Pleasantville and The Political Temptations of Nostalgia
Pleasantville and The Political Temptations of Nostalgia
Pleasantville and The Political Temptations of Nostalgia
humorous take on conservative nostalgia for the 1950s, or at least the 1950s
Best’, ‘The Donna Reed Show’ and the like.1 Magically transporting two
the film playfully shows the transformations the two bring to the straight-laced
fictional town the show is named for. Originally shown in black and white, by the
end of the film Pleasantville has become a much more liberalized, enlightened,
and free spirited town, and is now displayed in full vivid color. Growing sexual
awareness is the initial force of this liberation, and the film plays heavily on the
contrast between the sexually repressed Pleasantville and the sexually free
! There would seem to be little doubt where the film maker’s sympathies lie
when the political undertones of the film come to the fore in the second half of the
film. Liberal viewers already know the villains. A reactionary contingent of town
barbershops and bowling allies, the group moves from puzzlement to rage as the
1 Pleasantville, directed by Gary Ross, perf. Toby McGuire, Reese Witherspoon, 1998.
comfortable world they rule begins to dissolve. Still in black and white, they take
a stand against the increasing number of transfigured youths with signs and
placards bearing slogans such as ‘no coloreds allowed’ and they impose, briefly,
a draconian regime that shutters the library and proscribes provocative art and
music. The film’s deliberate evocation of the segregated pre Civil Rights
reminiscent of that seen in “To Kill a Mockingbird.” In this scene Toby Maguire’s
character triumphantly drives the last remaining black and white bigot out of town
by taunting him with the image of men staying home while the women go out to
work.
and sexual repression, leaving in its wake a freer, more enlightened society.
Most critics, friendly and otherwise, took it for granted that the movie was meant
to be a liberal cautionary tale for a time of conservative resurgence and the use
of nostalgia in the service of a political agenda that would, many believed, roll
back the achievements of the civil rights movement and modern feminism.
consideration, the ways in which the changes of the sixties are invoked in
appeals to the 1950s family sitcoms being satirized. Indeed, one thing that is
immediately obvious is how much of the real social upheavals unleashed in the
to the civil rights movement and reliance on a colored vs. non-colored visual
scheme, there are no black characters to speak of in the film. Quite arguably,
reading the film as a simple morality tale leaves it open to the charge that it
(Toby Maguire) and his twin sister Jennifer (Reese Witherspoon), and situate
geek, the kind of brainy kid who substitutes an obsession for a TV show from a
long lost era for girlfriends or a real social life. Though attracted to a pretty girl at
school, he can only watch her from afar and imagine what he would say if he had
life that is the envy of her friends and seemingly quite comfortable with herself
and her world and contemptuous of her straight laced and socially reserved
brother. Brazen, forward, and a poor student, she successfully pursues the
school hunk who is as vacuous and inarticulate as she is. She is heard
recounting on the phone a conversation the two had enjoyed that consisted
mostly of an exchange of “hey”, earning the admiration of her less daring girl
collision with David and his plans to watch the “Pleasantville” marathon that
weekend, Jennifer is planning watch a televised concert with the newly found
! With this introduction, our sympathies are initially pulled in the direction of
backwards gazing David—he seems more genuine and friendly despite his nerdy
ways, while his sister comes off as abrasive, self-possessed, and shallow. The
Jennifer’s high school for a quick glimpse of their gritty, worldly life. References
to the AIDS epidemic, Global Warming, economic uncertainty, and world poverty
come in rapid fire succession in a run of brief school room scenes. When we
learn a bit more about David and Jennifer’s family life, the sense that all is not
well in their world is confirmed. Like so many of their generation, David and
Jennifer come from a broken family and live with a single mom who as the film
opens is about to leave for a weekend trip with the latest in what is clearly a
parenthood are well in evidence as we hear her arguing with her ex-husband
over the phone about child care arrangements. His failure to pick up the kids as
he is supposed to leads to their staying home alone, setting the stage for their
Against this background, David’s fondness for the orderly family life shown
opening scenes of the contrast between the happy family scenes he sees on
parents. For a movie that is ostensibly a critique of this kind of nostalgia and
idealization of the past, the opening sequences are curiously indulgent of its
of the rebellions of the 1960s while affirming their validity. Sexual promiscuity,
all are on display and their effects on the young openly acknowledged.
repairman, played by Don Knotts in his last film role before his death in 2006,
appears when the twins, squabbling over what to watch on television, break their
remote. Not knowing how to turn on the TV without it, both David and Jennifer
find their plans for the evening threatened until this repairman shows up with a
boy on his knowledge of the show. Satisfied that David knows his stuff, the
repairman gives him a new remote, one with “a little more oomph.” When the
twins use it to turn on the set they suddenly find themselves in the middle of a
black-and-white “Pleasantville” rerun, playing the roles of the son and daughter of
Betty and George Parker, the famous doting parents of the show. Suddenly in a
sweet and solicitous parents, the twins panic and look immediately for an
television set, is hurt to find both kids mortified--he thought he was fulfilling
Peter’s dream. Ignoring their pleas to be returned home he leaves the two to
It is at this point the film begins to reveal the moral complexities that come
with comparing our own times with those of the past, real or imagined, and the
does his best to fit into his new role as “Bud Parker”, a role he knows well on
episode the two have landed in, and as bewildered as he is he resolves to be the
Bud he’s always envied and let events unfold as they are meant to. Jennifer by
contrast is immediately aware of how deeply out of place she is. In Pleasantville
Jennifer must play the role of “Mary Sue Parker”, a prim, proper, and popular girl
who exemplifies the innocence and purity of this imaginary world. Unlike her
bristles at its constraints and superficiality, mocking everything from the sweater
set she forced to wear to the sanitized language of ‘gosh’ and ‘gee whiz’. Her
sexually confident and self-aware turns her into an aggressive agent of change.
modern slang to her TV world friends, and worst of all, refusing to dampen her
sexual forwardness in the slightest. Events very quickly go off script. Seducing
the innocent but handsome high school star athlete Skip, Mary Sue sets in
of several scenes that show a child giving council to a parent or adult, Mary Sue
also leads her Pleasantville mother Betty Parker (played by Joan Allen) to her
enrichment and loss of perfection: the basketball team discovers sex but starts
losing games, firemen are forced to do more than rescue cats as a real fire
breaks out when Betty has her first orgasm, and town experiences real rain for
the first time as the youths of Pleasantville head to Lover’s Lane in groves. With
the forces unleashed by Mary Sue’s sexual boldness comes the loss of a
pleasant but bland paradise. In its place comes a world that is messy and noisy--
But something peculiar happens to Mary Sue as she plays this role of
vanguard for sexual revolution and social transformation. The driving and
2In fact, rarely in the film does an adult show the slightest bit of wisdom, either in the present or in
Pleasantville. The children lead throughout. Betty is the only exception, as her sexual wakening leads to a
gradual increase in wisdom and self-confidence as she takes up with and helps in turn to liberate the
hapless if genial soda jerk Bob, played by Jeff Daniel. Encouraged by both Betty and later Bud/Peter, Bob
gradually learns to embrace his long denied desire to be a painter.
stunning visual motif of the film is the progressive addition of color to the black
and pieces of their world, one at a time, as they become sexually experienced.
Mary Sue represents the first exception to this. Despite her more extensive
sexual past, she remains black and white while the kids around her are
transformed. As she complains to Bud , “I’ve had ten times more sex than the
rest of these girls and I still look like this. They spend a half hour in the back of a
car and suddenly they’re in Technicolor?” Bud answers, less than helpfully, that
gradually revealed. The answer begins to emerge when the Pleasantville youths
library by accident and discovers that all the books are blank. This complements
downtown streets (Main, and, of course, Elm) and history lessons follow the ‘non-
sexuality, they also begin to discover their minds. Turning to Mary and Bud, who
as Peter was a good student, the kids of Pleasantville ply the twins from the
outside to tell them the stories missing from their blank tomes. Overcoming his
initial loyalty to Pleasantville as it was, Bud outlines the story of Huckleberry Finn,
and the text and illustrations of Twain’s masterpiece magically fill in the pages.
He then turns his attention to Catcher in the Rye. Soon the town library is as
turning point for Mary Sue. It also represents a change from the film’s previous
modern (real) world. In Mary Sue’s case, she becomes freer the more she
leaves her own world and becomes a true denizen of the transformed
Pleasantville. A poor student in the world she came from, Mary Sue begins to
forgo her penchant for shallow sexual encounters while immersing herself into
Chatterly’s Lover--“it seems sexy” she tell a confused Bud when he finds her
reading a book--Mary Sue beings to realize the deeper meanings that sex can
have in our lives, and the price she’s paid in a lack of integrity and feigned
superficiality while playing the “slut.” In a pivotal scene that is both stirring and
classic 50s owl rimmed glasses and the kind of sweater set she’d earlier
ridiculed. She then rebuffs Skip as he tries to lure her into another go around at
Lovers’ Lane, saying she has to study. She cozies up instead with Lawrence
transformation began subtly, when she gives the ‘birds and bees’ talk to Betty.
Cementing the role reversal the scene’s humor depends on, Mary Sue begins
with the familiar line “when two people love each other…” There’s an irony here,
as the emotional connection Mary Sue would have Betty believe is the proper
locus of sexual behavior is exactly the kind of thing that has been absent from
her own sexual encounters, and it’s this gap between her feelings and her
actions that Mary Sue is coming to reject. But this awakening also coincides with
a growing distance between her and the world she came from, and most startling
of all with a lessening of her rebellious leanings. From here on out Mary Sue is
the time of the critical courtroom scene that marks this movement’s triumph, she
at the film’s end, when she opts to remain in Pleasantville, rather than return to
the present with David. Only in the transformed Pleasantville, she points out, will
she have a chance at college. This is coupled with both her fuller appreciation
for her brother, who she used to consider a loser, and her explicit rejection of her
promiscuous past –“I did the slutty thing David, it got old.”
strikingly the gap between the triumphs of the fictionalized 60s rebellion of
“Pleasantville” and the film’s more ambivalent representation of the actual social
character also reinforces the film’s unhistorical telling of that story that has
prevailed throughout in less obvious ways. I mentioned earlier the lack of any
racial politics. We can add to that the curious nature of the literary works
explicitly cited in the film. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Catcher in the
Rye, Lady Chatterley’s Lover: it’s hard not to be struck by the eclecticism of the
titles, and the anachronism of these choices. What’s lacking is any reference to
any of the truly iconic texts of the youth rebellion that date from 1950s, books like
Jack Kerouac’s On the Road or Allan Ginsburg’s Howl or Ken Keasey’s One Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Or consider the choice of Lawrence as the vehicle for
Mary Sue’s intellectual awakening. Why not The Feminist Mystique? Or The
Second Sex? The film’s curious avoidance of so many obvious period cultural
references carries over to the musical selections. While there are expected nods
to early rock and roll—we hear at various points Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly and
effective. Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five”, Miles Davis’ “So What?” from “Kind of
Blue” and Etta James’ “At Last” are all featured more prominently and used to
greater effect than the instantly recognizable rock and roll classics we might have
expected.
It is clear, then, that we should not be too quick to equate the liberation of
Pleasantville with the actual social changes wrought by the 1960s, which makes
it all the harder to reconcile Jennifer’s transformation into Mary Sue with the
plausible to argue that the film suggests the liberationist pretensions of the youth
movement as it actually occurred failed girls like Jennifer, at least in certain ways.
Jennifer/Mary Sue is better off, not in the present, not in the idealized 1950s of
the black and white Pleasantville, not in the actual 1950s, but in an idealized
version of what the rebellions of the 1960s might have, but in fact failed, to bring
about, in the transformed but still fictional colorized Pleasantville. The sexual
liberation Mary Sue brings to Betty frees her from the sterile and subservient (if
pleasant) relationship she’s had with George, but does not result in the kind of
pointless couplings that have characterized Jennifer’s (or perhaps her real
mother’s post divorce) encounters do date. Rather Betty’s sexual growth marks
genuine self development, while it is clear that Jennifer has come to age in a
the one Betty has escaped. Mary Sue’s feminism is closer that of Danielle
Crittenden’s Things Are Mothers Never Told Us than one that uncritically
mourning the passing of the restricting and artificial veneer used to cover the
reality of female sexuality in early times, Mary Sue’s newfound chastity suggests
younger women that still allows the needs and desires of men to define sexual
roles. For some women who grew up in the wake of the sexual revolution,
neither attitude allows for honest, heathy female sexuality, or productive and
not to return to the world that had offered so to an intelligent and strong young
woman is perhaps the film’s most powerful refusal to embrace uncritically the
If Jennifer’s experiences in Pleasantville lead her away from her life in the
his life in the present world, such as talking to girls and standing up for himself.
gradually comes to terms with the more complex and difficult realities of the
present and is able to embrace his real world wholeheartedly upon his return.
Appropriately enough, his first act after returning from Pleasantville is to turn off
the television. He then turns to offer advice to his mother, who has returned early
after deciding against spending the weekend with her boyfriend. The resulting
David finds his mother in the kitchen distraught at where she finds herself
in early middle age. The comfortable middle class life style she had aspired to
and temporarily achieved has vanished with her divorce, and suddenly feeling
too old for the care free sexual adventures she had been clinging to
compensation, she is suddenly at a loss. Tearfully, she turns to her son and says
“it wasn’t supposed to be like this.” David answers with the lesson he has
apparently drawn from his adventures in Pleasantville: “it’s not supposed to be
anything.” This attempt at comforting reflects the underlying ethical picture that
the film ultimately falls back on, a kind of simple romanticism that would valorize
any impulse we act on so long as it is sincere and authentic. As Bud had said
earlier, “if it’s inside you it can’t be stopped”, and neither, apparently, can the
social changes these forces bring once unleashed. David is now able to
world he came from because he now sees those complexities as the inevitable,
The problem is that it just isn’t true that “it’s not supposed to be anything”,
at least not if we want to take seriously the idea that the world represented by
Pleasantville needed changing, or the idea that our current world remains in
the world. The problem with the kind of individualistic, subjectivist moral picture
embraced by David is that it is unable to say just what was wrong with
Pleasantville other than that people weren’t as free as they might want to be.
What is lost is any sense that the choices we make should be governed by
adequate values and genuine wisdom, rather the caprice or blind appetite. As it
stands, David’s new found romanticism is unable to distinguish the kind of self-
aware sexual freedom achieved by Betty and Mary Sue in the new Pleasantville
and her real world mother in the actual present. That social problems are the
result of specific social organizations, that the real failures of the past and
present are injustices that should be the ultimate focus of political reform, is
at the film’s end, when David picks up a tissue to dry his mother’s eyes and clean
up her smeared make up. The scene deliberately echoes an earlier one, where
Bud comforted Betty Parker and applied gray scale makeup to her in order to
disguise the fact that she’d become colored. In both scenes David/Bud works—
world in which she is not and should not be comfortable. In eventually coming to
see why Pleasantville had to change and reducing that change to a nostrum of
individual freedom, David loses his ability to see the failings of his own world.
The biggest failing of the moralistic reading of the film is that it invites viewers to
never was for the conservative nostalgia for a golden age of the family that never
was.
identifiable forces of good and evil. A more insidious danger is that is blinds us to
legitimate targets of self criticism, and I think this is the true lesson of
“Pleasantville.” Just as nostalgia for a golden age of the middle class family
blinds us to the shortcomings of that age and the actual problems of the time, a
nostalgic retelling of the protests and social movements that reduces a complex
and difficult time to a simple triumph of individual freedom over oppression can
blind us to the problems created by increased divorced rates and a more sexually
indulgent culture, for example. The moral ambiguities the film acknowledges are