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Melting
Pot
Marianna Martin on
Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle
In the year 2004, American identity
is a complicated thing, despite what some of those espousing
sides of the ideological arguments at stake in this
election year may insist to the contrary. Is it necessarily
the case that if you check off one set of identity “boxes”
you belong to party A, and if you check off the other
boxes, you belong to Party B? Identity takes all tenses—who
people are, who people were, and whom they might become,
and Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle supports
the idea that the realities of the three might overlap
a bit at all times to define who we are. Maybe America’s
“melting pot” is no longer an external societal condition
but something that can be wholly internalized in each
individual’s conception of self.
The predictable debate supplied by reviewers of the
latest release “from the director who brought you Dude,
Where’s My Car?” this July centered around asking
the real Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle to
please stand up: Was the film’s true identity closer
to the realm of the puerile stoner film? Or is Harold
& Kumar a groundbreaking moment in American pop
culture cum identity politics? A remarkable amount seemed
to be at stake in considering the ramifications of this
fast-food film even before its release, and the question
that seemed to be on the audience’s minds as we waited
for tickets to an advance screening at an urban university
was one fraught with such weighty concerns: was the
film a radical statement of ethnic inclusion in American
youth culture cloaked in gross-out pratfalls, or was
it another lowbrow commercial spectacle that had been
window-dressed with a little “color” for novelty’s sake,
like so many other exploitation films? The majority
South Asian and East Asian audience seemed willing to
risk the disappointment of the latter possibility, the
college student ahead of me in line probably putting
it most eloquently to a friend waiting with him: “Dude,
how often do we get to see guys like us as the main
guys in anything?”
A good question, and from a cheery, All-American frat
boy type that’s well-represented on his campus. This
dude just happened to be South Asian. Which brings us
to confronting the idea that a little duality in this
film is not only conceivable but a pretty good outcome
if achieved. Harold & Kumar features likable
minority protagonists with fully developed, stereotype-defyingly
rounded personalities and is also an enormously silly
film, ultimately a series of juvenile setpieces selected
for their ability to keep the audience giggling through
sheer quantity over originality. But because of the
formulaic approach to plot (or an approximation of one)
and faithful devotion to conventions of genre, the film
manages to deliver only what is promised in the title.
Harold and Kumar do indeed make it to White Castle,
and dozens of greasy patties of dubious origin are only
their most literal reward: Harold and Kumar have also
breached the previously impregnable walls of the stoner
genre and made a cinematic world traditionally populated
by the dumb white male a comfortable home for themselves
onscreen. If Harold & Kumar hadn’t been played
for a series of dumb and occasionally disgusting laughs,
no new ground would have been broken—the “Social Issues
film” is already an established genre that gets its
own chapter in some undergraduate film textbooks. Instead,
Harold and Kumar put a new face on stoner humor, which
has been enjoying a revival in current popular media,
with of course, Dude, Where’s My Car? and the
Fox sitcom that launched Dude’s star, Ashton Kutcher,
That 70’s Show. Comedies based around bored suburban
kids doing dumb things sober or altered are nothing
new to American popular culture, but with the American
Pie franchise and a plethora of other teen exploitation
comedies, this August’s Without a Paddle being
the latest entry of dim, privileged Anglo males screwing
up for our laughs (in a truly perverse mood I might
classify Fahrenheit 9/11 in this category too,
if it weren’t so depressing and horrifying all the same)
the cinematic image of the regular stoner has been realigned
from its Seventies associations with bucking the oppressive
system to being one of the many privileges enjoyed by
those who stand to reap the most from such a system.
The kids in these more recent films are tuning out hard—without
much attention paid to what they’re tuning out from—simply
because they can do so without dire consequences.
Part of the Seventies drug culture was about rejecting
a set of values that marginalized you, and if the stoners
in Seventies films were largely dropouts from the mainstream
culture, with little to offer, the sense was that extraordinary
things were required to avoid such marginalization,
and acceptance by so flawed a system was little incentive
for the less than exceptional to strive for better.
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Cheech and Chong films of the Seventies arguably introduced
an ethnic slant to the image of drug use and dazed behavior
played to comic cinematic effect, and their names are
of course virtually synonymous with the idea of movies
with stoner protagonists—to a degree that the casting
of Tommy Chong as the middle-aged burnout Leo on That
70’s Show is an inside joke in of itself before
he ever speaks a word onscreen—but their screen identities
are tied up in a tangle of politico-cultural issues
specific to the Seventies. It’s stretching things to
claim that youth identity in popular culture at that
time is the same animal as it is now. The distinction
between popular culture and counterculture was a serious
factor then, and one that there is no easy analogy for
in the contemporary youth culture of this decade. Though
Cheech and Chong-style stoners belong to the counterculture
of the Seventies, Dude’s stoners are part of
today’s pop mainstream. Membership in the stoner group
is not synonymous with membership in popular cultural
identity today, but it’s no longer a strictly exclusionary
factor either.
What’s curious about
Harold and Kumar in comparison to Cheech and Chong,
is that this temporal shift in stoner popular identity
allows them, though they are identifiably minority players
like those predecessors, to be seated firmly in the
contemporary mainstream along with their Anglo counterparts
as well. They are provisionally and potentially marginalized
by their ethnic identities, but for them, toking is
a way of opting in and identifying with the mainstream,
rather than a way of drifting further out. These are
young men who, though they are aware of the obstacles
their ethnicity can create in dealing with their Anglo
peers, fully share in the same popular culture with
those peers. Both of them are anxious to avoid any hint
of conformity to the stereotypes through which they
know others filter their interactions with them, and
this is where the movie has some of its most ebullient
and occasionally risky fun. The bits borrowed from other
genre films are played as conscious setpieces, the clichés
and stereotypes inherent to them turned up to full volume,
and thus often resulting in bizarre twists on the old
standards. A pair of horny, British twin girls on the
Princeton campus invite the guys back to their dorm
rooms: pursuing this ultimately dead end means Harold
and Kumar miss out on a party thrown by the Korean Students
association that, when glimpsed as they flee the campus,
looks like a hedonistic club-raver’s dream and not the
geekfest Harold was dreading, (lapsing for a moment
himself into stereotypical assumptions about his own
group). All encounters with exclusively white law enforcement
take on surrealistic and grotesque forms due to the
uniformly exaggerated racism of the cops, which is so
far beyond the expectations of the protagonists as to
be incomprehensible even to them.
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Two of the more daring scenarios involve both amusing
and sympathetic twists on the “issue film” yet—played
for laughs...mostly. Secure in their identities as cool
American youths, they identify another South Asian and
East Asian pairing of guys they see from their car as
being “like the lame version of us.” Almost as soon
as they say this, a white gang jumps the pedestrian
pair and starts beating them. The surrealism of this
moment, and Harold and Kumar’s incredulity as their
laughs go sour, keep the scene surprisingly light given
the inflammatory nature of the content. Later, when
they leave the scene of another gang harassing a lone
South Asian convenience store clerk, there’s a curious
simultaneity of the situations’ unfairness, the knowledge
that these are individual fights they have no hope of
winning and they’re better off not involved in. But
perhaps the most daring flaunting of expectation comes
at the beginning of the film, when Kal Penn’s charismatic
Kumar bombs his medical school interview by interrupting
his older white male interviewer (Fred Willard) to take
a cell phone call from Harold to discuss drug-related
plans for that evening. But surely it will turn out
Kumar was doomed to disappoint his father’s medical
school hopes for him anyway, being a stoner and all?
An emphatic “no,” we discover—busting a generic stereotype
wide open. It turns out you can have a perfect MCAT
score and not give a rat’s arse about it, and in fact
be no less intelligent for your lifestyle choice. Kumar
may make some dubious choices, but it’s not for lack
of smarts. And this is perhaps where the stoner identity
is redefined the most radically: the notion the stoner
can hold multiple identities simultaneously, some of
them beyond the stereotypical bounds of that choice.
The suggestion of this multiplicity is, I would argue,
Harold and Kumar’s most innovative message about
what identity means to young Americans. This film not
only suggests what audiences are already supposed to
know (though how easily it seems to be forgotten, John
Cho and Kal Penn are both coming from previous roles
as fairly mono-dimensional minority sidekicks in American
Pie and Van Wilder, respectively), that minority
personages don’t have to be walking embodiments of cultural
stereotypes, but additionally dares to suggest that
none of us have to be walking embodiments of any of
our respective groupings either. It’s weirdly liberating
to watch the silly glee with which Doogie Howser himself,
Neil Patrick Harris, throws himself into his self-cameo,
licking the seats of Harold’s car in a drugged, horny
frenzy. The way that the stereotypes are amplified until
they explode plays up the idea that hewing too closely
to any one identity is inherently false, and that all
of us are potentially multidimensional: more, there
may be surprises in the secret, ancillary identities
we carry around with us: once the holy grail of White
Castle burgers has been found, Kumar gets philosophical
and decides he might actually want to go to medical
school after all, surprising not only Harold but himself.
This however, does not represent a sudden, absolute
conversion to the straight and narrow—though the impulse
is genuine, he’s soon distracted by an equally strong
impulse to take a trip to Amsterdam, to enjoy some activities
that are legal there and don’t count towards a medical
degree. Kumar isn’t unwilling, in the end, to take on
the career his father wants for him, it’s just that
he doesn’t want to conform to his dad’s expectations
of him precisely, because it limits the individuality
of his identity. Harold, meanwhile, really is a conscientious
worker at his job, and he really, sincerely, wants to
do his job well. He’s sick of his co-workers taking
advantage of his work ethic and allowing themselves
to believe that he must be one of those hardworking
Asians whose whole life is work, but Harold’s rejection
of that stereotype doesn’t mean that he’s the opposite
either—after all, wouldn’t that just be another, flat,
clichéd extreme? |
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