Gremlins is playing at the Guild tonight, and I've been pretty jazzed about it all week. I love that movie, and have recently been honing some thoughts on the subject when I'm on the bus. In an attempt to rally the troops so they'd be interested in seeing it tonight, I wrote a little “review” of the film, which I've included below. Enjoy!
Gremlins
Joe Dante practically invented the  Christmas     Horror movie, but with Gremlins the fact that it's     Christmas -- or for that matter, a horror movie -- takes second     place to his particular satiric vision. Gremlins is     crammed with social satire and commentary from first scene. Over     the opening credits, the first thing an attentive viewer may     notice is that most of the sets are modeled after, “It's A     Wonderful Life,” a point that's driven home even more by     the fact that the town is “run” by a miserly old     woman who loves to screw people over around the holidays. (Of     course, it's only more appropriate that the mother in this film     is watching “It's A Wonderful Life,” on TV, as if to     further de-construct the 4th Wall in film viewing, and to serve     as a “Life As Art, Art As Life” counterpoint to that     particular angle.) If that weren't enough, Gremlins' own     version of George Bailey is introduced immediately, seeing as how     the town's greedy miser has got it in for not only him and his     family, but his little dog, too.           
But beyond the  thematic and film allusions, it's     not until the Mogwai comes home that the social commentary     begins. As a typical complacent family of the '8Ø's, it's     much easier to get wrapped up in their own lives than meet     the needs of the family pet, a not-so-subtle jab at the problems     with child-rearing in America. Christmas itself serves a     particularly important focal point when it comes to pointing out     our shortcomings: It's as if this small-town family is so     distracted by material needs and the superficial aspects of     Christmas, that the forces of nature throw a plague of Gremlins     on the town in an almost biblical fashion. And then the real fun     begins.           
To complicate the  layers upon layers of     poignancy, the Gremlins themselves seem to be attracted to junk culture,     violence, and the flotsam and jetsam of the '8Ø's. The     more they are exposed to these inclinations, the more the second     and third generation beasties become more disgusting and easier     to distract. Weather it's a steady stream of beer coming     to keep them docile or having them watch a movie to make them     happy, it seems as if the Gremlins themselves amplify the very     character traits that caused them to exist in the first place. More jabs     at child-rearing, since the “parent” Gremlin seems     less affected by these problems, though not entirely.           
But when all is  said and done, Gremlins is     more a form of demented slapstick a la The Three Stooges.     When push comes to shove, they think they have all the rights in     the world to be as lazy and disgusting as they want, and will     gladly defend those rights in the most silly and hilarious ways     they can muster. But like most junk-culture addicts, the Gremlins     feel their rights involve over-indulgence at all costs, and in     the end it becomes their very undoing. When the soft and cuddly     marketing tool of the film finally dispatches the final villain,     it's only fitting that an Asian Gentleman judges the family that     stars in this movie. He leaves little to recommend this -- or any     -- American family, and claims that they are not ready for     responsibility of this kind. Is it more film allusions, or a     comment on the opinions of foreign powers regarding typical     Americans? In Joe Dante's world, it's all the same, so     long and the pace is frenetic and the jokes crud and funny.           
And personally, I wouldn't want it any other way.
 
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