Posted on 03/23/2002 8:22:39 PM PST by cincinnati65
Which movie (past or present) embodies the most liberal message?
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Um, like what? Guns? Drugs? Welfare? Free speech? Libertarians and liberals generally disagree on these social issues.
I suggest you watch it one more time. Only this time, try to ignore the belligerence of Lee J. Cobb's character and concentrate on the absurdity of Henry Fonda's goofball scenarios.
I would agree if the arguments made for a not-guilty verdict were based on evidence presented. But these guys went out of their way to exonerate this guy. How about going out and finding/buying a knife exactly like the one that was the alleged murder weapon? Is that the purview of a jurist?
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I never really noticed this when I watched M*A*S*H. On the other hand, I liked Hogan's Heroes better as far as war-related sitcoms went. "Schuuuuultz!!!" (hee hee)
I always found Fonda to be one-dimensional, wooden and overrated as an actor. I still don't see much difference between him and, say, Maclean Stevenson.
A lot of what the media usually does blends into the soft left message. Curiously, a lot of "right wing" adventure films are loaded with "left wing" messages by the choice of villains. Kevin Costner's done a lot of that, though it often backfires. Movies thrive on dramatic tensions and oppositions, and the acceptable kinds of villains become ever more restrictive. Many women's films are feminist and therefore generally liberal. The case with youth movies is similar. The bad guys are always going to be the "uptight squares." Smarmfests with Whoopie Goldberg and Robin Williams. The Seventies paranoia thrillers also fit the bill. And Spielberg. Are his movies liberal, or just escapist?
When I was in High School, we watched this movie in Father Ed's Peace and Justice class. When the film was over, a not-too-bright kid asked: "Father Ed, was this based on a true story?"
I kid you not.
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Haven't seen the movie, but I read the novel. Boy, did it suck; achingly dull too.
Of Mice And Men was a better effort from Steinbeck IMO. It had this "It's a tough old world and that's just the way it is" vibe to it.
John Wayne hated High Noon.
Say it ain't so!
I thought it was intended to have an entirely different message. I always saw this movie as a great allegory of the Cold War. Gary Cooper was the USA - who had helped clean up the town. The rest of the town who enjoyed the benefits of Gary's work - and now deserted him in his time of need - were our erstwhile european 'allies'. And of course the bad guys were the commie thugs ...
Do you mean this wasn't the message? You're not going to burst my bubble - I enjoy this movie, and I enjoy the ending where Gary the Sheriff basically tells his cowardly allies to eat spit...
That miniseries scared the crap out of me when I was a kid, especially when they showed evertbody getting vaporized.
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