WHAT IS SPICE? Many people believe spice to be a sort of
condiment, or an odor, but this is blatantly wrong. "Spice"
is in fact either a prefix or a suffix that can be used to modify
any noun: Spice Bus, Baby Spice, Spice World and Spice Think are
examples. If this doesn't seem completely obvious to you, you
are without a doubt over age 13, and hopelessly square. Get over
yourself, girl. Buy some giant shoes and a ticket to Spice
World, the new Spice Movie, flecked with Spice Girls.
It's funny, but the brand "Spice Island" also comes
to mind when I think of Spice. Not that anything actually has
to make sense in Spice World, which is a world containing
five Spice Girls who change their clothes so often that the idea
of counting the costume changes will be quickly abandoned by any
fool who tries (silly me). It's just that Spice World,
like life, is so much like Gilligan's Island that it's
freaking me out. The only difference is that Spice World
only has five inmates, and they're all half-dressed and babes.
Other than that, it's exactly like Gilligan's Island.
For example, Gilligan's Island contains seven stranded
castaways cut off from the society of others. Spice World
stars five vixens isolated on the island of their fame, who are
unable to leave or make any decisions for themselves, except for
things like "deciding to jump on a boat." The inmates
of Gilligan's Island were doomed to endless repetition, fulfilling
the destiny engraved in the narrow grooves of their characters,
and it's the same with the Spice Girls! And not only that, they
have the same characters!
You see, Baby Spice is just like Mary Ann--cute and infantile
and obsessed with her lollipop the way Mary Ann was deeply fixated
on coconut creme pies. Posh Spice (who, from her wardrobe, could
also be called "Call-Girl Spice") corresponds perfectly
to the sultry, self-loving starlet Ginger, with a bit of Lovey
thrown in for bite. Ginger Spice (Ginger!) is the Professor, because
she's knows all sorts of information, for example that the manta
ray is a fish. Sporty Spice is Gilligan himself--she's agile,
and seems to be at the center of the group, maybe because she's
the only one who can actually sing. Scary Spice is the Skipper,
because she's bossy.
Just how trapped they are on their personal three-hour tour (three-city
tour?) becomes clear when the girls play dress-up for a photo
shoot, and they all just end up dressing up like some other Spice
Girl that they are not. At least fame is fun, even when you can't
escape it. They get to sing while holding cordless microphones
and dancing the way teenage girls dance when they're alone in
front of a mirror. As an engineer comments during one of their
sessions, they're "perfect without actually being any good."
Of course, evil is afoot, and there's some bad guy with a saliva
condition who would like to take down the Spice Girls and their
philosophy of life, Girl Power. I was hoping he wouldn't win,
because I knew it might be painful for the little girls sitting
behind me singing along loudly with the hits--even though I was
annoyed by their singing. But God knows adolescence is already
painful enough without evil triumphing over good.
Luckily, Girl Power is a tough power to take down. Girl Power,
in case you're wondering, is feminism for little girls who might
be a bit scared at the prospect of being independent adults. It's
about being sexy and in charge of your life and commanding respect
even while being a Spice Girl who doesn't have sex (Baby Spice
says she has too many stuffed animals in her bed to make room
for a man), who lives in a big house along with all the other
Spice Girls (but with her own bedroom), who is never alone, and
who never makes decisions that aren't instantly corroborated by
the other four righteous Spice Girls. Plus, they have a sort of
big daddy (Roger Moore) who is like Charlie from Charlie's
Angels or Boss from Fantasy Island (another island!)
who engineers their lives and careers so they don't have to. What
a relief!
It's sort of cool, because they're like the female versions of
teen idols, in that they hint at grown-up things like sex and
independence without actually voyaging into the scary reality
of it--but they're girls, and spicy ones at that! They
know what they want. They want to have fun, Spicy Fun, and they
want it now. They want it yesterday.
Now everybody dance.