Monday, March 16, 2015

Raymond Babbitt in Vegas

   I'm not sure how, popular or whatever, it is to like Rain Man, anymore, especially for an Aspie or for anyone, (I'm probably going to get torn to shreds for this,) but, Rain Man! I think that it's a terrific film. Smart, iconic, unevil, and with heaps of Tom Cruise. My legs are jelly.

   The climax and most iconic scene is Vegas- Charlie gets Raymond to count cards, everyone has a gay old time and makes a lot of money over the course of the day to the point where Charlie's debts are made up for, and the question inheritance money practically gets mooted, with the only cost being never being allowed to set foot inside a casino ever again. Also that wad of cash lost when Raymond pulls a number out of his butt at the roulette wheel, but, no matter.

   So. Happy ending, yeah? But the movie keeps going... the story's not yet over. Hmm. Let's examine that.

   See, in this scene Charlie has made concession to Raymond's talents, true, but he was still using Raymond the exact same way he uses everyone else (whether the "yes" had been actually in response to a question posed a half-hour ago or not, it was still an accurate response to the question posed to Raymond then and there.) The Vegas scene gets Charlie out of his monetary problems, (which I guess is kind of important since it was all he could think about before,) but I don't think people realize the implications there; he's still using Raymond. You know, the reason he whisked Raymond away from the mental institution in the first place? He's still doing that. That's bad.

   Charlie is the true broken one: Raymond, though not without his problems in relation to change, is more than happy to deal with Charlie on Charlie's terms, but you don't see much of that going the other way. To put in simplistically, though not inaccurately, Raymond is just a problem that needs to be dealt with, because that's the way Charlie sees the world at first. (Prized. goshdarn. rosebush.)

   It isn't until the fire alarm and the scene at the pancake house that there's a full reconciliation between the two brothers, and Charlie is totally transformed. Charlie is able to approach Raymond on Raymond's own terms, for the first time that's real (i.e., syrup.) Charlie making concessions to and taking advantage of Raymond's savant skills in Vegas is a step that highlights both Charlie's and Raymond's natures, bringing the two (finally) together in a way that Charlie can swallow, and in the waffle house Charlie is ready to approach Raymond as a whole person, not just a savant, but an autistic savant. A bundle of complexities. Actually a pretty nice guy once you get to know him.

   It's weird, how many people overlook that.

   Or at least, I don't know, I think people overlook that, but-- the implications of the Vegas scene sure as heck never get brought up in any of the parodies, when it would seem that that's the most riff-able aspect of it, so...

   I was always disappointed that I wasn't named Timothy, but at least my middle name is Charles. I think that's pretty cool.

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