Tag Archives: Movies

Welcome to the new Civil War

Welcome to the new Civil War

In a recent discussion with a friend, I mentioned how news pundits constantly use the phrase: “Our country has not been so ideologically divided since the Civil War.”

My friend’s question was “why the Civil War analogy…?  The following piece tends to address this question.

Salon

Lincoln’s unfinished war rages on, as the neo-Confederacy tries to turn back the clock on women, gays, God and guns

On a repeat viewing of Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln” over the New Year’s holiday, a scene I had barely noticed the first time jumped out at me. Confederate vice-president Alexander Stephens (played with reptilian gentility by Jackie Earle Haley), in a secret meeting aboard a steamboat with Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State William Seward, faces up to the reality that the era of slavery has come to an end. Ratification of the 13th Amendment, Stephens muses, will destroy the basis of the Southern economy and the South’s traditional way of life. “We won’t know ourselves anymore,” he says.

If only it had been so. What an affluent slave owner like Stephens feared most, no doubt, was the utopian vision of “radical Reconstruction” imagined by legendary abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens (Tommy Lee Jones in the movie), in an earlier conversation with Lincoln in the White House kitchen. Stevens envisioned a future in which all the land and property of the Southern aristocracy would be dispossessed and divided among the emancipated slaves, building a new society of free soil and free labor amid the ruins of tyranny. To put it in contemporary social-studies terms, Stevens hoped that by uprooting and destroying the South’s slave economy, one could also replace its culture.

It didn’t quite work out that way. You can’t boil one of the most tumultuous periods of American history down to one paragraph, but here goes: Lincoln was assassinated by a domestic terrorist and replaced by Andrew Johnson, who was an incompetent hothead and an unapologetic racist. Within a few years the ambitious project of Reconstruction  fell victim to a sustained insurgency led by the Ku Klux Klan and similar white militia groups. By the late 1870s white supremacist “Redeemers” controlled most local and state governments in the South, and by the 1890s Southern blacks had been disenfranchised and thrust into subservience positions by Jim Crow laws that were only slightly preferable to slavery.

So even though it’s a truism of American public discourse that the Civil War never ended, it’s also literally true. We’re still reaping the whirlwind from that long-ago conflict, and now we face a new Civil War, one focused on divisive political issues of the 21st century – most notably the rights and liberties of women and LGBT people – but rooted in toxic rhetoric and ideas inherited from the 19th century.

Edit Note:  Emphasis are mine

Continue reading here…

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Filed under GOP Hate-Mongering, The Great American Divide

Then and Now…How Will Hunting Got It Right

Consider this:

The following is a snippet from a film made 16 years ago.

The film is called Good Will Hunting

The scene:

The relevancy of Will’s answer to an NSA recruiter’s question  and our current geopolitical issues is astonishing.  Watch it flow from there.

It’s an amazing scene.  I may be the only one that thinks so, but see for yourself.

Watch:

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Filed under Matt Damon

Political Plotlines in Liberal Doses

Well, I  can’t wait for these movies to surface.  Political junkie that I am, I anticipate getting an ample supply of popcorn at the theaters and enjoying every minute of each film.

The New York Times – Movies

At least three coming high-profile Hollywood films explore the underbelly of Democratic politicians and their handlers.

[...]

“Knife Fight” joins two other high-profile Hollywood projects that look at the dark underbelly of politicians and their handlers. And in what may be a rare confluence for Hollywood and politics, the films are focused on Democrats who are wrestling with questions of conduct, character and pragmatic choices — things that have come into sharp relief with the resignation of Anthony D. Weiner and the indictment of John Edwards. Writers on two of the projects have worked in Democratic politics.

[...]

Politics has more often been the stuff of documentary than drama of late. Perhaps lacking heroes or an empathy factor, few narrative films poked at political innards. Among the handful Oliver Stone’s “W.” looked at George W. Bush, and George Hickenlooper took aim at Republican politicians and operatives with “Casino Jack” last year. Earlier “Primary Colors” or “Wag the Dog,” a pair of Clinton-era satires that to different degrees put a comic face on the connection among elections, sexual shenanigans and public policy among Democrats.

(Television contributed political films like HBO’s “Recount” in 2008, and “Game Change,” a planned HBO film that will look at the last election. Sarah Palin and her brand of conservatism are also the subject of a current theatrical documentary, “The Undefeated.”)

The current crop promises a harsher view of Democratic politics and its practitioners, even if the critique comes largely from inside the family.

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Filed under Political Movies

‘The King’s Speech’ Leads Golden Globe Film Nominations With 7

As fate would have it, I just saw The Social Network last night and was blown away by the acting and the powerful script about Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.  After viewing the movie I had no doubt that Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Timberlake and  screen writer Aaron Sorkin  of The West Wing  fame, would walk away with at least a Golden Globe and/or Academy Award  nomination in their respective categories.

As for The King’s Speech, I haven’t seen it yet, but I have discovered that almost anything Colin Firth plays in is a winner.  I fell in love with the shy yet brilliant barrister, “Mr. Darby” in the Bridget Jones series and was floored by his sensitive yet comedic role in Love Actually.  In my opinion,  A Single Man was perhaps Mr. Firth’s finest role, until I read about his performance in The King’s Speech

If Colin Firth is in a movie, I’d recommend it…

The Hollywood Reporter

“The Social Network” and “The Fighter” were close behind with six nods each, while “Glee” leads the TV pack with five.

With seven nominations, The Kings Speech, the British drama about a regal speech impediment, led the nominations for the 68th annual Golden Globe Awards were announced Tuesday morning. Facebook-founding drama The Social Network and boxing tale The Fighter followed close behind with six noms each.

In the television categories, Glee led the parade with five nominations. Eight other shows — including 30 Rock, Dexter, Modern Family and Mad Men — scored three noms each.

Johnny Depp scored a double whammy, picking up two nominations in the same category — best actor in a motion picture comedy or musical. He received the noms for playing the mad hatter in Alice in Wonderland and as a man who stumbles into an international web of intrigue in The Tourist – a movie that Sony Pictures sold as a romantic thriller. Angelina Jolie, his seductive costar in that movie, earned a nomination as well.

In the race for best motion picture drama, Speech, Network and Fighter will go up against the ballet drama The Black Swan and dream thriller Inception when the Globes are handed out on Jan. 16.

On the best motion picture comedy side, Tourist will be competing for attention with Alice, the musical Burlesque, the alternative family tale The Kids Are All Right and the senior action movie RED.

See the full list, here…

Social Network Trailer

The King’s Speech Trailer

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Filed under Golden Globe Nominations