

David and Jennifer don't have the "ideal" lives. Their high school teachers warn them of the dangers that await them in the real world, while their parents are divorced and can barely stand each other. Each twin deals with their situation differently; Jennifer acts like a slut by wearing the most provocative clothing available and submitting herself to anyone in return for "popularity". David, on the other hand, retreats into Pleasantville, a sitcom from the 50s where everything is perfect and pleasant. Everyone gets along, the high school basketball team is undefeated, no one is homeless, and everyone is happy. David sees this as the perfect life, and uses it as a substitute for his own.

One fateful night, when fighting over the TV remote (the film has some interesting things to say about television, in addition to nestalgia), the twins end up breaking the remote, rendering their TV unworkable. Soon, a weird TV repair man shows up and gives them a magic remote that sucks the pair right into the world of Pleasantville, where they, along with the entire world, are shaded in black and white. Both David and Jennifer are distraught by this turn of events, but for entirely different reasons. Jennifer is put off by the way of life; she is forced to eat fatty foods and wear poodle skirts. David, however, is afraid of ruining the perfect world that he adores so much. At first, he tries to preserve Pleasantville as best he can by coaching Jennifer on what the character she is inhabiting is "supposed" to do. But David cannot possibly contain Jennifer's desires to be herself.
Before going on, let me list a few things that are unheard of in Pleasantville: toilets, fire, women's rights, rain, cursing, minorities, life outside of the town, books (or at least books with writing inside them), change, and sex.

When I wrote about WALL-E, I commented on how thin the line between utopia and dystopia is, and that sentiment is very appropriate here. Everyone thinks they're happy in the town of Pleasantville, but that is because they don't know of any other way to think. Even David quickly becomes disenchanted with the world he once saw as perfect. People may be happy, but they lack free will. But when David and Jennifer begin introducing reality to the innocent town people, color begins seeping into the black and white world.

People acquire color when they accept change; most of the Pleasantville natives do so by accepting their sexuality, but other desires allow for the change as well. Mr. Johnson, the local soda shop owner, discovers an artistic creativity in himself that makes him want something more than the duty of cooking burgers every night, while Betty Parker, the mother of David and Jennifer's characters in the show (not to be confused with their actual real-world mother) learns that her life as a housewife is boring (ok, so she also has a sexual experience serve as the catalyst for her colorization, but there was more to it than just that).

And of course, the town elders (I really don't want to refer to them as the rich white men of the town, but that is who the elders would be in a 50s sitcom) want to do everything in their power to prevent these changes. Director Gary Ross correctly noted that these are the people with the most to lose because they are waited upon hand and foot by their wives and they are respected by their children (rock and roll and counterculture also begins to establish itself when David and Jennifer show up). And the parallels between real world oppression and the attempts by the "true citizens of Pleasantville" is the subject of the next post.
Up next: Struggling to remain Pleasant...
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