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Washington Post: The 34 best political movies ever made


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The 34 best political movies ever made

Our critic’s list includes ‘Malcolm X’ and ‘Mean Girls.’ What’s your vote?

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2020/01/23/34-best-political-movies-ever-made/?arc404=true&fbclid=IwAR1GI_q-bbcKShAG6yL2e4WofXoyvb78LiHe4zeTolaO5auL7AKUiQGYuJY

 

Joseph McBride commented on Facebook about this article:  I guess Ann Hornaday of the Washington Post deserves plaudits for being broadminded in choosing a film written by a member of the Communist Party as her #1 political movie. MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON, which has always been one of my favorite films, was written by Sidney Buchman, who was a CP member at the time and was later informed on by director Frank Capra and blacklisted. Not only that, Hornaday doesn't mention that MR. SMITH was plagiarized from a Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Maxwell Anderson, BOTH YOUR HOUSES. I don't think Buchman or Capra were responsible for that, since Columbia only discovered the similarities shortly before the film's release and bought the rights to the play (though without giving Anderson screen credit). I wonder about Lewis R. Foster, who received the only Oscar given to MR. SMITH for what purported to be his original story. For all these revelations, see my 1992/2000 book FRANK CAPRA: THE CATASTROPHE OF SUCCESS and my 2019 book FRANKLY: UNMASKING FRANK CAPRA. It's a piquant irony that Buchman, a brilliant writer who was found guilty of contempt of Congress in 1953, has his work lauded by Hornaday for writing "Hollywood’s most stirring, convincing and timeless reminder that the Constitution is a sacred trust that all American citizens — and their representatives — have responsibility for bearing."

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The total dismissal of JFK in the preface, which I disagree with, almost made me dismiss the rest.  An interesting and informative list and description of the films.  Several I've never seen.  I'm no critic.  Maybe Citizen Kane and The Grapes of Wrath might be rated higher in a classic sense?  I was surprised to see High Noon included, but the guy does make the case well for it.   

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1 hour ago, Bob Ness said:

Z

State of Siege

Burn!

The Wages of Fear

Three Days of the Condor

Team America: World Police

The Parallax View

Seven Days in May

The Year of Living Dangerously

Salvador

Missing

Bob Roberts

Chinatown

 

 

Edited by Cliff Varnell
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I mean, if we're going to consider High Noon then why not:

The Draughtman's Contract

LA Confidential

Enemy of the State

Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

Paths of Glory

Miller's Crossing

 

Edited by Cliff Varnell
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I would definitely put LIBERTY VALANCE, such a profound film, right up there with MR. SMITH.

I use LIBERTY VALANCE to end my course on films about American history. It even

prefigured the JFK assassination in 1962 with its "Grassy Knoll" flashback of Wayne

firing incognito from the darkened alleyway with the help of Woody Strode, and the newsmen covering up

the truth as the lie becomes history. Artists are the canaries in the coal mine.

The Post list is rather absurd, though. 

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Edited by Joseph McBride
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How could a good movie be more about politics than The Best Man, written by Gore Vidal? (And if only we could have a Secretary of State like Henry Fonda, instead of the present toad.)

The line I still remember is how a politician "has to pour God all over everything like ketchup."

BTW I Googled that line to be sure I had it right, and I found it, not in Vidal's screenplay, but in a 2019 book called Leaping to the Stars by David Gerrold.

Maybe it's an old saying and Vidal just borrowed it too, I don't know.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Of course, it's still #toosoon to mention Vice, the Dick Cheney film by Adam McKay, or the deregulation politics of McKay's The Big Short.

This is a feel-good list for cross-Beltway housewives that kisses its own a$$ by making All the President's Men number 2, and thinks it's edgy for citing Bulworth.  So nobody should feel hurt that Z goes unremembered.

Of interest: the header illustration by Stephen Bliss references the neopolitik kitsch of Jon McNaughton, "Trump's favorite painter," whose work (e.g., The Forgotten Man and You Are Not Forgotten) is too nuanced to be dismissed.

https://www.salon.com/2020/01/26/trump-propaganda-painter-jon-mcnaughton-greatest-artist-of-our-time/

Edited by David Andrews
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          Interesting thread.  Coincidentally, I've been reading a fascinating book this week about the history of Hollywood during WWII and the ensuing Cold War, called Army of Phantoms, by former Village Voice film critic J. Hoberman, which has multiple references to the work of Joseph McBride  I can hardly put the book down.

https://www.amazon.com/Army-Phantoms-American-Movies-Making-ebook/dp/B004W3UGU0/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=Army+of+Phantoms&qid=1580406558&sr=8-1

 

 

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