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    Study Guide to Popcorn

    Key ConceptsEthics, moral responsibility, society; film violence

    Summary

    Bruce Delamitri is a film director who makes very violent but stylish movies. Bruces movies

    are hip. Post-modern cinematic milestones, dripping with ironic juxtaposition. His killers

    are style icons. They walk cool, they talk cool. Getting shot by one of them would be a

    fashion statement (from the book cover).

    Wayne and Scout are psychopaths who are killing people without apparent reason. Many

    people consider Bruces films to be the cause of the violence. As a way of avoiding the death

    penalty they decide that Bruce must take responsibility. They break into his house on Oscars

    Night and a terrible siege begins.

    After the final bloodbath the arguments continue over who is responsible for a violent

    societyand this violence in particular.

    WARNING Contains strong language; violence; sex

    Cultural significance

    Popcornstayed at the top of the hardback best-seller lists for quite some time before being

    released in paperback and has been translated and published widely around the world. It is

    also a successful West End play now at the Apollo Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1

    (directed by Laurence Boswell).

    Ben Elton has said I dont think balanced people can be driven to be any different from

    what they are The suggestion is that those who are open to anti-social behaviour may be

    seduced into believing it is the norm I feel slightly exposed here because I am putting a

    point I dont entirely believe. (The Daily Telegraph, July 29th 1996).

    Biographical background

    Ben Elton was born in South London and studied Drama at Manchester University. His

    numerous television writing credits include The Thin Blue Line, Blackadder, The Young OnesandThe

    Man from Auntie. He has written two hit West End plays and three previous internationally

    bestselling novels. His plays and novels have been widely translated. He tours occasionally

    as a stand-up comedian. Popcornis his fourth novel. He is going grey, is married to Sophie

    http://studyguides.rivassl.com/study-guide-to-popcorn/9/http://studyguides.rivassl.com/study-guide-to-popcorn/9/http://studyguides.rivassl.com/study-guide-to-popcorn/9/
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    Gare and lives in Notting Hill.

    Other books by Ben Elton

    Ben Elton, Batchelor Boys The Young Ones Book

    spin off of the TV series which Elton co-wrote with Rik Mayall and Lise Meyer

    Ben Elton Stark(1989)

    His first novel which sold massively in Britain and Australia. It was reprinted 23 times in its

    first year of publication, and sold over a million worldwide.

    Ben Elton, Gasping(1990)

    Based on his successful West End play starring Hugh Laurie

    Ben Elton, Gridlock(Warner Books 1991)

    Ben Elton, Silly Cow(1993)

    Ben Elton, This Other Eden(Simon and Schuster 1993)

    Overview

    The book opens with the narrative switching between Bruce Delamitri being interviewed by

    the police and him being interviewed by Oliver and Dale on Coffee Time USA the morning

    before. Most of the book is the events that took place in the intervening 24 hours.

    On Coffee Time USA he is quizzed over a series of killings that had taken place, apparently

    copying killings depicted in his latest film Ordinary Americans. He is expected to receive the

    Oscar for Best Director that night but a controversy is raging over whether or not his films

    have given rise to this violence or whether they merely show life as it is. Bruce maintains that

    it is the latter.

    The narrative then moves to switching between Bruces appearance on Coffee Time USA and

    the movements of Wayne and his pretty waif-like girlfriend Scout. They are known as the

    Mall Murderers and have been killing people across America in exactly the same way as the

    couple in Ordinary Americans.

    Bruce protests in strong terms that the association between his films and these killings is an

    invention of news editors; he maintains that people arent influenced in such a direct way by

    what they see. He insists that artists dont create society, they reflect it. And if you dont like

    that, dont change us, change society (p. 14). Wayne and Scout are watching this in their

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    motel room hatching a plan.

    Bruce spends the afternoon before the Oscars addressing the film studies course at the

    University of Southern California where he himself studied. He impresses the students but

    not the dusty old Prof. Chambers who asks some very penetrating, critical questions and

    gets the better of a very angry Bruce.

    Bruce arrives at the Oscars in a limo which crawls through the heavy traffic. He watches the

    crowds staring and straining to see whos inside. They couldnt see anything: all the limos

    had mirrored windows, so all they could see was themselves That was it! The whole truth

    in one startling image. Why were Bruces movies so successful? Because people saw

    themselves reflected in them. Maybe better-looking and a little cooler but none the less

    themselves, with their fears, their lusts, their most secret desires and fantasies He was a

    mirror. He did not create a world for people to watch; they created a world for him to film (p.

    54).

    His acceptance speech at the Oscars is embarrassing waffle. At the same time, Wayne and

    Scout are moving on having murdered two people at the motel.

    At the post-Oscars party Bruce drinking hard. He is rude to everybodyespecially to a

    young woman named Dove who he accuses of making up the terrible emotional abuse

    shedsuffered. Bruce claims to have an addictive personality and therefore was not

    responsible for his drinking. He rants about the victim culture and the lack of responsibility.

    Then he sees a Playboy model/aspiring actress who he takes home intending to sleep with

    her.

    What they do not realise until they start to undress is that Wayne and Scout are in the house.

    Some hours later Bruces almost ex-wife, Farrah and their daughter Velvet arrive. Wayne

    phones the TV networks and soon a convoy of media vehicles and police arrive at the house

    and a siege commences. The Police Chief and the NBC chief vie with each other as to who is

    in overall charge of the situation.

    Wayne s plan is for Bruce to go live on every TV network to say that he is responsible for the

    Mall Murderers killing spree because his films had such a profound impact on them. That

    way Wayne and Scout, though guilty, are not ultimately responsible and will avoid the

    electric chair. If he wont do it then he will kill Farrah and Velvet Delamitri and Bruce himself.

    Eventually Bruce and Wayne agree to debate it together on TV. Wayne has asked for a

    two-person news crew to come to the housewithout clothesin order to film this as well

    as a ratings computer so that he can see how many people are watching.

    As the debate goes on, the ratings gradually drop until Wayne announces that he will kill

    Farrah in one and a half minutes. At the end of the time he does shoot her and the Police

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    SWAT team start to enter the house. As soon as Wayne learns of this he says that he and

    Scout will give themselves up with no further bloodshed on the condition that everyone

    watching turns off their TVs. If they keep watching he will kill everyone in the room.

    The SWAT team move in and there is a bloodbath. Bruce survived but his career didnt; Scout

    also survived. Brooke, Velvet and the news crew as well as Wayne were killed. The epilogue

    of the book is a catalogue of litigation: everyone is blaming everyone else and suing them

    for damages over what happened. The book concludes, So far no one has claimed

    responsibility. (p. 298).

    Ideas for discussion

    1) With which of the characters in the book does Ben Elton seem to have the most sympathy?

    2) What do the various characters believe about human moral responsibility? What basis do

    they have (or are likely to have) for these beliefs?

    3) What elements of truth and error are there in Bruce Delamitris argument that he is only

    holding a mirror up to society, not creating it?

    4) What purpose do you think the confrontation between Prof Chambers and Bruce Delamitri

    serves in the narrative?

    5) Which side of the debate over violence in the movies do you think Ben Elton is on at the

    end of the day?

    6) To what extent has Elton glorified violence in his book in exactly the way the book seems

    to condemn in films? Is his use of violence legitimate because of the point that is being

    made?

    7) Why do people want to see violent films? Does the public get what it deserves?

    8) The controversy about film violence resurfaces fairly often. How could you bring a

    Christian angle to a conversation with a non-Christian friend when it is next in the news?