The Gospel According To Napoleon Dynamite

Posted by: Randy in Blog Thoughts Add comments

I decided to cash in some gift certificates to Blockbuster the other day and Reese asked if we could get the movie Napoleon Dynamite. We have my brother-in-law, Paul, to thank for Reese’s interest in this movie. We bought the movie (a pre-viewed copy) and agreed that we would watch it together so as to talk about any questionable content.

I’m usually hesitant to recommend movies to people I know. Even more hesitant to recommend something to someone who does not know me. The reason for this is I may find something to be funny and you might find it to be something other than funny.

For example, when I was in college my mother came up for a visit and I talked her in to watching the movie Spies Like Us. Let’s just say I had forgotten about a few specific moments of questionable content in the film. (I shall from this point henceforth use the word “film” in honor of my Swiss relatives).

At the risk of offending someone, here are my thoughts about the film Napoleon Dynamite. I’m not going to give you a review of the film so much as the specific ways in which the message of the Gospel was conveyed - intentionally or unintentionally. I’m sure there are others who could better analyze this film. I was struck with the following observations:

The four main characters of this movie are Napoleon, his thirty-something living-at-home older brother Kip, their uncle Rico, and an immigrant student named Pedro. There are other characters weaving in and out of the fabric of this film who have major and minor roles.

Napoleon is everything short of being Dynamite. His last name is an oxymoron as much as jumbo shrimp, tuna fish and country music. He’s the struggling high school kid who is not popular, is not quite coordinated, and finds solace and comfort in a make-believe world.

Kip, his brother, is the typical portrait of a computer geek who lives at home and spends hours in a chat room where he can be more than a “live-at-home-computer-geek.”

As far as Uncle Rico is concerned, Bruce described it best when he sang about those “glory days which pass you by.” Uncle Rico lives in a van (no, not down by the river) and though the year has passed, he continues to re-live 1982.

Pedro is Hispanic, presumably the son of migrant farm workers, dropped into the pool of rural “wonder-bread” America. The challenges and pressures of that situation alone would be significant. Add to the mix that Pedro hardly says a word and you can imagine the uphill battle he faces.

What struck me about this film was the way in which love, acceptance, and forgiveness transformed these characters. The changes we were able to see and the changes we imagined would come about when those whom society normally discards are loved, accepted and forgiven.

Pedro runs for student class president and wins. Kip finds his soul mate in a chat room and is transformed into a hip-hop cool as a cucumber dude. Napoleon discovers the wonderful release of being loved for who he is and not what he thinks he needs to be. And wow, that boy can dance! Uncle Rico, though still quite unable to escape 1982 is apparently forgiven by his long-time girlfriend.

Though I’m not quite sure that Reese fully understood this film, for that matter I’m not quite sure I fully understood the film, I hope he sees the transforming power of love, acceptance and forgiveness.

This is the heart of the message of the gospel: the transforming power of love, acceptance and forgiveness. I hope Reese sees this not only in a film like Napoleon Dynamite but that he sees this in the story of our life together.

4 Responses to “The Gospel According To Napoleon Dynamite”

  1. Thurman8er Says:

    As a high school teacher, I literally did not have a choice when it came to seeing this movie. They all talked about it so much that I was out of the loop until I had seen it. We borrowed the neighbor’s copy (a minister, by the by…it seems that it’s a must-see for minister’s too) and started watching.

    I know my wife very well and I knew after 5 minutes that she was only watching this movie for me. After a half hour (during which the only time I laughed was when Napoleon got hit in the face with a steak), I finally…mercifully, Lisa would say…turned it off.

    After a week in which TOO MANY PEOPLE told me to finish it, I did. And I thought it was “OK”. The weird thing is how it seeped into me during the next week. And the week after. And how the lines kept coming back to me. It is the most quotable movie I have seen in a long time, maybe even since “Grail.” And now I want to see it again, probably even show it in class during the last week of school, you know, the week where nothing gets done.

    I agree with your points about its applicability. But really I just love looking at a student who has given me a wrong answer and saying, “GOSH!”

    For the record, my favorite line: “Are you drinking 2% milk ’cause you think you’re fat? ‘Cause you’re not. You could totally drink whole milk if you wanted.”

  2. cd2lab Says:

    Preston, Idaho is experiencing an influx of tourism, especially from Germany. Germans. I’ll leave it at that.

  3. Ebyboy Says:

    Haven’t watched the movie. Maybe I will. I do remember it being discussed as a cult classic. It is gratifying to realize that a movie with such an intense following parallels the redeeming power of love and relationships that the bible sketches.

    The irony is not lost on me though because cult classics of the last twenty or so years are not reknown for being morally instructive. This one as Randy narratives seems to be wholesomely instructive in a day and age where the best one is likely to get in any feature is selective and deducible by distillation from other unwholesome messages.

  4. Brandon Scott Says:

    Um…Napoleon doesn’t just dance…he has skills. SKILLS. And everyone needs to own a “Vote for Pedro” shirt. Lastly, I’ll leave you with a title to a little song I wish we could put on the new ZOE record…”I Still Love Technology”. Thank you, thankyouverymuch.

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