Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Fighting the future with mustaches

I've been waiting for mustaches to make a comeback, and I think this recent Rolling Stone cover just might help its long awaited return.



I've always been amazed at Brad Pitt's chameleonesque hair. He can go all Legends-of-the-Fall in weeks, shave it for his next film, then appear days later with George Clooney's very fashionable 1950s look.



I wonder if there's some magical Hollywood secret gel that allows celebrities to grow their hair out more quickly than the rest of the plebeian masses.

Anyway. Mustaches: why did they wander in the cultural desert for so long, collecting all kinds of sleazy connotations, like some creep in a windowless van (Michele associates mustaches with child molesters, which pretty much disqualifies me from ever growing one, even though I really really want to)?

I'm also waiting for body hair, in general, to make a comeback. Americans are obsessed with shaving everything, but I just can't keep up; what is it about body hair that so reviles us in one era, while being completely acceptable in others? I mean, Burt Reynolds used to be considered, like, a Greek God or something.



And then a mere 10 to 20 years later, this would completely repel 99% of women.

I think there must be an aesthetics of smoothness that's very active in the human brain--that makes us believe that rounded, consistent shapes are some kind of surface-manifestation of inner purity. I don't think that it's just sexual either. There's evolutionary reasons for why men are attracted to curves--they are supposedly the outer reflection of healthy reproductive capability (or so I read).

Yet, why is it that so much future-oriented design is almost inevitably sleek? For example, take the two robots from Disney's recent movie, Wall-E.



The old design is baroque, gothic, broke-down. The new design is exceedingly simple and egg-like. If you'll recall Terminator 2, the old design, occupied by Arnold Schwarzeneggar's smoothly shaved skin, is nevertheless a collection of intricate humanoid parts on the inside, while the new design is liquid metal.

In addition, if you compare the spaceships in the first three Star Wars films, they are much more complex and labyrinthine than the ships in the latest three.





My question is, why does new always equal smooth? Because in each case I actually prefer the old design, and yet I've always somewhat fetishized the new as well (hence my taste for Modernist literature). With the exception of home design, painting, and literature, in which I certainly prefer modernist straight lines and minimalist flourishes, the clunkier, more gothic-church like design of the "older" models registers more "soul", even if the object rendered is a machine.

So I think there's also something in us that rejects the aesthetic of smoothness at times, and lets us enjoy the sloppy effectiveness of the Millenium Falcon, the simple tasks completed by the squeaky but soulful Wall-E, and the human-in-waiting of the Cyberdyne Systems Model 101.

My next step must be to convince Michele that my desire to grow a mustache simply stems from my yearning to reject the onset of a featureless future that we humans can only seem to envision as a plain free of the scars, blemishes, and accretions that pock reality and erupt through the curvature of our utopias.

Think she'll buy it?

9 comments:

Schwartz said...

nope - me

The Engman family said...

I'm with Michele...mustaches=chester the molester. With that said, I have been begging Eric to shave his goatee (that he has had for the past 12 or so years, no exception) for years - merely to see what his face looks like under all that hair. Now sideburns - wish those would make a comback...
I'm scared for life by that Burt Reynolds picture.

Melissa said...

wow sam- "erupt through the curvature of our utopias"

that's intense:)

Sam Schwartz said...

Mel--That's hanging over our bed. Lol, jk. Actually it's funny that that picture is so infamous since, body-hair wise he's actually quite average. Maybe it's the pose that's so creepy.

And I admire Eric for his dedication to his goatee. Though it would be a revelation to see what he would look like w/o it.

Melissa--Thanks, I try. I'm actually more excited that I got Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Burt Reynolds, mustaches, Terminator, Star Wars, Wall-E, and the aesthetics of smoothness into one blog entry.

Schwartz said...

I would need some serious psychotherapy if that picture were hanging over our bed...now that top pic of B. Pitt would not be too shabby!!

Bonnie Kim said...

He's lying on a bear!! Nasty. He must be trying to make up for something because I walked by the actual Burt Reynolds on a plane one time and he is little! I agree Michele...that Brad Pitt pic is hot. I would be open to a mustache comeback, especially if they all look like his!

Becky said...

Gooooo Body Hair! I overheard one of my varsity basketball players state "I don't think I could ever be with a guy with a hairy body" as she made a repulsed face. I thought to myself, how immature, although I do realize that they are only high schoolers. To really not like someone because God forbid they have any hair is lame-o. I think people just watch too many movies and don't take a look at the real world, just as men sometimes have unrealistic expectations on what women should look like.

-hh said...

compromise: you can grow a mustache and she can grow armpit hair. you can both explore body hair together -- mutual repulsion or sensual enjoyment? dan can't grow the 'stache, but he's way hairy otherwise -- 3:30 shadow, seriously -- and i LOVE it. chest, legs, face, sexy. "let it grow!"

Sam Schwartz said...

geez holly that almost turned into a penthouse letter. And I would argue that is not an equivalent compromise! But I really don't have a good argument for why.