Posted on 06/14/2011 5:16:29 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
This weekend marked the 25th anniversary of the release of Ferris Buellers Day Off. As Kathryn has written, the original script for Ferris Buellers Day Off contained a bunch of conservative lines, including this gem:
FERRIS:
"My uncle went to Canada to protest the war, right? On the Fourth of July he was down with my aunt and he got drunk and told my Dad he felt guilty he didnt fight in Viet Nam. So I said, Whats the deal, Uncle Jeff? In wartime you want to be a pacifist and in peacetime you want to be a soldier. It took you twenty years to find out you dont believe in anything? [snaps his fingers] Grounded. Just like that. Two weeks. [pause] Be careful when you deal with old hippies. They can be real touchy."
Only one problem: They didnt make the final cut, for some odd reason (my theory: studio execs didnt want to offend liberals like them). Instead, what we got from Ferris Bueller was a proto-Simpsons view of adulthood and being a teenager. All the adults in Ferris Bueller are invasive morons including a principal who wants desperately for Ferris to stop cutting class and all of the adolescents are brilliant, witty, and charming. That was the conflict that summed up John Hughess world: he was a conservative, but he was also an advocate for taking teenage angst just a bit too seriously for conservative tastes. The only moment of responsibility-taking in Ferris Bueller occurs after Camerons ill-fated use of his dads Ferrari, and its played as a statement of teenage rebellion rather than of maturation.
Hughes deserves credit, however, for doing something most conservatives never even bother doing: making a good movie with certain conservative undertones. Where else would you hear a character (Ferris) explaining, -Isms in my opinion are not good. A person should not believe in an ism, he should believe in himself. Of course, that message is buried in a punch line: I quote John Lennon, I dont believe in Beatles, I just believe in me. Good point there. After all, he was the walrus. I could be the walrus. Id still have to bum rides off people. But at least Hughes makes the attempt.
Ben Shapiro is author of Primetime Propaganda: The True Hollywood Story of How the Left Took Over Your TV.
Don't forget...a much younger Kristy Swanson makes a small appearance in Ben Stein's classroom, I believe. Also worth a watch!
Mia Sara.
Ferrari.
The waiter (I weep for the future)
Just watched it again (10+ times, at least) and I was struck by the outstanding quality of the work - the soundtrack, the editing, the characters. It’s actually now on my “list of greatest movies evah”
She’s Sean Connery’s daughter-in-law.
It could be seen as the canary in the coalmine, IF artists led society.
The musicians I am thinking of (as a musician myself) are not leaders, nor do they have followers. They are simply reflecting PC thinking, taken to the extreme. They are also of the opinion that it is their job to ‘cram culture down The People’s throats,’ in their superior-ness, rather than to either elevate or serve others.
Think: ‘underpants operas’ — where they have bastardized Mozart by semi-pornographic stage presentations, or ‘modern’ music, that reflects their own Existential Angst. They wonder why attendance is down. Think, even, symphony concerts where they cannot resist, at every concert, to ‘introduce to the (illiterate) masses’ some modern, grating ‘new’ music. It is like cod liver oil poured on a great steak (”It is good for them.”)
Yes, but if you remember the movie, the lesson ended with the statement that the strategy failed and the country sank further into a recession. Which didn’t happen in reality, but the Stein character said it.
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