Real Freedom vs. Forcible Utilitarianism
“The
Tall Man” is a movie that was released in 2012. It’s a crime drama that
introduces a deep question in a way that anyone can understand: Is forcible
utilitarianism right or wrong?
This
article will contain a spoiler, because I am going to discuss the theme of “The
Tall Man”, and I can’t do it without revealing the plot. If you are a
movie-goer, watch the movie without reading reviews and reading this article.
It’s a good, suspenseful and twisty movie. You will probably be caught up in
it.
The story
takes place in a really poor mining town in British Columbia that has lost the
mine as a going concern. A complete summary is here. Children are being kidnapped. The
people think that a mysterious figure that they call “The Tall Man” is
responsible. Some have glimpsed him. Here’s the SPOILER. What’s actually going
on is that a doctor and his nurse wife are stealing the children and placing
them with wealthier families in a prosperous city. They are utilitarians who
believe it is right to use force to produce a greater good for a greater
number. The parents are heartbroken to lose their children, but the kidnappers
think that weighs lighter than the better homes in which they are placing the
children.
At the
end, a question is raised and repeated three times by one of these children in
her new environs. She wonders if she is better off. Here is what the wiki
summary says about the ending:.
“Jenny lives in a beautiful home, where her art is encouraged and she has the best of everything. She has begun to talk and seems well-adjusted and happy. As she walks to an art class, she gives a voice-over expressing love and gratitude toward her three mothers: her birth mother, whom she misses; Julia, who gave her a chance at a new life; and her new mother, who is providing her with everything she could ever want. As she crosses a park, she sees David with his new family, which he now accepts as his own. (Jenny thinks he and the other younger ones have forgotten and do not recognize her, but the visual cues leave it decidedly open-ended.) Despite getting her wish of a better life, she sometimes wishes to return. Jenny’s closing thoughts question society’s implication that her new life is better.”
The
summary is accurate. Jenny, who has been kidnapped and has material
opportunities that she couldn’t have in the mining town, “sometimes wishes to
return”.