Anonymous
ID: TyR6ynEm
7/6/2025, 4:55:00 AM No.509626390
I just realized that Pee-Wee's Big Adventure portrays a hyperreal America that exists exactly in the middle between an idealized 1930s, 50s, 70s and 80s. It's a world where you wait for the Wells Fargo wagon to show up with your new bike so you can go to the mall and check out the new Atari.
Where there's a Westward migration of hobos and dreamers toward opportunity, where bikers could be indians or the cavalry.
Where people ride old school gritty Harley's, greyhounds and trains.
Where BMX biker kids stand in place of the Sandlot gang.
As high trust as it possibly gets, with a backdrop of scanners and almost penitent criminals.
Pee-wee himself is almost an American Galahad. The bicycle is his holy grail, the embodiment of purely innocent joy. From the pointless speaker box with a 1980s "rad" lion's head on a 1940s Schwinn stylized like Buck Rogers.
To giving up the grail at the last moment to save all the animals, redeeming even the serpent.
Anyone feelin' me?
I've been very post-America lately and it dawned on me that a substantial part of the whole American soul is in this movie for some reason.
>gay jews
I know I know, but it was written by Phil Hartman.
It was directed by Tim Burton who's an Anglo wizard that low key drops red pills about Jews
https://www.nytimes.com/1992/07/02/opinion/batman-and-the-jewish-question.html
Where there's a Westward migration of hobos and dreamers toward opportunity, where bikers could be indians or the cavalry.
Where people ride old school gritty Harley's, greyhounds and trains.
Where BMX biker kids stand in place of the Sandlot gang.
As high trust as it possibly gets, with a backdrop of scanners and almost penitent criminals.
Pee-wee himself is almost an American Galahad. The bicycle is his holy grail, the embodiment of purely innocent joy. From the pointless speaker box with a 1980s "rad" lion's head on a 1940s Schwinn stylized like Buck Rogers.
To giving up the grail at the last moment to save all the animals, redeeming even the serpent.
Anyone feelin' me?
I've been very post-America lately and it dawned on me that a substantial part of the whole American soul is in this movie for some reason.
>gay jews
I know I know, but it was written by Phil Hartman.
It was directed by Tim Burton who's an Anglo wizard that low key drops red pills about Jews
https://www.nytimes.com/1992/07/02/opinion/batman-and-the-jewish-question.html
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