Posted on 01/14/2005 12:49:16 AM PST by kattracks
"Million Dollar Baby will win the Academy Awards.
Not because its the Best Picture. But because its Hollywoods best political propaganda of the year. More effective than Fahrenheit 911.
Think Baby is about Rocky in a sports-braas its being marketed? Youve fallen for the Million Dollar lie. What its really about, has nothing to do with Rocky Balboa or boxing. Thats just the cover story to suck movie-goers in for a nefarious message.
Babywhich has critics gushing all over each otheris a two-hour, twenty-minute exercise in subtle and then not-so-subtle left-wing diatribe.
If you plan to see the movie and dont want to read a spoiler, stop here.
If you want to know the truth and save your ten bucks, keep reading.
Million Dollar Baby will win the Oscar because it supports killing the handicapped, literally putting their lights out.
It features legendary Dirty Harry, Clint Eastwood, as its director and star. For roughly the first half, viewers are tricked thinking they are watching a movie about a champion boxer in the making, who just happens to be female.
Even those who find womens sports to be freakish sideshows of little interest, are rooting for Maggie Fitzgerald (Hillary Swank) to overcome her trailer-
trash background and become womens Welterweight champion of the world.
But theyve been defrauded, manipulated into what appears to be The Champ with estrogen, but is really a promotional ad for the Netherlands euthanasia policy. Movie criticsmost of whom are complicit in this deceptiononly hint at this unexpected, surprise twist.
Baby begins with the hillbilly Maggie trying to learn boxing and get gym-owner/trainer/manager Frankie (Eastwood) to train her. At first, he resists, saying he doesnt train girls. Women boxingthats a freak show, and freaks are in. Im sure youll find someone else to train you, he tells her. Besides, at 31, shes too old to become a great boxer.
But then, he loses his champion boxer to another boxing manager, and he takes Maggie on. Soon, shes winning fights all over the place, with instant knock-outs, and Frank and Maggie develop a surrogate-father/daughter relationship. Maggies so good shes in the Womens Welterweight championship fight in Vegas with a million-dollar pot to split.
Maggie, on the verge of winning the fight, gets blindsided and knocked-out cold. She hits her head so hard on the stool in the corner of the ring, shes knocked unconscious.
And thats where we learn what this movie is really about. Maggie is paralyzed, a quadriplegic who loses a leg to infection of sound mind, but almost a vegetable. And since she cant fightshe cant even movethe proverbial her life isnt worth living message is hammered home.
To make the message as black and white as possible, Maggie isnt just a hillbilly with no future outside boxing. Shes from a broken home, with family members in prison, a mother defrauding welfare and Medicaid, and the standard trailerhome. Her abusive family is only after Maggies money. They dont care about her, nor does anyone in the world. So, as a quadriplegic, her life isnt worth living.
Then theres the religion excuse. Maggie is eventually euthanized (a sanitized word for murdered) by trainer/surrogate-father Frankie. A devout, but questioning, Catholic, he attends mass every day. He is no common sinner without a conscience. Hes the perfect Hollywood murderer of the weak a whole lot more sympathetic than real-life mercy killers a la Dr. Kevorkian.
Janitors and waitresses die every day, thinking I never got my shot, Frankie is told by right-hand man, former boxer Eddie (Morgan Freeman). Its better for Maggie to die now, having made it to such a high point in her lifethe Womens Welterweight title fightthan for her to face a life of anti-climactic paralysis. Since she's only from a trailer park anyway, her life is expendable.
Sickening.
Babys version of euthanasia seems honorable and heroica sort of noblesse oblige for the 2000s. But imagine if the real-life euthanized, victims of the Nazis and the Netherlands, were the Million Dollar Babies instead of a pathetic, washed up female boxer from the trailer park.
The Nazis victims didnt just include six million Jews. They murdered the handicapped and infirm, some as handicapped as Babys Maggie. The handicapped, a burden on society and flaw in the master race, werent entitled to live, the Nazis posited. That disturbing message is more palatable when the victim is Babys broken female Rocky with no future, and a likeable religious father-figure is the euthanasia-committing hero.
Then theres todays Netherlands. The country that values its legalized prostitutes and drugs has little value for human life.
Anyone can be murdered by their doctors at the request of family members. There is no requirement the patients condition be terminal or the suffering be physical. Thousands of innocents are euthanized each year at the request of greedy or neglectful spouses and family. The slippery slope has begun.
Why cant Warner BrothersBabys distributorsay what the movies really about, glorifying euthanasia? Maybe it has something to do with the fact that no-one wants to go see a depressing movie with such stark politicking. Americans want to see positive movies, not be exploited. They think theyre going to see one here. But theyve been duped. Million Dollar Baby is nothing more than a multi-million dollar fraud.
Sorry, Dirty Harry. This time, you didnt make my day.
Sounds like the TV show did a much better and more honest job of it. If "$MM Baby" had spent 15 minutes setting the stage and 2 hours and 15 minutes on Frankies murder trial it would have been better. And no one would spend $10 to see it. I didn't like being ripped off. I don't spend my money to see Hollywood propaganda. I didn't see Michael Moore's "9/11" and won't. I didn't like "Cider House Rules" for the same reason. If I want to be preached at, I'll go to church. I don't need Hollywood to tell me what to think, and I don't like paying for the service.
Denny Crane: There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."
Denny Crane: There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."
Denny Crane: There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."
goldstategop, why do you keep including that quote from "Denny Crane" in every one of your posts? First off, it's not even remotely clever or profound. Second, the place to put that is in your tagline, where it belongs.
Denny Crane: There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."
Off topic, I don't have to justify a second tagline and I like it. I see nothing wrong with the idea we can find truth in two things Americans have come to trust over the ages and more recently, over the past decade.
Denny Crane: There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."
Good thing the mainstream rules in this country, trailer trash and all.
BUMP
So do you like my new second tagline?
goldstategop, why do you keep including that quote from "Denny Crane" in every one of your posts? First off, it's not even remotely clever or profound. Second, the place to put that is in your tagline, where it belongs.
Isn't Clint Eastwood right of center? Why would he write a movie to forward a leftist agenda?
The real euthanasia movie is "The Sea Inside", nominated for best foreign language film.
Actually, I think Eastwood is sneaking a conservative viewpoint into an apparently liberal film. The protagonist of this film is generous, works hard, spurns handouts, and insists on paying her own way while the dispicable villains suck off the government teat.
I don't think this movie is promoting a liberal agenda. Most of the themes in this movie promote conservative values. It has a distinct pro-freedom/anti-socialist slant, though it is not in-your-face or preachy about it.
Some posters believe it is anti-christian. I did not get that impression. Frankie goes to church almost daily. He seeks redemption through his religion. Frankie is cantankerous and his priest is often exasperated with him, but their relationship was much deeper than than I first thought. It is always the priest that Frankie turns to for advice, though he doesn't always follow that advice. We all fall short of the Glory of the Lord, and so does Frankie, but Frankie tries harder than any character I've seen in a Hollywood movie.
The movie does not advocate euthanizing anyone who is weak or handicapped against their will. It does not advocate euthanizing someone because their family wants it. The issue it deals with is whether someone trying to die should have to fight against everyone else to do it- whether it's ok to help someone trying to die- especially dealing with the grief and moral struggle of making that determination. Characters struggle morally and emotionally with this question, but the movie does not say whether it is right or wrong; to me it seems to leave it up to the audience.
I agree. I saw it yesterday. I don't think it was promoting euthanasia. There's a difference between showing something and advocating it...
It has a ring of Hitler's "Quality of Life" propaganda films used to soothe the populace into questioning who should live or die.
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