Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,074
- Location
- London, UK
For modern generations I think a part of The Mandela Effect is caused by the entertainment we watch and listen to. How many comedians or impressionists have done some version of James Cagney saying, "You dirty rat!" or Cary Grant saying, "Judy, Judy, Judy!"? Our minds record the information and, eventually, things get confused and we're convinced we've actually seen or heard James Cagney or Cary Grant utter those very words when, in fact, it never happened. This doesn't explain every instance, but it must surely explain some of them.
I think often a parody or impression is raised to pop-culture icon and remains so long after the source material is gone, enhancing the effect you reference. One of my PhD students is currently writing up a thesis on the regulatory issues relating to fan-fiction and fan-made works more broadly. In that context, he's referenced a known instance of a screening of The Princess Bride at which a lot of the audience who had never seen the film were suddenly realising where a lot of memes with which they were very familiar had come from. On the Cry Baby dvd, there's a great interview with John Waters in which he talks about how he was basically making an Elvis picture, then it went out in cinemas and much of the audience were kids who'd formed the original Johnny Depp fanbase when he was in 21 Jump Street; they'd never seen an Elvis picture, and found their own thing in it. I've seen similar happen with Indy and much else. Of course, the best stuff works both on its own level and at the level of pastiche / satire. I saw Who Framed Roger Rabbit? in the cinema in December '88 when it was a new release in the UK. Enjoyed it a lot. Revising it twenty-odd years later on DVD, my own reference points had changed and suddenly I actually 'got' a lot of the noir references. I'd had enough classic-cinema experience as a fourteen-year-old to have a bit of an idea of the aesthetic, but nothing like enough to see how clever a lot of it was. As an adult, I also had a clearer idea of why my mother in particular found it a touch risque for what was billed, locally, as "a kids' film".