By Gary Furr
Napoleon Dynamite. It’s been seven years and I still laugh at this movie. I have it on DVR so I can speed through to favorite moments. Not long ago a friend and I were laughing as we sent quotes back and forth.
Napoleon Dynamite: “Do the chickens have large talons?”
Farmer: “Do they have what?”
Napoleon Dynamite: “Large talons.”
Farmer: “I don’t understand a word you just said.”
The dialogue is so painfully true to life. I knew kids just like Napoleon, and he talks like them. The humor is not cruel, slapstick, humiliation or vulgarity. It is recognition and insight into irony. You feel the pain, because you’ve been there as one of the characters in that movie.
Napoleon Dynamite: “Stay home and eat all the freakin’ chips, Kip.”
Kip: “Napoleon, don’t be jealous that I’ve been chatting online with babes all day. Besides, we both know that I’m training to be a cage fighter.”
Napoleon Dynamite: “Since when, Kip? You have the worst reflexes of all time.”
Napoleon Dynamite: “Well, nobody’s going to go out with me!”
Pedro: “Have you asked anybody yet?”
Napoleon Dynamite: “No, but who would? I don’t even have any good skills.”
Pedro: “What do you mean?”
Napoleon Dynamite: “You know, like nunchuck skills, bow-hunting skills, computer-hacking skills… Girls only want boyfriends who have great skills.”
It’s the little details — Don the jock, mocking and threatening but never actually doing anything but sneering and shaking his head; the bully who kicks Napoleon’s pants to mash his “tots” when he refuses to share them; the kids in the bus screaming when Lyle shoots a cow without thinking about who’s watching; the town rich girl who always wins everything because she was entitled from the get-go and the faceless mass of kids who never have a chance.
Then the principal — lecturing Pedro for his “cruelty” for mocking his opponent with a piñata and later leering as the Happy Hands dancers do their skit bare-footed at the assembly. I could go on.
Napoleon grabs onto a new kid from Mexico in the desperate hope for a friend who might stick by him. I winced. I was that kid. I spent most of my life as an outsider, since I moved throughout childhood. I attended seven different school systems in five states before I graduated high school due to my father’s job. I get “not belonging.” I had to fit in and figure out a world others created, often obliviously, before I arrived.
I am actually grateful for these experiences. Any capacity I have for empathy and compassion owes a lot to this experience in my life. While America is throwing trillions around I think we ought to move everybody in the country at least once – and some of us to a foreign country — for at least a year so we can grow up a little and have some informed opinions.
The lack of imagination, openness to others and real knowledge of what it means to be “dislocated” probably has a little to do with our trivial politics and fear-based anxieties about the rest of the world. Once you’ve been the powerless, unimportant and an outsider, you never see life the same again.
I tell young couples pondering marriage that friendship is one of the most underestimated predictors of marital success. As I approach 38 years with the same woman, I credit some of it to a sense of humor and the fact that we like each other. Once when she dramatically said, “Sometimes I just want to RUN AWAY, I asked, “Can I go with you.”
My version of, “I caught you a delicious bass.”