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Captain fantastic
Captain fantastic







captain fantastic
  1. #Captain fantastic full
  2. #Captain fantastic series

The child rattling off facts about the Bill of Rights is supposed to be adorable and comedic as well as a "high five" moment for the family. To win the argument that his kids have been educated just fine without going to school, Ben forces his six-year-old to give an impromptu treatise on the Bill of Rights, the purpose of which is to shame the public-school cousins who have no idea about anything. Ben's kids don't know anything about pop culture. The family stops and stays the night with family (Kathryn Hahn's Harper, Steve Zahn's Dave and their two kids), and the culture clash is extreme.

#Captain fantastic full

What will happen one day if one of the kids decides Noam Chomsky is full of it? Will that even be allowed? The irony here, and it is a terrible one, is that Ben is raising his kids to question the status quo, to not swallow any information wholesale, and yet he creates an environment where questioning his authority is impossible. They pull off occasionally, once to steal supplies from a grocery store (they've run such drills before), and once for an annual family ritual: the celebration of Noam Chomsky Day. Ben, who has set up his whole life so that he never has to answer to anyone, piles the kids into their gigantic school bus, and heads off to crash the funeral and make sure Leslie gets the Buddhist cremation ceremony she always wanted. Leslie's parents blame Ben for everything and forbid him from coming to the funeral. When Ben gets word that Leslie has killed herself, he informs the kids in blunt plain language. It's like it's 1929 in the Soviet Union.) The kids miss their mother and want to know when she's coming back. I'm a Maoist." (This is a family where "Trotsky-ist" is descriptive and "Trotsky-ite" is an insult. They argue about capitalism and exploited classes, sounding like little robots, Bodevan informing his dad at one point, "I'm not a Trotsky-ist anymore. At night they sit around a campfire, the kids reading books like Guns, Germs and Steel, Middlemarch and Dostoevsky. He puts the kids through fight training, boot camp drills and ushers his oldest son Bodevan ( George MacKay) into manhood through the ritual of stalking and killing a deer solo. When the film opens, the mother of this little clan (Trin Miller's Leslie) has been hospitalized for bipolar disorder, leaving Dad as "captain" of the ship. But "Captain Fantastic" treats the situation (and Ben) so uncritically and so sympathetically that there is a total disconnect between what is actually onscreen and what Ross thinks is onscreen. All of this is extremely intriguing, calling to mind films like " The Mosquito Coast," or " Running on Empty," which had similar cloistered family atmospheres, and charismatic controlling (albeit well-meaning) fathers. Because they are children, and because they are cut off from other influences, they parrot back to him his words, they share his worldview without question. He treats his five kids as though they are military recruits (as well as PhD candidates). Such utopias need a strong leader, and father Ben ( Viggo Mortensen) is that. Okay, sounds fine, if a little unsustainable.

#Captain fantastic series

It's "Swiss Family Robinson," or that 1970s series of films about "The Wilderness Family." Fresh air.

captain fantastic

"Captain Fantastic," written and directed by "Silicon Valley"'s Matt Ross, presents a family who have retreated from the world into the wilderness of the Pacific Northwest.









Captain fantastic