Are We Idiocracy Yet? (idiocracy.wtf)

by jdiiufccuskal 548 comments 638 points
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548 comments

[−] bsenftner 38d ago
I attended an audience testing screener for Idiocracy before the film's final edit. I could not believe my eyes and ears, I loved it unlike anything I'd seen before, it was the hardest US culture satire I'd seen up to that point. Then the lights came up and the audience started giving their reviews, in an open mike fashion. They all identified with the "idiots" and were indignant insulted, and angry. I remember making eye contact with Mike Judge like "WTF!" It was an early screener and I think that reaction was a surprise to the film team. I own a copy and watch it more than once a year. One of my favorite hard satires.
[−] bdashdash 38d ago
I feel Idiocracy is irresistible bait for 'not like the other girls'-types.

Everytime this movie comes up, droves of people mention how they get it, while others don't. It's becoming a trope in itself.

[−] afavour 38d ago
Agreed. It’s cited so often on Reddit by people who want to establish their superiority over the masses. “It’s a documentary!!” is a meme unto itself.

It’s also got a kind of weird eugenics-y vibe to it (like establishing “stupid people breeding makes stupid people” as incontrovertible fact) when you step back and examine it as a movie that’s making Serious Statements. But it isn’t. It’s not a bad movie. But it’s a comedy, the satirical elements are heavily over exaggerated by fans.

[−] pixl97 38d ago
It's kind of funny when you say the movie isn't making serious statements when the highest of our publicly elected officials isn't a serious person. We elect people that are actively harmful to our well being. These people say things so incredibly stupid it can be painful. And then you wonder why people look at the movie like it's a documentary?
[−] lynndotpy 38d ago
It's not a eugenics-y vibe. The inciting incident is dysgenics, and the in-narrative apocalypse would have been prevented by eugenics.

It doesn't preclude the movie from being enjoyed or appreciated. The movie also came out at a time when test scores, literacy rates, and whatnot were all _increasing_, so that was the more salient lens to criticize it by.

That trend has reversed now, though. I don't agree with the dysgenic narrative, but I have often found myself thinking, "Gotta hand it to the movie Idiocracy, it's feeling familiar".

For all its flaws, I was a child at the time saturated in post-Y2K optimism that tomorrow would always be better than the day before. It was one of the first things that made me seriously consider, "What if humanity is not on a linear path of improvement"?

[−] Waterluvian 38d ago
This thread is a sort of extension to that, eh? Hacker News knowing the truth of a matter while observing Reddit down the barrel of a nose.
[−] tremon 38d ago
I never understood that eugenics criticism of the movie. They make zero references to genetics in that opening sequence, and the nurture side of that argument is readily trotted out as a truism even here on HN: "people from affluent parents have easier access to education".
[−] senectus1 37d ago
"Stupid people raise stupid people" is probably a better way to put it.

but even then thats entirely too simplistic as well.

[−] FeloniousHam 38d ago

> It’s not a bad movie.

I hadn't seen it since it came out, but had a that kind of general movie recollection that it was as funny as it was prescient. Watched it again with my wife who had not seen it before: it's not funny. Maybe I'm getting too old.

(I do still laugh at the "Ow! My balls!")

[−] wiseowise 38d ago

> like establishing “stupid people breeding makes stupid people” as incontrovertible fact

That’s based on environment and not on genes. You might not be born “stupid”, but if you’re surrounded by retards (like in the movie), chances are you won’t be splitting atoms.

[−] relativeadv 38d ago
It definitely activates something within people. Maybe I'm just terminally online, but there is always _always_ someone who will say "Idiocracy isn't satire, its a documentary."
[−] FrustratedMonky 38d ago
Not just 'other girls'. That happens, but also, it's a theme that has been around a long time. The 'Maga' movement existed before Trump. This is 1992

Was also in Snow Crash.

"All these beefy Caucasians with guns! Get enough of them together, looking for the America they always believed they'd grow up in, and they glom together like overcooked rice…With their power tools, portable generators, weapons, four-wheel-drive vehicles, and personal computers, they are like beavers hyped up on crystal meth, manic engineers without a blueprint, chewing through the wilderness, building things and abandoning them, altering the flow of mighty rivers and then moving on because the place ain't what it used to be.

The byproduct of the lifestyle is polluted rivers, greenhouse effect, spouse abuse, televangelists, and serial killers.

But as long as you have that fourwheel-drive vehicle and can keep driving north, you can sustain it, keep moving just quickly enough to stay one step ahead of your own waste stream.

"

Snow Crash Chapter 39 (Hiro's observation as he drives along the Alaska Highway)

[−] red-iron-pine 38d ago
for the uninitiated: the message is that serious pimping requires two D's, for a double-dose of that pimpin'
[−] btreecat 38d ago
I like money
[−] jacquesm 38d ago

> They all identified with the "idiots" and were indignant insulted, and angry.

That is sort of the point of the movie. It is a satire, but it is also a documentary packaged as a satire and the wrapping paper isn't all that thick.

[−] xattt 38d ago
It breaks my heart when I hear people outraged about Onion stories, not because that they fall for them, but because they know they have a hard time telling truth from fiction.
[−] Intermernet 38d ago
Many US citizens didn't get that Starship Troopers was a black comedy. There are serious video reviews taking it seriously as an action movie where the characters are true US heroes.

I have a feeling these people are the same as the ones you're talking about.

[−] j-kent 38d ago
Same goes with Starship Troopers - Clearly biting satire, but at the time was considered to be a dumb action movie by most.
[−] HexPhantom 38d ago
Satire really breaks when the target doesn't recognize itself as the target
[−] azangru 38d ago
Have they edited stuff out because of the audience reaction? Do you own an unedited copy?
[−] sidewndr46 38d ago
I guess that explains the lack of promotion around this film?
[−] spacebacon 38d ago
Indignant behavior may have been a result of a perceived attack on viewers belief system. Possibly combined with no 2nd order awareness of thought. Additionally, a subtle “critique” framing from the screening host or “open mic” framing may prime the participants to command attention. Outrage is the easiest when one has no conceptual lens to add interpretive value.
[−] m_mueller 38d ago
imagine how it would hit today. I'd guess a vast majority would feel insulted by it...
[−] cyjackx 38d ago
I guess I see why, though. Taken from the perspective of tropes of middle Americans, it's pretty condescending and claims everything they are is idiotic and responsible for the state of the world, when it is more complicated than that and the ivory tower has its own culpability
[−] netcan 38d ago
Idiocracy hit a lot of superficial/thematic nails on the head with its silliness.

"Don't Look Up" captures a lot more of the actual dynamics. Instead of anti-eugenics making brains feeble, the people are just normal humans made stupid by their cultural environment, incentives and suchlike.

[−] clejack 38d ago
I watched this movie really late. Let's say within the past 2 years or so. After watching it, all I could think was, "This isn't a comedy, it's a tragedy."

It felt way too close to home.

[−] yen223 38d ago
"A character is literally named 'Upgraydd' with creative spelling. In the future, names have become increasingly absurd — just random syllables, product names, and numbers."

Upgraydd was from our time wasn't he

[−] input_sh 38d ago
Not quite sure "Ow My Balls / Jackass" argument should count, the Jackass franchise is older than Idiocracy and was most likely an inspiration for that bit.
[−] Esophagus4 38d ago
As I got older, I always wondered if everyone thought they were the smart one and everyone else must be the idiocracy.

I seem to remember Homer Simpson thinking something to that effect (“Boy, everyone is stupid except me”).

I can imagine that happening today, esp politically.

[−] 8-prime 38d ago
Funny, just today I talked with a co-worker about how be both feel like we are approaching Idiocracy.

His nephew 'watered' their plants with Coke. Not quite Mountain Dew, but also not far off.

[−] beatthatflight 38d ago
Love it. Although I'm not sure which is the darkest timeline given https://www.howclosetoblackmirror.com/
[−] lelanthran 38d ago
I just finished up Pluribus S01; to me this could have been a take on AI.

The AI could have been The Joined; a population of beings who want only to make the remaining humans happy, by giving humans what they want, but they (The Joined) also acknowledge that in the long run their approach will result in an almost an Extinction-Level , mass starvation, etc.

[−] blamestross 38d ago
Every time Idiocracy comes up, I feel obligated to point out that it is WILDLY optimistic. The people are dumb, not evil. They struggle to adapt and learn, but are willing to try and willing to accept new information with evidence.

We are not so lucky in reality.

[−] Terr_ 38d ago
The profusion of LLMs with secret weights and prompts will also give us the The Truman Show's false-friendships, product placement, and fraudulent recommendations.

Without also making us famous or taking care of our daily needs.

[−] michaelermer 38d ago
[−] einpoklum 38d ago
In Idiocracy, president Camacho actually had the decent idea of trying listen to (somewhat) reasonable people with relevant abilities or skills rather than insisting that his failures are actually successes and just trying to force it until that worked. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
[−] qsera 38d ago
I just watched a new dinosaur cartoon made for kids and it has cartoon dinosaurs that farts a lot and I looked it up and in reddit people are saying "duh..farts are funny..why do you have a problem with it?"
[−] mt18 38d ago
Unpopular framing: it's less about "dumb masses" than incentive systems that make spectacle cheaper than competence—and we keep mistaking engagement metrics for neutral feedback.
[−] arionhardison 38d ago
I think in some ways we are past it; unfortunately not the funny ways. Some examples:

1. The presidents response to bombing of school girls was basically "stop hitting yourself"

2. Fox news host Dept. of Defense head and the "Dept. of War" name "change"

3. Building a grand ballroom while taking benefits away from hungry kids

4. Elon musk on stage with the chainsaw bragging about acts that save no money but did harm the poorest people on earth.

5. The fact that our media does not really care about any of this unless they get a ratings bump from it

Obviously we all could go on and on.. but the biggest loss IMO is objective truth. There are and will always be things that are true and I feel that we are losing a hold of that so that bad actors can just say to us: "no thats not what your seeing".

Its like in the movie, if they had looked at the plant growing and said: "Thats FAKE NEWS" then run to the field and claimed they did it all.

he claimed they did it to themselves

[−] sanex 38d ago
I don't think Starbucks offering happy endings is a 55% match to their current offerings.
[−] axegon_ 38d ago
Only 78%? That can't be right.
[−] duxup 38d ago
President Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho tried to find smart people to get their input, I wish we had President Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho…