Last modified: 2008-01-05 by marc pasquin
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At IMDB.com, the 2006 movie Idiocracy is presented thus:
Private Joe Bauers, the definition of "average American", is selected by the Pentagon to be the guinea pig for a top-secret hibernation program. Forgotten, he awakes 500 years in the future. He discovers a society so incredibly dumbed-down that he's easily the most intelligent person alive.500 years in the future begs the question about flags. Will a dumbed-down society be more or less prone to flag change than a brighter one? We can expect vexillological errors accumulating as designs get miscopied, though lessened creativity could lead to draber versions of our current colorful world.
by António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 August 2007
(ed. note: the text is only shown to give an idea. some samples seem to indicate the words are actualy a list of companies. )
Film director Mike Judge (or who ever responsible for
flag props in this movie) included a hardly changed US flag. This screen
capture (at the
Internet Movie Database) is a bit overexposed: I suppose usual Old Glory
(dark) shades for red and blue. The design is a bit unstandard, with 3:5
ratio, and 18 yellow (five-pointed, regular, upright) stars in a staggered
pattern (3×4+2×3); then there's the 13 usual stripes.
I suppose that this variant is within the expected range even by today
standards, so this may not be *the* U.S. flag of 2506 in the fictional
setting of this story, but it is there.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 August 2007
Actually, your flag has 11 stripes. The screen capture seems to have 10, but the
uppermost red stripe may be obscured. Either way the "13 usual stripes" seem to
have gone the way of the "usual white stars"
David Kendall, 5 August 2007
The stripes are definitely not usual - if you look closer you'll
see they are actually rows of red letters.
Can't see what's written there, probably some brand names, in the
Idiocracy world everything is commercialized, so I guess it's even
possible to buy ad space on the national flag...
Mariusz Borkowski, 5 August 2007
Indeed my image shows 11 because I also
assumed that an upper red stripe is obscured in the screenshot. Anyone who
watch this movie please pay attention for us.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 August 2007
I hunted for better images on line but found only many (many!) instances
of the same few images — none of them was clear enough to confirm this.
See here, the largest copy of
the one already mentioned, at the IMDb site. Mariusz, did you watch this
movie? Could you provide a better picture with these letters showing?
(Even if not readable.)
Anyway this yellow-star (and red-letter-stripe?) flag is seen in the bike
scene, but other flags displayed in this movie do not share these features
-- adding to the idea that in this year 2506 flag manufacture is not at an
all time best, which agrees with the setting. So, we can say that this is
*an* erroneous US flag shown in the movie, but not *the* US national flag
as per the movie's plot.
I tried, but can't find anything better than these:
Image 1,
Image 2.
However, I'm pretty sure the first row below the canton is:
CARL'S JR - COSTCO - ...
Also, sure the T-rex uniform's one is regular, as this one is from 1939, not 2506.
Mariusz Borkowski, 8 August 2007
The large flag hanging behind the speaker's desk is
definitely 11-stripped, the red stripes consisting lines of text sent in a
very bold and typgraphically dark face, slightly slanted; its stars are
indeed yellow, perhaps a bit denser than regular, and 25 in number,
arranged in seven staggered rows of four and three stars each.
The settings of its use (presidential bike, its armoured bus escort, and
the Senate(?) speaker's desk backwall) imply that this is *the* 2506 U.S.
national in this movie, after all.
Gotta watch this movie to find the motive for the number 25 (a half-brain
version of the current US?) and need a very good flat image, or a detailed
description, of the text making the red stripes.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 9 August 2007