THE MCJ

Christian scholarship is the Church’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the Bible. - Søren Kierkegaard

LEMMINGS

It's official.  Hollywood has a death wish.  According to Jason Apuzzo, here is a list of movies that are in the pipeline:

"V For Vendetta." From Warner Brothers and the creators of "The Matrix" comes this film about a futuristic Great Britain that’s become a ’fascist state.’ A masked ’freedom fighter’ named V uses terror tactics (including bombing the London Underground) to undermine the government - leading to a climax in which the British Parliament is blown up. Natalie Portman stars as a skinhead who turns to ’the revolution’ after doing time as a Guantanamo-style prisoner.

"Munich." Steven Spielberg directs this film about the aftermath of the 1972 Olympic terror attacks that killed eleven Israeli athletes. "Munich"’s screenplay is written by playwrite Tony Kushner ("Angels in America"), who has been quoted as saying: "I think the founding of the state of Israel was for the Jewish people a historical, moral, political calamity ... I wish modern Israel hadn¹t been born." The film focuses on the crisis of conscience undergone by Israeli commandos tasked with killing PLO terrorists - rather than on the barbarity of the terrorists themselves.

"Untitled Oliver Stone 9/11 Project." Paramount will distribute Oliver Stone’s new film recounting the rescue of two Port Authority officers after the 9/11 attacks. The film will star Nicholas Cage and Maggie Gyllenhaal - who recently suggested that America was responsible for the 9/11 attacks.

As for Stone, he had this to say only a month after 9/11: "This attack was pure chaos, and chaos is energy. All great changes have come from people or events that were initially misunderstood, and seemed frightening, like madmen."

"Syriana." Starring George Clooney and Matt Damon, this Warner Brothers film - set during the first Bush administration - features a plot by American oil companies and the U.S. government to redraw Middle East borders for greater oil profiteering. The film even depicts a handsome, ’tragic’ suicide bomber driven to jihad after being fired by an American oil company! The film’s climax comes with the jihadist launching an explosive device into an oil tanker as American oil barons and Saudi officials look on.

"The Scorpion’s Gate." Sony has optioned former terrorism-czar Richard Clarke’s novel about oil companies and Washington politicians colluding to reshape the map of the Middle East for greater oil profiteering - this time by launching a global nuclear war.

"The Chancellor Manuscript." Paramount reworks Robert Ludlum¹s 1977 thriller into an anti-Patriot Act star vehicle for Leonardo DiCaprio. Here’s the film’s screenwriter, Michael Seitzman: "We live in this crazy post-Patriot Act environment where Benjamin Franklin¹s warning that ’those that give up essential liberties for temporary security don¹t deserve either one’ are being ignored, so the subject matter seemed ripe."

"No True Glory: The Battle for Fallujah." Universal has attached Harrison Ford to star as real-life General Jim Mattis - in this story blaming the White House for the deaths of fifty Marines in one of the Iraq war’s deadliest battles. Based on the book of the same name by Bing West.

"American Dreamz." This ’satire’ from Universal Pictures deals with Pakistani suicide bombers out to kill the US president. The film stars Hugh Grant, Richard Dreyfuss, Willem Dafoe and Mandy Moore. According to writer-director Paul Weitz ("American Pie"), "The film is a comic examination of ... cultural obsessions" like the War on Terror "and how they can anaesthetise us to the actual issues of our day."

"Terminus." Set in the Middle East of the future, this Warner Brothers film depicts a ’disillusioned’ war correspondent covering an ’insurgency’ he decides he must support. The producer, Basil Iwanyk, says: "It deals head on with what some call insurgency, what some call guerilla warfare and what some call freedom fighting."

"Jarhead." This Universal release, starring Jamie Foxx and Jake Gyllenhaal, deals with the ’dehumanization’ of Marine trainees prior to and during the 1991 Gulf War. Based on Andrew Swofford’s notorious and questionable memoirs of the same name.

Forget that tired old cliche about how big corporations are conservative, says Apuzzo.

One thing should be obvious from this list: left-wing agitprop filmmaking is no longer the purview of desperate, ’indie’ filmmakers with shaky camcorders and maxed-out credit cards. The films listed above are being made by large, multi-national corporations - and will feature sophisticated, expensive marketing campaigns with A-list stars. Imagine Leni Riefenstahl cross-promoting "Triumph of the Will" with People Magazine covers and E! Channel specials. That’s more or less what Hollywood has in mind.

Hollywood has shifted strategies in its opposition to the War on Terror. No longer content to let clumsy, uncouth documentarians like Michael Moore or Robert Greenwald conduct its foreign policy, Tinseltown is rolling out big guns like Harrison Ford and Leo DiCaprio and George Clooney - complete with their p.r. firms, dazzling smiles, and easy charm.

What should conservatives do about this?  Buy cameras.

The proper ’response’ for this sort of thing is simple, if complex in execution. At some point conservatives need to raise capital, pick up cameras and start making movies of their own - much like Mel Gibson did with "The Passion." And conservatives should do this not simply to ’rebut’ the other side, but to add depth and imagination to what has become a wasteland of popular entertainment. Most Hollywood insiders - even liberals - agree that Hollywood is in a creative depression. More conservative voices can only help what has become a bleak situation for the town, both artistically and financially.

I agree to a certain extent.  Hollywood is an artistic trash dump and conservative voices can only help.  But there is one easier thing that conservatives can do about this situation which might make Apuzzo's suggestion a lot easier.  Stay home.  Refuse to see any of these movies.  If you want to watch a movie, go to the library or video store and pick up a movie or two that isn't garbage.

If the movies on this list go into the tank, and they will, a studio or two might go under and a lot more money might be freed up for these conservative films Apuzzo would like to see made.  After all, if Hollywood didn't learn from The Passion of the Christ, it can't learn from anything. 

UPDATE: Talk about cutting the ground out from under your premise.  This sounds like a must-see.

Posted on 8/10/2005 4:52:11 PM , 17 comments

Submitted by Allen Lewis at 8/10/2005 5:04:37 PM

I have to agree with you about staying home, Chris.

One would hope that these schlock-fests, masquerading as "entertainment" will bomb at the boxoffice.

By the way, how did "Fahrenheit 9/11" do in the States? I cannot imagine that it was a big hit here, was it?
Submitted by Jon at 8/10/2005 5:06:50 PM

The only explanation for that list of movies is that Hollywood has chosen sides in this war, and their side isn't the one the United States is on.
Submitted by David Fischler at 8/10/2005 6:42:18 PM

I agree with you about staying home, but don't have any illusions about the flopping of such films persuading Hollywood to stop making them. Profit is why they put out Spiderman and the like. These, on the other hand, are the result of True Believers sacrificing for The Cause. They really don't care whether they make money on such losers as long as they feel like they have Made a Difference.
Submitted by David Fischler at 8/10/2005 6:50:51 PM

Oops. Sorry about the early "enter." Allen, Moore's little autobiographical fiction made $119 million at the US box office ($222 million world-wide). Leaving aside the unfortunate fact that that means probably something like 30 million people were exposed to Moore's nonsense, it also means he has enough money to make dozens of propaganda movies.
Submitted by Ken at 8/10/2005 7:09:44 PM

It's worth remembering that more than a few liberals publically called Michael Moore a liar, which he is. Hope remains.

I generally agree that more Mel Gibsons are called for, but The Passion of the Christ was a personal passion and not just made for the money. I don't begrudge Mel a penny - he got more than a little of my money - but you can't mass produce Faith. For example, a movie about St. Therese of Liseaux was touted as the next Passion, but what became of it?

If these ideological movies are well-made, they will find an audience and perhaps influence the course of the events. On the other hand, they might just be more riffs on Farenheit 9-11 and preach to the choir. The central theme seems hatred of President Bush, which theme won't play well in about 3 more years.
Submitted by Bill (not IB) at 8/10/2005 7:26:30 PM

Christopher has it EXACTLY right. Staying out of the theaters (and not buying the DVD's) is all that's necessary. No need to protest, or make rebuttal films. Another bomb like 'Alexander' and Oliver Stone will be reduced to making the talk show circuits instead of making movies, and the studios can't afford to fund such duds. Especially with the way movie attendance has been drastically dropping of late.
Submitted by Fr. Leo at 8/10/2005 8:08:22 PM

Picturing facts into fiction is what the upcoming titles suggest. If we are not careful we may be offering the 'how to' to the terrorists through these past terrorist episodes like Munich Olympics and the like. Needless to say that the violent movies have been already a source of inspiration to also the terrorists. Hope such movies don't regenerate terrorism and backfire on us in the form of terrorist attacks.
Submitted by Jim the Fireman at 8/10/2005 9:03:17 PM

Compare this bunch of crap with the work that Hollywood put out during, and for some time after, WWII. During that time Hollywood enjoyed the adoration of the majority of folks. Now, I wouldn't cross the street to meet anyone of the so-called celebrities.
Submitted by Peter C. at 8/10/2005 10:32:48 PM

Hollywood will always be a bastion of the leftists for a very simple reason. The base of conservatism is firmly set in reality. We deal in facts and figures and truth and responsibility for one's actions and making the world a better place starting with where we are now. Liberalism is a denial of that reality. It deals in illusion and fantasy and puts forth contradictory visions of worlds that can never exist and that have no relation to the world around us. Want a great visualization of liberalism? Remember in Independence Day when all the people were up on the roof of the First Interstate building in LA with their signs welcoming the aliens? They were liberals living in their liberal fantasy world. Remember what happened to them? That's the inevitable end result of liberalism.

Submitted by Theodore Craig at 8/11/2005 12:12:19 AM

That's one reason I don't waste my money going to see (or even rent) movies anymore! I get more by being in a quiet place, praying and listening for His voice to guide me in His will for me, so I can do it! So doing, watching, and waiting for Him to come and take me home!

Ecclesiastes 12:10-14

10 The preacher sought to find out acceptable words: and that which was written was upright, even words of truth.
11 The words of the wise are as goads, and as nails fastened by the masters of assemblies, which are given from one shepherd.
12 And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.
13 Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man.
14 For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil. [Amen!]

Hollywierd has nothing that I desire anymore...
Theodore Craig
Quest For Truth Weblog
Brother Branham Lives Forum
Submitted by Ellen at 8/11/2005 3:51:21 AM

I've gone to one movie this summer. There are several I'd like to see, but I'm tired of high prices, rude audiences, and the general discomfort. I plan to see Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and that's it. After reading this list of proposed movies, I may never go again. I'm getting tired of the disrespect Hollywood has for people like me and am not inclined to give them any of my hard earned money.
Submitted by jude+ at 8/11/2005 7:09:08 AM

I've been doing my own 'boycott' of Hollywood for years! I rarely go/watch anymore.
Submitted by Allen Lewis at 8/11/2005 10:57:24 AM

There have been some great films based on principal and character over the years: A Man for All Seasons and Becket come to mind, here. One wonders if there is a way to film St. Augustine's story? Would it be a story worth watching?

Right now, Hollywood seems to be stuck in "remake mode", tryinjg to capitalize on previous successes. Of the ones I have seen so far - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, War of the Worlds, they were highly flawed remakes, plagued by lackluster acting and self-absorbed direction. Not really worth seeing. Seems like what's happening is that the producers are hoping that the special effects and/or elaborate sets will distract the audience from realizing that the actors are wooden, there is no caharacterization at all, and that they are being ripped off.
Submitted by David Foster at 8/11/2005 11:21:15 AM

Here's a half-baked thought. Some telcos are investing billions in wideband connections to the home, with the idea of delivering on-demand TV (as well as Internet and conventional TV)..problem seems to be that it's not clear if they will be able to license sufficient "content" from Hollywood, et al. Maybe there's a marriage made in heaven here, and an opportunity for new media companies to bypass the whole entertainment complex as it now exists. Of course, you'd have to deal with phone companies (sigh)
Submitted by yab at 8/11/2005 12:04:50 PM

It used to be that movie-going was a mass cultural experience - everyone went to the same movies, and as a result there was a sense of community about them. It also meant that the movies had to reflect consensus community values. Now movies are culturally balkanized. With the exception of some blockbusters like Lord of the Rings, movies seem to be tailored toward very specific demographics. The community experience is lost. So, whatever benefits there were to going to the theater are lost. Now I only go when I simply cannot wait four or five months to see the movie on DVD. And with high-speed data streaming, high-definition DVD, and other tech on the horizon, it looks to me like the age of the movie theater is coming to a close. They'll remain, for awhile, but the focus will shift even more toward home movie viewing. And if movie producers can stream directly to my TV with no middleman, movies will be even cheaper to make (no distribution deals necessary). Will this mean better movies? I don't know. Maybe. But I can tell you that the first high-def movie streamed directly to a TV over the internet will likely be about carnal passion, not the Passion of the Christ.
Submitted by Paula JL at 8/11/2005 1:14:07 PM

Hollywood contempt for America is not new. Michael Medved's book " Hollywood vs. America is very good, especially about Hollywood's contempt for religion.
Submitted by Andy at 8/11/2005 9:55:57 PM

thanks Chris for the link to the Great Raid review. Been seeing the ads for it on the History Channel but I was skeptical. Now I'm taking the boys as soon as possible.
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