Skip to main content

Life Lessons from Buckaroo Banzai

"The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension", commonly referred to as just "Buckaroo Banzai" is a cult American science fiction film from 1984.  It is one of my favourite movies, mainly because it's pretty weird and contains a lot of throwaway jokes and quotable lines.  My friends and I in college watched it obsessively. I highly recommend it if you are in the mood for a silly and fun science fiction adventure.

For all of its loopiness, there are some valuable life lessons that I have taken away from the film.  Buckaroo Banzai, played by Peter Weller, has a most famous line:  "No matter where you go, there you are."  As much as this is written to be absurd, the point that I take away from it is that you have to deal with the situation that you find yourself in -- there you are.  There's no point in moaning or blaming other people (blaming other people never solves a problem), you have to take responsibility for making bad situations better, and you have to take responsibility for whatever actions of yours have put you in the situation in the first place.  If your train is late, there's nothing you can do about it, and whining about it or worrying about it is not going to change the situation -- there you are.  If you burn the toast, you can either make more toast, or eat the burnt toast, and beating yourself up about it solves nothing -- there you are.  Buckaroo Banzai finds himself in a lot of perilous conditions, and he calmly works his way out of them when he can, without complaining about how unfair life is.  

In another memorable scene, two characters are moving through Buckaroo Banzai's laboratory, and one (played by Jeff Goldblum) sees a watermelon in a pressure-testing vice, the kind of tool used to test how well materials can withstand loads.  Jeff Goldblum's character asks "why is there a watermelon there?"  The other character replies "I'll explain later."  Of course, this is never explained. It's a great example to me about how there are things in life that we can't make sense of, and if they not not important (the watermelon in the vice does not miraculously become a key plot point later on), then we can just ignore them.  People seem to have different thresholds of what pisses them off, and the happy people I know have the highest thresholds.  We don't know why the watermelon is there, but more importantly it doesn't matter.

A final memorable line is spoken by the villain, Lord John Whorfin, hilariously played by John Lithgow.  In one of his ranting speeches, delivered in a comic-book Italian accent, he says "character is what you are in the dark!"  This barely needs explaining,  I think.  Your integrity is best tested when no one will know what choice you have made.

Buckaroo surrounds himself with people he trusts, known as Team Banzai.  They are all capable and Buckaroo trusts them implicitly to do the right thing.  I sometimes refer to my project teams as Team Banzai, and no one knows what I am talking about, but that's ok.

Finally, at the end of the film, Buckaroo, with the help of the friendly aliens, revives a dead person.  The alien glances at the audience and says "so what, big deal."  It's a helpful reminder of a lesson that runs throughout the film -- a lot of stuff that we take so seriously really doesn't matter.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

We Are Unreliable Narrators of Our Own Lives

The Unreliable Narrator is a device used in novels, plays, and films, wherein the character telling the story does not fully understand what is really going on.  Most often it is used for comic effect.  Examples include the film "Raising Arizona," the film "Badlands" and the "Jeeves and Wooster" novels of PG Wodehouse.  In these, the narrator is dimwitted, and the disconnect between what we see happening in the story and the narrator's understanding of what's going on is very funny.  Occasionally the Unreliable Narrator is used for tragic effect, the best example I can think of is the Terence Malick film "Days of Heaven" in which the narrator is a young girl, possibly mentally disabled, who's misinterpretation of the events of the film is sad indeed.  I believe that we are unreliable narrators of our own lives .  Our minds provide a constant stream of interpretation and the assignment of meaning to What is Happening to us, why we do w...

Listening is a Super Power

One of the more memorable experiences of my early coaching career occurred when I was having breakfast with a client.  He was going on about his people problems (two on maternity leave, one on sick leave, etc.) and his IT problems, and so on.  In the middle of his (healthy) venting, he made the comment "we're nowhere" without any further explanation of what that meant.  When he was done, I gave a thoughtful pause, and then asked him "what did you mean when you said 'we're nowhere.'?" To his surprise, and mine, he didn't remember saying that.  I assured him that he had, and then he thought about it, and replied that what he meant was that he felt that the organisation could be much larger, and that the number of clients that they were serving could be at least twice what it was.  It turns out this was his deepest concern, and that all of the other issues were secondary, or perceived by him as getting in the way of that goal. I've had several m...