“Remember, remember, the fifth of November, the gunpowder treason and plot.” Every year, people on social media throws this line into the proverbial wind, maybe less so for Guy Fawkes and the gunpowder plot, and more for the political action film V for Vendetta. While Guy would ultimately be hanged for his attempt (and would get a day named after him in the U.K.), the film and more specifically, what it represents, has become something of a torch for activism movements. The mask, which was designed for the graphic novel, has become the symbol of activism in the 21st century, and the face of the Anonymous hacker group. So in the ever so rocky and contentious world that we’re being witnessing, how does V for Vendetta look at the tail end of 2020?
V for Vendetta, an adaptation of the Alan Moore graphic novel of the same, was directed by James McTeigue and written and produced by The Wachowskis. It stars Natalie Portman as Evey, an employee at the state-run news/television network and Hugo Weaving as the titular V. The plot takes place in a dystopian version of London, where a fascist regime has been voted into power and rules the United Kingdom with an iron fist. Many liberties we take for granted, such as music and art, are systematically banned, and anyone who isn’t White/Aryan, British (sorry, the Irish aren’t included here), Christian (Protestant) and heterosexual are “processed” into camps, as are political opponents. Think Nazi Germany meets 1984, as the government listens to everything the population says and will arrest citizens without trial for anything said that goes against what the government stands for. Likewise, they also use the media to misform and manipulate the masses. When Evey breaks curfew to see a work superior under false pretenses, she’s ambushed by the secret police.
Along comes V to save the day and set the plot in motion. Played by Hugo Weaving both on set and with re-recorded dialogue, V isn’t your typical hero. In fact, it would be fair to label him as a terrorist or freedom fighter, depending on where you stand. While he fights off the secret police with blade in hand to save Evey in a manner much like a swordsman from the 18th century would, he soon blows up the Old Bailey and later straps on a bomb vest and threatens to blow up the television network. Bit extreme, eh? But desperate times call for desperate measures. In the wake of government corruption, conspiracy, secrecy and downright murder, V is giving the people one year to rally to his cause, to overthrow the High Chancellor and fulfill Guy Fawkes’ dream of blowing up Parliament, because, in V’s point of view, the building is a symbol, as is the act of blowing it up.
“People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.”
With lines like that and the year we’ve had, this quote may identify strongly with many people around the world. In fact, there’s a lot of themes and parallels between the world today and what’s being depicted in the movie/graphic novel. There are internment camps for Muslims in China, immigration detention centers in the US, a virus that’s spread throughout the world that could have been prevented had the source country, China once more, taken action and responsibility early on. Hong Kong has lost its democratic rights, and the protests leading up to that decision featured thousands wearing the Guy Fawkes mask. Many countries are in a second nationwide lockdown, police brutality finally sparked a massive reaction due to the continuous demise of unarmed African Americans, sending the Black Lives Matter movement into full overdrive. Was that everything? Probably not, but you get why the people are angry, frustrated, confused and rebelling, either on a wide variety of issues, or just one. There are even those protesting against those protesting.
We don’t have a V of our own, but the idea that we’re all V has permeated into the mindset of many activists. 2020 seemed to be the year where people put their foot down and said, no, not anymore and began to fight for change. Is V the reason for that? I’d say no, the current state of affairs was the spark for that, but the spirit of what V was fighting for lies in that ideology, as does those who don the mask. When it was written, the mask was meant to represent resistance against a fascist government, but now it has been adopted to represent activism as a whole, regardless of what the cause is. Depending on where you are in the world, there may be no attempts to overthrow the government, as V intended, but V is certainly the concept of an idea, which is also something V intended. The very name, V for Vendetta, no longer applies to solely a movie or a book, it represents much more. So, if you plan on watching V for Vendetta this November the fifth, instead of remembering the gunpowder plot, think back on 2020. One thing is for certain, none of these issues are going away any time soon.
