Posted on 08/01/2018 11:59:29 AM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
You know, maybe I’m not as smart as some of the rest of the FReepers around here, but I liked the music, I liked the dancing, I liked the songs, I liked the MAGIC of it all.
And I will LOVE Julie Andrews until the day I die. :)
Maybe when I saw it first (as a kid) I was just enthralled that someone that MAGICAL could come into my life; not that I had a horrible childhood or anything, because I didn’t, but still - what a Kids’ Dream Come True!
Indeed. I wonder what he'd make of "From the ashes of disaster grow the roses of success"?
Aw, c’mon...it’s a sweet movie and Dick Van Dyke is adorable. Just have fun, for goodness sakes.
Roses LIKE ashes...and spent coffee grounds. ;)
It was the first movie I remember seeing. My Dad took me.
We went to the local theater that you had to walk through the popcorn stand then through the back alley and into the next building to see the movie.
My FIL did the rising specters in the Night on Bald Mountain sequence.
I did not like it, and still do not, though I like both DVD and JA.
That is irrelevant. Enjoy what you enjoy, as long as it is not inherently evil. You are entitled, and it really of itself says nothing about your intellectual or philosophical propensities (and if it did, so what?)
I love John Wayne movies. I used to read comic books. Many have looked down on me for each, saying they are beneath a man of my intellect (genius IQ).
There is room for much more in life than many of us think: If there be any virtue, if there be any praise, think on these things.
I became a huge Tolkien fan around age 11. At 16 I was invited to a pastoral conference because I was being groomed for the ministry. I was both amazed and dismayed to hear both Tolkien and Lewis generally denounced as inappropriate reading fare for Christian adolescents.
As Tolkien might say to such critics: That is all right; I think the same way about what you like.
I was so struck by that section of Fantasia that I tried to draw the monster myself, when I was seven or eight years old. Your FIL contributed to the memories of millions of children.
Step in time!
Hmmm...The essay writer argues rather, that the Disney version at least is subtly pointing to Christian charity, and to childlike faith and wonder - rather than secular Marxism as the antidote to the soul-killing ways of modernity and unbridled capitalism. Hence the central role of St. Paul's Cathedral, the Bird Lady, and the lyrics of the classic song "Feed the Birds" - which was known to be Walt Disney's favorite of all time.
All around the cathedral the saints and apostles
Look down as she sells her wares
Although you can't see it,
You know they are smiling
Each time someone shows that he cares
I have not read the original novel by PL Travers, but I get the sense the writing is in keeping with the spirit of earlier peers like Charles Dickens and the morality behind "A Christmas Carol."
The best lies are 99% true.
-PJ
Like pushing snow, returning to the screen this December.
LOL I didn’t see that no. haha. But I don’t want to equate the modern day secular-3rd wave feminists with the suffragists of the past — who were a diverse bunch, and made up of many noble Christian women as well. :)
FYI
I don’t care for Pooh Bear either, as fine a moral example he may be.
I tried some Turkish delight once. It was kind of weird, but oddly tasty at the same time. Sadly, it didnt coincide with a trip to Narnia.
I don’t think you would want to equate the suffragettes with the second-wave feminists like Betty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir, either, especially when the latter were Marxists in all but name.
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