Hollywood vs. America
by Edward Cline“When’s the movie coming out?”
I have been asked that question repeatedly over the course of seven years of book-signings for Sparrowhawk at Colonial Williamsburg’s Booksellers by eager patrons who have read the series and wish to see it on the big screen.
“Not any time soon,” I usually answer. “If it is ever produced, it won’t be by Hollywood. And if Hollywood in some episode of hubris thought it could tackle it, it would attempt to maul and dismember it, just out of sheer, doctrinaire meanness, coupled with incompetence. I would likely disown the result. After all, Hollywood hates America.”

I borrow the title of film critic Michael Medved‘s book-long critique of Hollywood (Hollywood vs. America: Popular Culture and the War on Traditional Values (New York: HarperCollins, 1992). Neither he nor his book is the subject here, but rather the culture that cannot produce Sparrowhawk or any other nominally pro-American, pro-freedom film — including the “traditional” ones which Medved has championed in his book and in various conservative and religious columns (promoting family, God, and other, non-intellectual, non-fundamental values — “Leave It to Beaver“ style, with Ward Cleaver taking questions from the audience).
I don’t think a list of films is necessary that proved Hollywood’s anti-Americanism. I could go as far back as some of Frank Capra’s films (which were not so much anti-American as pro-collectivist), and, working forward, see the list of movies grow exponentially (with a short hiccup in the 1950’s and early 1960‘s), ending with stuff like “Avatar” or “Little Big Man” or “Jarhead.”
The worst film critics happen to be conservative ones. They call for a moral cinema and constantly pine for one that does not now exist. Leftist critics have a near monopoly in the press and mainstream media, but their influence and popularity poll are hard to measure. But, as the Republicans in politics are bankrupt of ideas and cannot (or will not) offer a credible antidote to the leftist ideology of the current administration that does not include God, conservative critics like Medved cannot offer a credible antidote to the leftist mantra that America is an evil country, and an evil empire, and evil in its material comfort and achievements.
Leftists are beholden to the great ghost society; rightists are beholden to a ghost of indeterminate gender and appearance in the ether (or perhaps He’s a resident of the constellation Orion, no theologian in history has been able to pinpoint his whereabouts on the map). The leftists have been able to put over their ghost because society is ostensibly tangible: it’s you, and me, and our neighbors all over the country. The rightists can only cite belief that the creator of individual rights and freedom exists — somewhere, as an entity of semi-infinite dimensions, armed with the contradictory powers of omniscience and omnipotence — and that everything good emanates from Him, including that incidental, unimportant thing called capitalism.
In terms of metaphysics and epistemology, the leftists have a leg up on the rightists. They can “prove” their ghost exists, and why everyone should defer to it today, in personal relationships on up to coercive legislation, while all the rightists can trot out is a tooth fairy on steroids who mandates selflessness and self-sacrifice in the name of life after death.
David Brooks, writing in The New York Times, has written about “Avatar” and the Haitian earthquake. Brooks is a specter himself, materializing here as a progressive, there as a disgruntled conservative. His advice on why the Haitian earthquake was so destructive is nearly spot-on. Haiti has been the recipient of billions in especially U.S. aid to reduce its poverty, yet its infrastructure collapsed and vanished like sand castles at the onset of high tide. Haiti remains the poorest country in the Western hemisphere. Why?
The first of those truths is that we don’t know how to use aid to reduce poverty. Over the past few decades, the world has spent trillions of dollars to generate growth in the developing world. The countries that have not received much aid, like China, have seen tremendous growth and tremendous poverty reductions. The countries that have received aid, like Haiti, have not.
Here he implies, but does not identify, that it is freedom that allows countries that have not received aid (extorted from productive men in freer countries) to increase the wealth and standard of living of their citizens. China, even though it is a repressive dictatorship, allows its citizens a modicum of freedom in order to produce wealth (to better tax and expropriate). Countries that receive aid become addicted to it and never develop the morality or political institutions that promote wealth-creation. They remain on welfare, and are not encouraged to break free of it by the “humanitarian” programs of the West, which has a vested interest in being altruistic, altruism being the only virtue it boasts (and which is destructively addictive in its own right). Altruism, after all, is the enemy of selfishness and self-interest. Why would a tax-paid alms-giver want to see a country like Haiti become free of his generosity?

Brooks shows the other side of his spectral being when discussing James Cameron’s “Avatar.” (Avatar: incarnation of Hindu deity, an incarnation of a Hindu deity in human or animal form, especially one of the incarnations of Vishnu such as Rama and Krishna.) In “The Messiah Complex,“ he rightly points out that the film is a 3-D rehash of cinematic shibboleths from the last few decades of Hollywood America-bashing: colonialism is bad, the white race is bad, capitalism is bad, and so they’re doomed to be defeated by the primitive natives. He mocks the film better than I could.
This is the oft-repeated story about a manly young adventurer who goes into the wilderness in search of thrills and profit. But, once there, he meets the native people and finds that they are noble and spiritual and pure. And so he emerges as their Messiah, leading them on a righteous crusade against his own rotten civilization.
Avid moviegoers will remember “A Man Called Horse,” which began to establish the pattern, and “At Play in the Fields of the Lord.” More people will have seen “Dances With Wolves” or “The Last Samurai.”
Kids have been given their own pure versions of the fable, like “Pocahontas” and “FernGully.”
John Podhoretz in The Weekly Standard, whom Brooks cites, is even more severe:
What they didn’t tell us is that Avatar is blitheringly stupid; indeed, it’s among the dumbest movies I’ve ever seen. Avatar is an undigested mass of clichés nearly three hours in length taken directly from the revisionist westerns of the 1960s-the ones in which the Indians became the good guys and the Americans the bad guys. Only here the West is a planet called Pandora, the time is the 22nd century rather than the 19th, and the Indians have blue skin and tails, and are 10 feet tall.
They’re hunters and they kill animals, but after they do so, they cry and say it’s sad. Which only demonstrates their superiority. Plus they have (I’m not kidding) fiber-optic cables coming out of their patooties that allow them to plug into animals and control them. Now, that just seems wrong-I mean, why should they get to control the pterodactyls? Why don’t the pterodactyls control them? This kind of biped-centrism is just another form of imperialist racism, in my opinion.
(I especially appreciated Podhoretz’s remark about the natives apologizing to the animals they kill. That politically-correct and probably fictive Indian practice was in the opening scene of the last remake of “Last of the Mohicans” (1992), another turned-inside-out mess which partly moved me to begin work on Sparrowhawk.)
Podhoretz writes, observing the anti-Americanism in the movie:
You’re going to hear a lot over the next couple of weeks about the movie’s politics-about how it’s a Green epic about despoiling the environment, and an attack on the war in Iraq, and so on. The conclusion does ask the audience to root for the defeat of American soldiers at the hands of an insurgency. So it is a deep expression of anti-Americanism-kind of.
But while Brooks and Podhoretz justly explode the story and dwell on the suffocating political correctness and second-handedness of “Avatar,” they don’t defend or advocate anything. Neither of them contends that our civilization is not rotten, that it ought to be defended and preserved, and that it is superior to Pandora’s and even Haiti’s. Neither counters the charge that big corporations are inherently evil, and that its employees are necessarily avaricious monsters capable only of destruction.
Most conservatives are too cowed by their own apologetic philosophy to advocate the superiority of Western culture over Islamic or any other pre-industrial or anti-reason culture. They would be reluctant to take Voodooism to task, for fear of offending a cultural “tradition.” When was the last time Britons heard that British culture was superior to that of the Muslims who want to establish Britain as a suburb of Riyadh? And where, except on Internet blogs, do Americans read that their civilization is superior to the Indians’? It is such ’sensitivity” to Muslim culture that freed Major Nidal Hasan to open up on American soldiers at Fort Hood, in the same way that “sensitivity” to Pandoran culture freed neo-Na’vi Jake Sully to open up on his fellow humans in “Avatar.”
It is this crucial omission (or evasion) by conservatives which allows them to agree with their rivals for political power, the leftists. As the leftists cannot bring themselves to champion individual rights, private property, and selfishness, neither can the rightists. They meet on a middle ground, as they have done for decades in Congress, and agree to an alleged compromise that simply paves the way for the more consistent of them to go whole-hog. As the Obama administration has done.
The Republicans are as anti-American as are the Democrats. As Hollywood. The film that defines America is neither “Wall Street” nor “The Ten Commandments,” but, to date, “The Fountainhead.”






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I wouldn't even mind if the sentiments expressed by Hollywood were one of many. However, it seems ANYTHING disagreeing with the accepted point of view is disallowed. It gets old in a hurry.
morning, Wheat. I don't think you are in the minority at all. I virtually never go to a theater and find myself purchasing, renting, or otherwise paying for new content. I would bet that "Oscar" will not reward Sandra Bullock primarily because the film did not conform with the template.
its funny, the older I get the more I like stuff from dead people. (music, movies, etc)
I don't go to theatres much either (when the babysitter costs as much as the evening out, you prioritize), but I do have a subscription to NetFlix.
Most of the new stuff is of really high quality, but the story falls flat.
I haven't seen the Bullock movie. But quite frankly, the Oscars have become the anti-barometer for me. If it gets nominated for best movie, actor/ess, director I generally won't like it. There are exceptions, but it holds tru for the most part.
I've not seen nor heard of a decent, original, movie in years.
Epic diatribe, Mr. Cline. Well reasoned and spot on.
One of the byproducts of my thirty-plus years of studying the history of the evolution of Western art music has been to grasp the totality of the effect of reason and logic on musical and societal progress – the two things went hand-in-hand. The original source material dates back circa 2,500 years to Ancient Greece, when people like Pythagorus began to look at the harmonic series and ponder what its implications were for music. The musicians of early Christendom – monks all – borrowed that material and slowly developed a way to write music down so that western art music became literate (One of those monks was Hucbald of St. Amand, my nom de web).
Then, musical progress could be notated and passed to succeeding generations: Plainchant became Organum, Organum became Counterpoint, and Counterpoint lead to the full development of the harmonic system. The other arts, the sciences, and society followed parallel evolutions, as inquisitive reason lead to the scientific method and legions of discoveries. As God told Daniel, "knowledge will be increased."
Then a funny thing happened: Bach's Age of Reason was replaced with Frederick's Age of Enlightenment, which lead to Romanticism, and then post-modern Nihilism: Schoenberg and his fellow-travellers decided, in essence, that 2,500 years of musical evolution could be thrown out and replaced with… anything. All of the arts fell from grace similarly, and now most music and art amounts to nothing but rampant dilettantism. The fabric of society followed suit, and as Climategate has shown, even hard science has been much reduced.
No apologies from me, though: I enjoy the music of many cultures, but Western Art Music is clearly superior to all others, and I haven't met anyone who can hold their own against me in an argument on the subject in decades. Same for Western Civilization and same for America: Western civ evolved through countless discoveries and innovations – fueled by capitalism, I might add – and culminated in putting men on the moon and computers on almost every desktop (And now with my iPhone, in my pocket).
Hollywood should be celebrating and defending these things, not berating them and tearing them down, but they suffer the same mental defects that all progressives share: They rejected reason and the natural philosophy that comes from observing the universe's God-givens, and replaced that with futile wishful thinking and conceit.
You touch on something, I think you should explore further: a comparison of Avatar's Jake Sully to Major Nidal Hasan.
Frankly, I get tired of the "pox on both their houses" style of blogging.
I used to think and talk like this, back when I was a fan of Ayn Rand. My book THE GOLDEN AGE is one that will also never be made into a Hollywood movie.
One reason why I no longer think and talk like this is that I found I could not admire Western civilization– which certainly is superior to that of the East, with their polygamy and suicide, and certainly superior to that of savage tribesmen living in the Hobbesian war of all against all, and certainly superior to that of the pagans, with their pederasty and suicide— I could not admire Western civilization without admiring the one all-important thing that sets the West apart from the East and from the ancient world.
That thing is Christ, and His Church, and His people. The rationalism of the Greek was incorporated into the moral vision of the Jew to produce a unique culture, one that both affirm rational conclusions, such as that all men are created equal, and affirmed mystical and moral conclusions that no reason can defend such as, well, that all men are created equal.
With Christianity, there is no foundation for science, for capitalism, for human freedom, for human dignity– one need only look at sections of the world or periods of history that lack the Christian intellectual framework to see the correlation.
If Christian is (as is so often maintained) antithetical to science, capitalism, freedom, for dignity, why is it that these things did not flower in the ancient world, and did not exist at all in the great and literate civilizations of Egypt and Persia, India and China?
We think of the pagan Greeks and Romans as rationalists. This is an historical error. They were enthusiastic mystics, followers of mystery cults and the like. We think of Greeks as rationalists because the few Greeks who were rational, Plato and Aristotle, Archimedes and Galen and Plotinus — those were the ones the Christians of the Dark Ages (who were eminently and severely rational) preserved and copied and used as teaching materials.
Why did the Free Market arise in Christian lands and nowhere else? Why does the Free Market contract wherever Christianity is in retreat and post-Christianity rears its head?
So, no, that Ghost in the stars of Orion you dismiss it the source of everything else you value, like it or not.
I do not know which conservatives you read, or who you know, but we are not reluctant to extol the virtues of Christendom over our enlightened brethren in benighted parts of the world — such as Hollywood.
I personally could give a crap what David Brooks or anyone at the Weekly Standard have to say about Avatar. I feel like I'm of the few who viewed the movie through a "natural law" lense. To me, it was a good movie both cinematically and from a liberty perspective.
http://andykatherman.blogspot.com/2010/01/natural...
I thought it was just me. But I'm one of those "God" believing conservatives.
This is the most unfocused, rambling, nonsensical essay I've seen on Big Hollywood. Really Mr. Cline if you believe that conservatives are unable or unwilling to stand up for their beliefs what exactly were the tea parties? What's happening in MAss. today?
"Ghost in the stars of Orion"
Cline, it seems to me, is the very typical unbeliever who creates a God in his own mind and then says, "Well, I don't believe that kind of God exists." It works for the atheist every single time because God becomes, not who He is, but a moving target that changes with the whims of the unbeliever.
Frankly, Mr. Wright, I wish you're writing had been given the space today.
The fool says in his heart, "There is no God."
Psalm 14:1
Never present a CINO with the facts.
I still refer to Michael Medveds "Hollywood Vs America" book all the time to prove that Hollywood is NOT interested in making money (though I bet they'd start thinking about it if they COULDN'T make money, but even dips in income have not stopped them). If they were, they would actually cater to the market and not to each other.
I saw a pretty good one over the weekend, in HD too.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0970411/
Great Post! I wish I could pass it on to many others!
I wish I'd said that.
If you wrote a regular column I would be willing to read it.
Ditto! (And I almost never say that.)
Me too.
I just don't understand why it's the atheists who are against inclusiveness. I don't think I've ever met (though I'm sure they exist) a Christian conservative who believed that the Republican party should drive out anyone who isn't Christian, but there are so many atheists who think the GOP could really succeed if it wasn't for all the God people in it. Yeah, good luck with that.
Scott: I have a regular column (of sorts), at Rule of Reason, The Dougout, Family Security Matters, Infidel Bloggers Alliance and who knows where else. I lost track.
Bless you for stating very quickly and concisely what would've taken me days (if not longer) to refine into sensible comprehesion.
Pietro: What would you call focused, integrated, and un-nonsensical commentary? Leaving that question aside, what's happening in Massachusetts re Scott Brown is not a "conservative" phenomenon. Those voting and supporting Brown are a mixture of various persuasions who see him as a last hope to defeat the socialist health-care legislation, as the 41st vote — conservatives,libertarians, Objectivists, former Obamaniacs, disgruntled Romneyites, wised-up Democrats, and even a handful SEIU types. I participated in the Tea Parties of 2009, in one event in Richmond VA addressing 5,000 people. On an ad hoc basis, I'd side with conservatives, religious or not. If Brown wins and casts the 41st vote — and I don't know what else is on his own agenda — that woudl buy Americans time to get their act together and prepare for November 2010.
Funny that the most anti-American anti-capitalist people on earth are Hollywood millionaires doing everything in their power to maximize their wealth, fortify their future earnings and broaden their power base.
"The leftists have been able to put over their ghost because society is ostensibly tangible: it’s you, and me, and our neighbors all over the country."
"They can “prove” their ghost exists, and why everyone should defer to it today, in personal relationships on up to coercive legislation"
I'll preface by informing that organized religion has not been my cup of tea since it was forced on me as a kid. Didn't believe it then. Don't now. And outstanding read. BUT…
That is a total crock of baloney. "In terms of metaphysics and epistemology?" Ohhhh. They can prove their ghost? I'm not being flippant. When I talk (try even the slightest debate) to people who embrace their liberism the only thing they ever prove to me is how truly disconnected they are with human nature. And many prove to me how truly stupid they sound when they do try to debate. (Yes. There is stupidity from both sides I know)
Let's keep it simple shall we. In terms of HUMAN NATURE is what I care about. Flawed human nature. And how we mitigate the flaws in human nature is the only logical approach to public policy. Not some pathetic Utopian vision (or Hollywood wet dream) that desires to correct the flaws – heal the flaws – by suffocating or sucking the energy from what is good in human nature.
Altruism already exists in human nature. Yet we still are victimized by selfishness. Government is the last place in the world where this battle should take place. Have you looked at our leadership lately?
A good layman's intro is "Temperament: How Music Became a Battleground for the Great Minds of Western Civilization" by Stuart Isacoff. I understand it's not necessarily a complete or technically rigorous account, but it does provide the music theory beginner with some interesting background knowledge. The most interesting aspect for me was the sort of dialectic process that went on between music theorists and more "real-world" folks like composers and organ-builders. The former tried to understand and systematize music abstractly (though sometimes experimentally); the latter just wanted to write nice tunes and construct instruments that sounded good. A lot of wrangling between the two groups went on before they found something that really worked – and what worked wasn't "ideal" in the philosophical sense. It's a great story. Check out the book sometime.
The anti-barometer started with Chariots of Fire for me. What a booooring movie.
Thought provoking article, with some awsome responces by John C Wright and Hucbald in particular. a lunch break well spent.
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Great post. My first thought about Haiti was finally Barack has found his "shovel ready projects." What if we relocate the entire population stateside and clear the rubble and send our unemployed carpenters in there with real plans for reliable housing and quality neighborhood environments. Just don't ask Brad Pitt to bring any of his blue prints from New Orleans.
Agreed. It's too easy a cop-out.
Iron Man was good, too.
Margaret Mead (for those too young to remember the name, she was one of the first and certainly most famous anthropologists of the 20th century) said, "All primitive peoples lead miserable, unhappy, cruel lives, most of which are spent trying to kill each other". She should know. I'm sick of this "noble savage" idea. Will James Cameron be giving up his Iphone in order to be "saved" by such "culture"?? I think not. Plus, the Avatar society still had many aspects of corruption of the soul(jealousy, anger, violence), anybody notice? The Navi weren't any better than us (neither, by the way are any native peoples or any peoples). I hate Hollywood.
Many great points made here.
As Mark Steyn has observed, "multiculturalists" really don't respect ANY cultures, especially their own. They subscibe to the view that civilization is simply a process of evolution that will just continue without any effort on their part. The proliferation of failed states like Haiti, Somalia, and Darfur give the lie to this assumption.
Civilization is spread by appreciating your own cultural values first, and being willing to fight and advance them. General Sir Robert Napier personified this perfectly while suppressing the Hindu "time-honored tradition" of suttee:
"We also have a time-honored tradition: When anyone burns a woman alive, we hang them. ..So when you observe your tradition, we'll observe ours."
We need leaders in Napier's mould who combine keen understanding of other cultures with a rock-solid conviction of the value of our own.
Cinematically only if you ignore that little thing called STORY (cue 70-minute takedown of Phantom Menace…) and characterization, as well as consistent internal logic.
C'mon, to call the bad guy a cardboard cutout was an insult to all geometric characters, be they two dimensional, lines, or points.
RE: Liberty – sure, and the story could have been told in a "go with the natives and kick out the evil humans" meme – but couldn't they have used a culture more like the french or russian colonialist movements that actually did just "take what they wanted?" Look at the meta-story – the metaphorical story being told via referents. Did they HAVE to use language that obviously made the "mercenaries" and corporate types US? Did they have to imply through that that WE were responsible for 9/11? Use the "mercenary" title as a fig leaf all you want but the movie clearly state "once a marine, always a marine…" – and Sculley clearly found the "ex" marine mercs worthy of respect when he first got there – so he didn't think they were dregs, misfits, and barracks scum.
T4 was a mess in my opinion
I would love to see Edward Cline and other writers here on Big Hollywood spend some time reviewing movies and directors that are actually of a conservative bend, instead of whining and pining over the never-ending liberal, anti-american Hollywood. James Cameron is the new Michael Moore is the new Capra is the new blah blah socialist blah. The fight doesn't have to be perpetual… there are alternatives – films and directors of them – begging to be reviewed and be given an opportunity in mainstream America.
How about you give Off-Hollywood independent film makers like Jason Apuzzo (Kalifornistan), or Ladd Ehlinger Jr (Flatland: The Film, Hive Mind) an opportunity to reach a larger audience by actually reviewing their films, for better or worse.
If anything, opportunity is one of the core American ideals we should all be strive for. You (Breitbart, et al) are the mainstream media now – and the opportunity (exposure) for artists such as these two is pretty much solely at your discretion. Do your job.
Don't completely give up on conservative film critics. They are still out there, and in the age of the new media they have a wide voice if people want to find them.
My favorite film critic/blogger is Bill.R at "The Kind of Face You Hate"… he is funny and well grounded. You won't get the overt feeling that "Oh, he's conservative" like you would from the standard liberal critic. He just sticks to expressing his views on film and books through the eyes of a film and novel aficionado who happens to also be a conservative.
You should check him out:
http://wwwbillblog.blogspot.com/
I knew I was making a mistake reading these comments.
Good work, Ed. You're always reliable for some trenchant commentary. But I'm not sure it's sooner than we think anymore.
May I ask where that quote from Mead came from? I'm not questioning it, but it doesn't sound like the author of Coming of Age in Somoa.
Thanks for the comment.
1) I don't think anyone can dispute the movie is well done from a special effects standpoint. So, from an entertainment perspective, it was good.
2) Again, my argument is that the military ("Marine") allegory is a straw man and misses MY point about the protection of liberty, property rights, self-sufficiency, and anti-AGRESSION – all central to the movie. Those core "American" ideals should be acknowledged and supported 100% (unless you're a Communist who has no respect for private property or natural law). Everyone should agree that unjust/immoral aggression and outright theft of property should never be justified. I don't care if their Chinese, German, Pakistani, or Russians executing the plundering. Non-agression and natural law doctrine should reign supreme.
http://andykatherman.blogspot.com
Thanks for the comment.
My critique was a thumbs up for both the story/theme and the cinematography. The singular fixation on the allegory argument to me is a straw man that misses MY point which is the movie highlighted the principles of protecting private property and understanding natural law doctrine as well as belief in non-aggression/self defense to protect these rights. Ironically, I don't even think James Cameron is smart enough to understand this self evident truth of the movie. Sadly, those core natural law ideals USED to be beliefs celebrated. The fact that a movie selectively puts "English speaking humans" on the wrong side of what is just should not cause people to foam at the mouth. Just as our government makes mistakes with the use of force (see IRS tax code) domestically should not be a surprise that mistakes can be made internationally as well (through the barrell of a gun). This isn't to say America is bad, but rather "human" with flaws and misteps. I'd hope that objective people would understand this and look at the big picture as I've tried to do here.
when everyone thinks alike there isn't much thinking going on.
besides that it gets pretty boring.
I may be in the minority, but I've gotten bored with much of Hollywood. The retreads get old. I will take low production value originality over a shiney re-issue anyday.
I got it from an article in Commentary Magazine entitled "What Do Native Peoples Deserve" by Roger Sandall, a professor of Anthropology in Sydney. The context being that native peoples generally do not want to stay in states of stagnation, once they are introduced to the innovations of the "civilized" world. Mead also, "claimed emphatically that they all wanted one thing only; and that was to have as many material possessions and comforts as possible. Those still running away in the jungle were the ones who had encountered the most unpleasant savagery from Europeans, and even thought they might be having no contact now, if they could possible get hold of any aluminum pots they would use them". I don't know his source for the quotes, you'd have to research it.
I heard that The Book of Eli was awesome. That is pretty original. I just wish I could go see it.
Thanks. I'll keep on saying what needs to be said, regardless.
One of my favorite quotes, the Napier. But, such leaders are no longer being trained. Certainly not at West Point or Annapolis. The only service that hasn't been completely compromised by political correctness and multiculturalism is the Marines. And I know that Obama and Company especially hate the Marines — together with Hollywood.
I'm not an atheist, but I am by no means religious, and as a conservative who has seen common sense and morality become less and less important in politics, I find myself wondering if religion is something that is a necessity. Religion is not just belief in a "ghost", it is a set of morals and standards that you practice every day in your life. Some of these politicians who call themselves religious, yet fight tooth and nail to see abortion (which is abhorrent to anyone with a brain) paid for by taxpayer dollars, it makes me wonder what religion they actually practice.
My point is religion is not important in politics, but the morality and the clear cut thinking that goes along with it is.
The Dark Knight.
Unfortunately for us, economic and moral depressions are boom times for Hollywood and drug dealers.
Mr. Phillips, I applaud you. I also do not see Reid's comment as racist. Unfortunately it was an honest assessment of the sordid mindset of the Democratic party.
What struck me about Reid was his obsession with how Obama looked but not with what Obama believed. I wonder what Reid is thinking now? Massachusetts looks ready to tank for the DNC, Democrats are frantically ditching the party or the office, our economy is in the tank and the country is enraged at the bills which Reid's 'light-skinned N*gro' is trying to ram down our throats. So, Reid? How's that 'color of skin' instead of 'content of character' working out for you?
Opps. Sorry. I accidentally posted my comments to the wrong post. My bad.
Their ghost is even more imaginary than the so-called Christian ghost.
There is actual proof that the liberal heavenly ghost is wrong if not evil (to the tune of 100 million corpses) but they continue to cling to their statist guns and their Marxist religion; whereas the Christian holy 'ghost' birthed and allowed all the blessings that we have come to take for granted.
Now whose faith is more rational?
Their hatred of the Marines is represented in spades in Avatar.
Ooops! Can I still use that word these days or is it one of them there verboten in any context ones?
I have been working for a number years on a screenplay based on a true story involving a top-secret submarine mission during the Cold War. I recently received feedback which, among other things, urged me to make the sub’s commander, who is the main protagonist, question the mission that he and his ship are on.
Needless to say, the concept of doing one’s duty appears to be an alien concept to the evaluator in question. Ditto the concept of military professionalism.
So how did I contort this true story to fit this Hollywood mandate?
I peppered my screenplay with a few scenes that has the skipper remark about the political aspects of the mission while emphasizing the need to do one’s duty. I believe that this is consistent with the man in question, particularly since he was a former naval aide at the White House.
So there is the challenge – to write something positive about one’s country while cloaking that message from hubris of Hollywood.
Finally, with respect to Mr. Cline’s observation that the” film that defines America is neither Wall Street nor The Ten Commandments, but, to date, The Fountainhead,” I respectfully disagree. The film that best defines what it like to be an American and America itself is The Spirit of St. Louis — a true story of courage and vision, guts and engineering, underwritten by American private enterprise.
I saw Avatar last week. And I have to agree that it's a pretty stupid movie. I can't believe Cameron when he says it took him 15 years to write. He ripped off just about every movie out there. Star Wars, Dances With Wolves, even the music sounded like it was from the Lion King.____The dialogue was weak, the story tired, and the word predictable is too mild. Vuisually it was stunning, but the preview for the NASA IMAX movie blew that away too. I can recall the people saying this movie would change how we viewed movies from now on. I honestly don't see anything to justify that at all.
I have to disagree, Taken, Gran Torino, Outlander, Terminator Salvation, are among the few.
What a fine choice.
Totally agree! How about interviewing the "For Liberty" documentary directors (Chris Rye & Corey Kealiher) about the Ron Paul campaign?
I would expect nothing less.
One last comment. From an innocent who has not seen the movie. And probably will not. A still from the movie is attached to this story. I examine the picture and the first thought that arises is "the blue guy and the 'dinosaur' really look cheesy; the actual movie can't be full of these pasted-together pieces stolen from illustrations in old children's books." Therefore, the actual core question is "Is it possible to sell mega-millions of dollars in tickets to a "movie" that contains nothing except advanced special effects technology for image viewing?" I guess the answer is yes.
"Up" was decent, both morally and creatively, and original. A delightful, moving movie.
Bravo Ed! Wonderful article!
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