for Ben because I thought Ben was a pretty decently portrayed character. I also thought that, although overblown, the ableism was in the direction of reality.
Jeff:
Yeah, I also gave it a four.
Erika:
Okay.
Jeff:
I took off marks for a different reason. I took off marks because the biomedical of this film was just complete nonsense. I mean, yes, people with Down syndrome do have chronic heart conditions. Typically, people with Down syndrome could have problems breathing. All of those things are accurate, but the way that it was just smashed together in this jambalaya of medicalism, I felt was, definitely should have removed a mark. I agree. I think the ableism, although, on steroids, I think was kind of accurate to the ways that people think about intellectual disability at times.
Erika:
Onto the next question, with five being the hardest, how hard was it to get through this film?
Jeff:
I always struggle with this question, always, but it’s because I am a weirdo who loves terrible films, but I gave this one a four. It wasn’t the hardest thing I’ve ever watched. There were some trying moments, but I think the thing about this film is that it takes very seriously that old school like filmmaker’s motto, which is that every scene should increase the drama from the previous scene, but this movie starts with a fat shaming of a teenager whose parents come outside and scream, “Why do you hate our daughter?” It has to go up from there.
This thing just ratchets every scene is just more extreme and unbelievable than the last. That kept me hooked. I’m giving it a four. Sorry. I guess, I shot the other way around, I’m giving this a two, a two out of five. I felt that it was actually very easy to get through this film.
Erika:
Wow. I gave this one a four because I did find it cringe factor alone made it hard to get through this film. I was physically uncomfortable watch. I was so distracted by just the silliest little things, like why are they selling popcorn in a smoothie shop and why are there clearly no drinks in the drink until it gets spilled? There were just so many, they’re not even disability related bits, but just the film production had so many cringy and then it’s just, oh gosh, I can’t, that’s a separate episode. We’ll just leave it at a four.
Jeff:
Yeah. I mean the production of this film was fairly bad. This was YouTube quality film making. I’m so sorry everyone involved, but actually I’m kind of not sorry. All right. Question number three, scale of one to five, with five being the maximum, how often did you laugh at things that were not supposed to be funny?
Erika:
I think that’s a five for me. I laughed…
Jeff:
Easy five.
Erika:
… constantly at this film.
Jeff:
Easy Five. This movie was unintentionally hilarious. Even the things that were trying to be funny, were hilarious because they were so cringy.
Erika:
Yup. I’m with you there.
Jeff:
Easy five.
Erika:
Yeah. Our last category, how many steps back has this film put disabled people with five being the most?
Jeff:
I gave this a 3.5. I don’t think it set us back a lot. There were definitely some questions. I think the preacher’s sermon alone set us back at least one step. I’m going to give it a 3.5.
Erika:
I’m going to have to give this one a generous four for well-intentioned because although, I don’t think it hit the mark by any means, I do think that there was some well-intentioned here.
Jeff:
Okay. Drum roll please. That means this has achieved our third award. Our third rate a crime may have been committed. I think that’s fair because that scene of the two girls definitely felt like something that would be shown at the UN.
Erika:
Yeah, I had a feeling of being violated at some points in this film.
Jeff:
Absolutely. I definitely gagged at least once while watching this film. This concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for joining us. I hope you enjoyed it or not. Did you have a film you would like for us to cover on the pod or even better? Do you want to be a victim on Invalid Culture? Head a word to our website, invalidculture.com and submit. We would love to hear from you. That’s it for this episode. Catch you next month and until then, stay Invalid.
[Outro verse from the chorus of “Arguing with Strangers” by Mvll Crimes]