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To: uncbob

I would respectfully disagree. In "A Few Good Men," the military was portrayed as, for the most part, an ethical institution (Cruise, Bacon, both the younger marines, Moore and Pollack) that was capable of weeding out the corrupt colonel. The only area where I think it strayed into typical liberal agitprop was the need to make Keifer Sutherland's psycho Lt. into a born again Christian.


103 posted on 09/28/2005 9:42:23 AM PDT by Behind Liberal Lines
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
I would respectfully disagree. In "A Few Good Men," the military was portrayed as, for the most part, an ethical institution (Cruise, Bacon, both the younger marines, Moore and Pollack) that was capable of weeding out the corrupt colonel. The only area where I think it strayed into typical liberal agitprop was the need to make Keifer Sutherland's psycho Lt. into a born again Christian.

The movie was fairly well done, and much of its portrayal of military personnel was favorable, but it had some elements that guaranteed that it would not be a really good movie:

1) Demi Moore
2) The entire premise that there would be such a huge scandal resulting from the death of a Marine as the result of a pre-existing medical condition. We're supposed to believe that two Marines will be court-martialed for murder, top Marine officers, including the base commander, will sacrifice all sense of honor and duty to set up those two Marines to be fall guys, and that another top Marine officer, a combat vet, will shoot himself out of remorse, all for some kid who died during what amounted to fairly mild hazing because of his medical condition.
3) Tom Cruise's technique for tripping up the base commander and getting him to admit to a serious crime that he has made his sole purpose to cover up for the entire movie - just ask the guy. If only all prosecutors knew this secret technique: just get the perp on the stand and ask him if he's guilty.
186 posted on 09/28/2005 10:02:46 AM PDT by fr_freak
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
I would respectfully disagree. In "A Few Good Men," the military was portrayed as, for the most part, an ethical institution (Cruise, Bacon, both the younger marines, Moore and Pollack) that was capable of weeding out the corrupt colonel. The only area where I think it strayed into typical liberal agitprop was the need to make Keifer Sutherland's psycho Lt. into a born again Christian.

NOT SO

The true military types ( ya know the ones that do the fighting and dying ) all looked bad--Nicholson was a paranoid--Platoon leader was an automaton --and the one officer didn't have the character neede so he shot himself_- Only military that looked good were the LAWYERS in uniform

Blacks were pictured as heroic or ethical -- the judge and one in the platoon

White males were either the bad guys -Colonel-Lieutenant --and the one pvt in the squad who was a dim bulb who couldn't do anything right unless the Black guy helped him --Crusie was a go along to get along who only cared about softball UNTIL Demi Moore gave him a backbone

At Least you got the Born again Christian slur right

Notice none of the baddies were black --They could have made the prosecuting attorney blac and the judge white
326 posted on 09/28/2005 10:45:17 AM PDT by uncbob
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