Posted on 10/28/2007 12:31:47 PM PDT by rellimpank
Hollywood now proposes that in a new live-action movie based on the G.I. Joe toy line, Joe's -- well, "G.I." -- identity needs to be replaced by membership in an "international force based in Brussels." The IGN Entertainment news site reports Paramount is considering replacing our "real American hero" with "Action Man," member of an "international operations team."
Paramount will simply turn Joe's name into an acronym.
The show biz newspaper Variety reports: "G.I. Joe is now a Brussels-based outfit that stands for Global Integrated Joint Operating Entity, an international co-ed force of operatives who use hi-tech equipment to battle Cobra, an evil organization headed by a double-crossing Scottish arms dealer."
Well, thank goodness the villain -- no need to offend anyone by making our villains Arabs, Muslims, or foreign dictators of any stripe these days, though apparently Presbyterians who talk like Scottie on "Star Trek" are still OK -- is a double-crossing arms dealer. Otherwise one might be tempted to conclude the geniuses at Paramount believe arms dealing itself is evil.
(Just for the record, what did the quintessential American hero, Humphrey Bogart's Rick Blaine in "Casablanca," do before he opened his eponymous cafe? Yep: gun-runner.)
(Excerpt) Read more at lvrj.com ...
as one of the role models
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G.I. = “Global Integrated?”
Makes me think about Rule 308.
...does this make Lady Jane a member of Code Pink?
This is the first time I heard the story of Mitchell Paige. What a great read. Thanks for posting the article.
“Global Integrated Joint Operations Entity”, IIRC.
BWAHAHAHAHH! Why did you have to bring that annoying him/it up?
See my #30.
I had such an amazing collection of GI Joes and accessories when I was little... Of course, I had all of the cool stuff, though little of the original WWII accessories: But I had the USAF officer, complete with "short boots," which seemed silly to me at the time, the deep sea diver (complete with black plastic and rubber octopus), the frogman, and of course, the astronaut, along with the space capsule. Oh, and there was a commando, complete with a M3 "grease gun."
Then again, when I was little, I also had a set of cammos, complete with sgt stripes, and my name on a ribbon on the front, and a toy M14 that fired plastic "bullets." I guess today I'd probably be institutionalized, and drugged out of my mind... But back then, it was considered normal, though maybe a bit "spoiled."
Mark
I had a big collection of those too! I was a total "space freak." My uncle was an engineer at McDonnel Douglass, who sent me a paper, die-cut "model" of the lunar module around the time of Apollo 8, and I had a cousin who was a tour guide at the Kennedy Space Center. In fact, somewhere around here I've got a photo of myself wearing a "real" space suit (one of the ones used by the staff at the KSC for demos. It was real, just didn't pass the QC tests, or was retired), and I was able to catch a ride on the "lunar rover" when I visited my grandparents in FL. IIRC, that was around the time of the Apollo/Soyuz flight.
Anyway, I had a bunch of Major Matt Mason stuff, including that multi-level "space station" or what ever it was. Man, I had SO many toys, I really was spoiled... While all my friends collected Hot Wheels, I had the Johnny Lightning cars, and this track which had this really steep hill, and a lever used to power the cars up the hill, and they'd glide back down around the track. What I learned was if you removed these guards at the top of that hill, you could launch the cars for a pretty great distance!
Mark
L
Good point !
I spent good money on a Mk 12 Semi Auto Clone yesterday and wanted to air it dambit !
Seems Rick shows up more than ONCE....
Lets see Rick characters played by Bogie and the order they were released.
Across The Pacific ((AKA Aloha means Good by)) (1942) He plays Rick, from Army Intel
Casablanca (Late 1942) Also plays Rick, a fellow who doesn’t seem to care for Nazis either.
IN 1948, he played a burned out Army Captain “Frank” who had a lot to say about civilians during WWII. One of my favorite Bogie movies, I think it is even better than Casablanca both the story but also because we get to ‘meet’ Bacall.....
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