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V Is For Vapid (Don Feder Slams Hollywood Far Left's Paranoid Fantasies Alert)
Frontpagemag.com ^ | March 20, 2006 | Don Feder

Posted on 03/20/2006 2:27:38 AM PST by goldstategop

"V for Vendetta," which opened on Friday, combines all of the celluloid left’s paranoid fantasies – Christian conservatives in charge of a brutal regime, the war-on-terrorism as an excuse for the suppression of civil liberties, homosexuals harassed and killed by conservative Christians, a pedophile priest (who works miter-in-had with the regime) and an attack blamed on terrorists that’s really a right-wing conspiracy.

All that’s missing is a Halliburton connection. For that, we’ll have to wait for "V – The Return."

"V" opens in Britain circa 2020. America has succumbed to plague, civil war, and chaos. (Bush’s fault, no doubt.) The UK is ruled by a fascist regime with strong Christian overtones – the party’s slogan is "Strength through Unity; Unity through Faith." Its symbol is a stylized cross, and its enforcers are a quasi-religious police.

As the film opens, Britain’s most popular commentator is explaining how America’s fall was ordained by its embrace of "degeneracy," as flecks of saliva fly from his mouth.

The Brit Reich is headed by Chancellor Sutler – played by a cadaverous John Hurt (who looks like a cross between Hitler and Kate Moss). Hurt is incapable of delivering his lines unless he’s: A) Screaming B) Sneering or C) on the verge of a cerebral hemorrhage.

In the England of "V," free speech has been crushed. Conformity is ruthlessly enforced. Dissidents and non-conformists are hunted down and eliminated. Torture is a routine. Medical experiments are performed on undesirables. And "1984" indoctrination is ubiquitous.

Enter the mysterious "V" – a knife-throwing martial-arts master in a Guy Fawkes mask.

The movie projects the 17th century Englishman as a prototypical freedom fighter. In reality, Fawkes was a Catholic conspirator who tried to murder James I and most of Britain’s nobility by attempting to blow up Parliament in the famous Gunpowder Plot of 1605. His objective wasn’t constitutional democracy but a return to Catholic rule. But, then, Hollywood never did have much of a sense of history.

That’s only the beginning of "V’’s confusion. One of the characters is a closet homosexual talk-show host (portrayed by British actor Stephen Fry), who shelters Natalie Portman on the run from the authorities.

In his Crypt of the Banned, Fry shows Portman a Koran. "Are you a Muslim?" Portman innocently asks. No, Fry replies, but I appreciate the beautiful illustrations and poetry therein. Does he also appreciate the perspective of the religion-of-peace on the love-that-dare-not speak-its-name? Were there German Jews in the ‘30, who really dug those snappy SS uniforms?

The only reference to Islam has to do with beauty and poetry. "V" has other targets on its radar screen. In terms of bashing the Right and demonizing Christians – with "V," Hollywood is completely in character.

Need a clichéd bad guy? Call central casting for a stock lecherous priest, hypocritical evangelical, repressive preacher or sadistic nun. Whether now or in the past, committed Christians are regularly portrayed as characters who should be committed – fanatical, hypocritical, cowardly, avaricious and lustful. Think "Kingdom of Heaven," "King Arthur," "Saved," "The Magdalene Sisters," "Priest," The Order," "Dogma," "Stigmata," and the movie version of "The DaVinci Code," coming out in May.

As much a staple as the evil Christian is the unprincipled, power-mad conservative politician, general, or businessman.

Starting with "Dr. Strangelove" and "Seven Days In May," proceeding to "The Manchurian Candidate" (both the ‘60s original and the recent remake), "Dreamscape," "The American President," "The Contender" (with Gary Oldman doing his Bob Dole impression), "Bulworth," "The Day After Tomorrow" (where the destruction of America in a global climate catastrophe is blamed on a conservative vice president opposed to the Kyoto Treaty) – well, you get the picture.

"V for Vendetta" is distinguished by envelope-pushing, combined with an unapologetic glorification of terrorism.

The title character (who begins the movie by blowing up the Old Bailey and ends with the demolition of Parliament) is a noble soul – a courageous, long-suffering, philosophical bloke, who appreciates jazz, Renaissance paintings, weepy old movies, and high-cholesterol cooking.

This is Hollywood’s romanticized take on terrorists – far removed from the reality of Koran-happy sadists who plant nail-packed bombs in restaurants frequented by families with young children.

The slogan of "V for Vendetta" is: "People shouldn’t fear their government. Governments should fear their people."

In the real world, beyond the pages of comic books (where "V" originated), there’s no shortage of governments that prey on their people, and people who live in gut-wrenching fear of their rulers – places like Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Syria, and the Peoples’ Detention Center of China.

Here are governments with gulags, medical experiments performed on dissidents, tanks rolling over demonstrators, torture cells and thought-control.

Beijing sells the organs of executed prisoners. Kim Jong Il deliberately starves his subjects while pursuing nuclear weapons. Iran puts out contracts on novelists. When he was in power, Saddam Hussein’s idea of a night on the town was watching a live man being fed into a plastic shredding machine.

When was the last time Hollywood made a big-budget film about the agony of existence in one of these nightmare states? I know; it’s a real brain-teaser.

The few include "Red Corner" (where China’s "justice system" is not portrayed sympathetically) and "Die Another Day" (even here, the bad guys aren’t the rulers of North Korea, but rogue elements therein – scary thought).

While they carry on about Bush being behind the 9/11 attacks and using the war on terrorism to advance his totalitarian plans, much of Hollywood has the warm and fuzzies for the most corrupt and brutal tyrannies on earth.

Sean Penn flew to Baghdad prior to the U.S. liberation and posed next to a picture of Saddam. Steven Spielberg (whose "Munich" posits moral equivalence between Palestinian assassins and Israeli agents out to get them) once remarked, "The best seven hours I ever spent was actually with Fidel Castro." (Given the quality his recent films, he might be right.)

And, lest we forget, Jane Fonda (star of "Monster-In-Law," now playing on cable), who traveled to Hanoi during the Vietnam War to make propaganda broadcasts, told an audience at the University of Michigan (1970): "I would think that if you understood what communism was, you would hope, you would pray on your knees, that we would someday become communists."

After the war, Fonda called Joan Baez a liar for charging the Khmer Rouge with genocide. (In reality, the Killing Fields were a reclamation project.) The U.S. POWs who said they were tortured at the Hanoi Hilton – also liars, according to Fonda.

Her ex-husband, Ted Turner – who’s gone duck hunting with Castro – has remarked that "communism is part of life on this planet. And that’s okay with me."

In the 1980s, Ed Asner bought "medical supplies" for the FMLN, the Marxist guerrillas who wanted to turn El Salvador into another Cuba.

The aptly named Vanessa Redgrave is a member of the British Workers Revolutionary Party. In her younger days, the mummified Marxist may have shared a bed with the red gravedigger of Cuba. And, in 1978, she teamed up with Fonda to make "Julia," glorifying yet another Red lover: Lillian Hellman. Warren Beatty got off playing John Reed (who thought Lenin was the messiah) in "Reds."

Need I continue? Hollywood has a lot of credibility when it comes to lecturing us on tyranny – about as much as Ted Kennedy does on drunk driving, Bill Clinton on marital fidelity, and Robert Downey Jr. on a drug-free America.


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: amerrika; bforboring; christians; conservatives; donfeder; dystopia; farleft; frontpagemag; hollywood; islam; natalieportman; paranoidfantasies; religionofpeace; terrorism; tyranny; uk; vforvendetta; visforvendetta; waronterror
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To: goldstategop

"The movie projects the 17th century Englishman as a prototypical freedom fighter. In reality, Fawkes was a Catholic conspirator who tried to murder James I and most of Britain’s nobility by attempting to blow up Parliament in the famous Gunpowder Plot of 1605. His objective wasn’t constitutional democracy but a return to Catholic rule. But, then, Hollywood never did have much of a sense of history."

Today's left has echoes of that plot.

Look at it this way. What is one of the cases where the freedom of political speech should be denied? When someone wishes to use it to end yours. Period.

In a similar way, the English back then, who had been turning way from Catholicism, and more importantly, it's political regime, had to take steps to root out the old regimes political operatives. They faced being rolled back, and their freedom and liberty being taken away. Some people, anglo Catholics like Fawkes, suffered because of this.

So what was the Gunpower Plot, something leftists look back at fondly? An example of the real "rightwing" trying to get territory back. To me, that sums up what todays Left is about. They want to go back to the old Empire, just without its formal Catholicism. No thanks!


21 posted on 03/20/2006 3:23:17 AM PST by Frank T
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To: goldstategop

Hollyweird strikes again


22 posted on 03/20/2006 3:28:27 AM PST by Cruz
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To: chief_bigfoot
The vendetta behind film V for Vendetta

As this article shows, he doesn't like the film. Anyway, I may have spoken too soon - he may have been anti-Mrs. Thatcher...I'll double check.

Regards, Ivan

23 posted on 03/20/2006 3:29:00 AM PST by MadIvan (You underestimate the power of the Dark Side - http://www.sithorder.com/)
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To: MadIvan

It was written as an anti-Thatcher graphic novel, and the reason he wants nothing to do with the film has nothing to do with politics. Check out this article from the Independent UK:

http://news.independent.co.uk/people/profiles/article352247.ece


24 posted on 03/20/2006 3:30:07 AM PST by Very Goldwater
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To: Very Goldwater

I stand corrected. I was sure I had read somewhere it was anti-Michael Foot.

Regards, Ivan


25 posted on 03/20/2006 3:32:33 AM PST by MadIvan (You underestimate the power of the Dark Side - http://www.sithorder.com/)
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To: MadIvan
Moore does not much like Hollywood and they made this movie without his consent. He thinks its utter rubbish. I completely agree.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

26 posted on 03/20/2006 3:32:56 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

The idea of turning Guy Fawkes into a hero is utterly barmy as well. There's a reason why we burn him in effigy to this day.

Regards, Ivan


27 posted on 03/20/2006 3:34:22 AM PST by MadIvan (You underestimate the power of the Dark Side - http://www.sithorder.com/)
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To: MadIvan

Oh I don't doubt that you are right. I also don't doubt that M-TV wouldn't spin this to help their fellow comrades in Hollywood sell some tickets. I'm willing to wager that you are correct and they aren't.


28 posted on 03/20/2006 3:35:46 AM PST by chief_bigfoot ("isn't THAT amazing?" - Ron Popiel)
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To: goldstategop

***In the England of "V," free speech has been crushed. Conformity is ruthlessly enforced. Dissidents and non-conformists are hunted down and eliminated. Torture is a routine. Medical experiments are performed on undesirables. And "1984" indoctrination is ubiquitous.****

WOW! Sounds like Liberal Utopia!
Does Air Britain rob Children's Charities, too???


29 posted on 03/20/2006 3:36:38 AM PST by tcrlaf
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To: tcrlaf
It used to be called the Union Of Soviet Socialist Republics. The original Leftist utopia.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

30 posted on 03/20/2006 3:38:30 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

How about a movie (circa 2040) where Britain is ruled by Muslims and its (native) citizens are forced to live under the Sharia? You won't ever see that one, although it looks ever more likely every day. No, the boggyman will always be the conservative Christian who resorts to fascism to impose his will and morality on everyone else. You can argue that it happened once, although I'd hesitate to call Nazi Germany "Christian". The real agenda is to convince the masses that conservatives are the real villians. Only then will the way be paved for the Other to take over. Then Hollywood will find out what tyranny really is. Of course, those "courageous" liberals will be the first to lick the boots of their new masters.


31 posted on 03/20/2006 3:39:46 AM PST by rbg81
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To: goldstategop

What's funny is these Liberal clowns have NO IDEA that the world they portray as "Conservative", is actually the Liberal Utopia they are so desperate to force upon us......

Where everyone is a slave to government....


32 posted on 03/20/2006 3:42:31 AM PST by tcrlaf
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To: tcrlaf
The funny thing is this movie would have made a chilling allegory if the Chancellor had been a Bin Laden Imam and the UK Flag was Green and the loudspeakers called the faithful to prayers in the mosques. Leave everything else the same and portray the Bible as a banned book and then you've got a likely picture of the UK of the future. But Hollywood is not going offend the ROP TM on this occasion any more than they did when they filmed Tom Clancy's The Sum Of All Fears and changed the original bad guys, Islamist terrorists to white neo-Nazis in order to be politically correct. Islam is the one ideology no one is Hollywood dares to cross. In the back of their tiny minds, they're aware of what happened to Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh. For all their pretensions to seek the truth without the fear, the reality is Tinseltown is populated by moral cowards.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

33 posted on 03/20/2006 3:48:40 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop
The central mesage of V is simply this: "People should not fear the government, government should fear the people"

Flawed film or not, that is something we should *all* agree on.

34 posted on 03/20/2006 3:51:11 AM PST by Wormwood (Iä! Iä! Cthulhu fhtagn!)
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To: Wormwood
The reality is the Left fears the people. And in THAT sense, the message of V is uncannily accurate. Liberals can't win in the arena of ideas and they can't win elections. So they have to turn to the bureaucracy and the courts to impose their agenda over a rebellious commons.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

35 posted on 03/20/2006 3:57:02 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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Comment #36 Removed by Moderator

To: MadIvan
Alan Moore is a bit of an iconoclast, isn't he? (smile) I've read a few of his other pieces and commentary, and that continues to come through.

"The Watchmen" is a masterpiece, in my opinion.

37 posted on 03/20/2006 4:17:08 AM PST by Jonah Hex ("How'd you get that scar, mister?" "Nicked myself shaving.")
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To: MadIvan
The author of the comic book series, Alan Moore, has disavowed this film and refuses to take money from the proceeds.

From Alan Moore's interview at: at http://www.mtv.com/shared/movies/in...re_alan_060315/

Moore: I've read the screenplay, so I know exactly what they're doing with it, and I'm not going to be going to see it. When I wrote "V," politics were taking a serious turn for the worse over here. We'd had [Conservative Party Prime Minister] Margaret Thatcher in for two or three years, we'd had anti-Thatcher riots, we'd got the National Front and the right wing making serious advances. "V for Vendetta" was specifically about things like fascism and anarchy.

Those words, "fascism" and "anarchy," occur nowhere in the film. It's been turned into a Bush-era parable by people too timid to set a political satire in their own country. In my original story there had been a limited nuclear war, which had isolated Britain, caused a lot of chaos and a collapse of government, and a fascist totalitarian dictatorship had sprung up. Now, in the film, you've got a sinister group of right-wing figures — not fascists, but you know that they're bad guys — and what they have done is manufactured a bio-terror weapon in secret, so that they can fake a massive terrorist incident to get everybody on their side, so that they can pursue their right-wing agenda. It's a thwarted and frustrated and perhaps largely impotent American liberal fantasy of someone with American liberal values [standing up] against a state run by neo-conservatives — which is not what "V for Vendetta" was about. It was about fascism, it was about anarchy, it was about [England]. The intent of the film is nothing like the intent of the book as I wrote it. And if the Wachowski brothers had felt moved to protest the way things were going in America, then wouldn't it have been more direct to do what I'd done and set a risky political narrative sometime in the near future that was obviously talking about the things going on today?


Man, I may disagree with Moore on his politics, but the man is *dead on* here.
38 posted on 03/20/2006 4:27:04 AM PST by Wormwood (Iä! Iä! Cthulhu fhtagn!)
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To: MadIvan
A little off topic but what you stated reminds me of Joseph Wambaugh and how Hollyweird butchered his novel The Choirboys. It was so bad he sued and won because of a handshake deal the producers backed off on. He disavowed the film and his name was removed from the credits.
39 posted on 03/20/2006 4:32:00 AM PST by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
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To: napscoordinator

$26.1 mil. (3,365 theaters, $7,766 average). And over 50 mil to make. Don't know about marketing costs. Numbers look kind of anemic to me.


40 posted on 03/20/2006 4:33:15 AM PST by mewzilla (Property must be secured or liberty cannot exist. John Adams)
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