16. What exactly is the Watermelon doing there?
The following explanation can be found in the World Watch 1 Newsletter from the official Buckaroo Banzai
Fan Club from the April 1986 edition. This was written by the Director W.D.
Richter :
"I can only imagine Buckaroo trying to grapple with this question.
When cornered (as I feel now), he often quotes H.L. Mencken's nasty remark
about how every complex question always has a simple answer...that is usually
wrong. But it is high time poor New Jersey's honest inquiry be answered.
Let me rephrase the question first one way, then another. "Why is a
watermelon trapped between those monstrous pressure plates deep within the
Institute's Critical Stress Laboratory?"
Team Banzai botanical agronomists have been for years hard at work on the
problem of hunger in Third World countries under constant revolutionary
turmoil. A non-political, humanitarian effort, their goal has been to find
ways to feed starving peoples in remote areas where traditional food delivery
systems prove woefully inadequate. Often the only way to get the nourishment
into the bellies of the needy is to hit and run, avoiding all petty ideological
side-taking.
What you see in the Critical Stress Lab is a revolutionary watermelon capable
of withstanding impact pressures of 300,000 pounds per square inch! Sweet,
juicy and vitamin-packed, this remarkable fruit can be dropped from the
bomb bays of low-flying aircraft into the backyards of disenfranchised villagers
in the remotest backwaters of this angry planet. Just another Team Banzai
effort to cut through all the unnecessary crap around us and help people
help themselves. Look for high-impact, low cholesterol eggs next... and
sooner than you think, shatter-proof whole-wheat taco shells.
Rephrasing Number Two: "Why is there a watermelon in the movie at that
particularly tense moment? Doesn't it clutter the narrative flow?"
Absolutely, it does, in answer to part two of your question. But isn't life
full of things that get in the way?
Those of us making the movie that day felt under particularly severe pressure
from forces who would rather we'd all just stayed in bed. Not much of what
we were doing didn't clutter the movie. With a mountain rushing up in our
faces, was there any point in putting on the brakes? Would Buckaroo put
on the brakes?? Would a watermelon in the midst of a chase sequence not
be, in its own organic way, emblematic of our entire misunderstood enterprise?
At once totally logical and perfectly irrational?
Exactly. We knew it would confound and upset certain authoritarian types.
So we did it. And it worked."
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whats that watermelon doing there?