This blog posting is dedicated to Ted Vincent, who convinced his mother-in-law to watch Cowboys and Aliens in spite of her avowed dislike of both groups.
I've just finished reading a couple of Joe R. Lansdale stories,
Dead in the West and
Deadman's Road, both of which involve zombies in the post-Civil War West. Perhaps due to his Texas roots, Lansdale has always had a strong affinity for Western settings, albeit with unexpected and fantastic plotlines, as demonstrated in his work on
Jonah Hex for DC Comics in the early 90s.
The interesting thing about these two weird Western tales is that
there's no context for the characters to realize the nature of the peril they're facing. Let's face it, if the media
reported an outbreak of zombies tomorrow morning, a substantial percentage of
the US population would smile happily, put an oversized clip into their
AR-15, and go out into the streets to git some, as they say. But in the West of the late 1800s, there's really no cultural basis for knowledge of the walking dead, and as such the characters are horrified and astonished to a much greater extent.
The movie
Cowboys and Aliens offers a comparable scenario in terms of a situation where people are faced with an enemy with absolutely no precedent in their milieu. As things stand right now, I suspect that
virtually anyone in the world, upon seeing a bright ball of light
descend from the sky, land in the back yard, and expel a couple of green fellows with big heads, would say, “Aha, aliens!”
Culturally speaking we’ve been preparing for this for years – in fact, I
could probably write a reasonably plausible
Men In Black subplot
dealing with extraterrestrial Hollywood producers who have been funding
movies with the purpose of preparing the general population to accept alien visitors more easily.
Cowboy and Aliens is oddly lacking in this area - it's surprising that there's an almost complete lack of speculation as to the origin of the titular creatures (the aliens, that is). Other than someone asking the
preacher if the invaders could be demons, there's no real curiousity
about the origin of the giant fanged bullfrogs that are behind the
problems.
Historically speaking, it's a very near thing. A well read
latter-days cowboy might be familiar with H. G. Wells'
War of the
Worlds, which first saw print in 1897, and it's Wells who first introduces the idea of extraterrestrial invaders to the cultural mindset. But other than that possibility, the whole idea of aliens would have to be a mystery to
the
Texes and Hopalongs of the Wild West.
Regardless of the opinion of the cowboys, there's a very basic question left unanswered. What would the aliens think of the whole "cowboys" idea? Depending on
their cultural matrix, who knows what they might think was actually going on with the riders of the purple sage?
As usual, science fiction has already address this question, so I close with the following excerpt from
The Secret, a story in the
Retief of the CDT series by Keith Laumer. Jame Retief, a member of the
Corps Diplomatique Terrestrienne, is about to rescue a captured alien diplomat who is being tortured with Roy Rogers and Dale Evans movies.*
"Mr. Minister, the US cavalry has arrived. Are you ready to go?
"Heck no, Retief, we're just getting to the good part, where Roy mounts his wench and rides off into the wasteland."
"I think maybe you've got Trigger and Dale confused, D'ong."
"I confess I pay little attention to names. But how I admire the savoir fair of the cowbeomen, who, in times of strife, think first of love. Always they and their faithful mates couple joyously as they dash off across the plains, hero and villain alike!"
Remember that quote the next time you're watching a John Wayne movie and he tells everyone to mount up...
- Sid
Recommended Reading:
If you're interested in this particular sub-genre of science fiction, I strongly recommend
David Drake's trio of
Roman-meets-alien books -
Killer,
Legions of
Bronze, and
Birds of Prey. Drake does a very good job
of creating convincing scenarios in which the Romans come out on top
against aliens who may have superior technology, but not superior
determination and bravery.
* Hey, I don't write this stuff, I just reference it.