Monthly Archives: June 2007

Live Free or Die Hard and Our Dependence on Technology

June 29, 2007
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Live Free or Die Hard and Our Dependence on Technology

When a movie form achieves lasting popularity, it eventually becomes rather baroque, pursuing increasingly bizarre concepts and events in order to bring a little orignality to the overworked format. That has happened with action movies in recent years, as filmmakers have moved into grotesquely weird comic-book concepts and ludicrously impossible action sequences. In such a situation, a little classicism can be a very good thing, as it distinguishes a film by differing it from its increasingly mannered competition, and also foregrounds what people really liked about the genre in the first place. Live Free or Die Hard is a great example of that process, and a superb representative of the action melodrama form. Bruce Willis is the centerpiece of the film, of course, as NYC police Detective Lt. John McClane, who finds himself in Washington, D.C. sheperding a person wanted for questioning by the FBI, when the nation’s entire communications, transportation, and power grids shut down in the wake of an attack by terrorists (or so it would seem….).

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Fired Actor Plays Race Card

June 28, 2007
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Fired Actor Plays Race Card

Fleeing headlong to the last refuge of a particular type of scoundrel, actor Isaiah Washington, fired from the high-rated ABC-TV program Gray’s Anatomy for referring to a fellow actor as a "faggot," claims that he was dumped because he’s black, not because he said something—twice—almost guaranteed to get him in trouble in today’s extremely sensitive, pro-homosexuality Hollywood environment. In an interview with Newsweek magazine, Washington said that his refusal to act submissively was what really got him fired:

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Prominent GOP Senator Embraces Classical Liberal Position on Iraq War

June 27, 2007
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Prominent GOP Senator Embraces Classical Liberal Position on Iraq War

"We don’t owe the president our unquestioning agreement," U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar said yesterday in a stunning, lengthy, unnanounced speech on the floor of the U.S. Senate. Reflecting to a significant extent the ideas outlined in my articles on A Classical Liberal View of the Iraq War, originally presented in detail here on The American Culture, Sen. Lugar, the ranking Republican on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, bluntly said that the Bush administration’s plan for Iraq is simply not working.

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Greatest Action Movies of All Time

June 27, 2007
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Greatest Action Movies of All Time

Coincidentally timed to align with today’s premiere of Live Free or Die Hard, the magazine Entertainment Weekly released its list of the greatest action movies of all time. Number one in the genre was Die Hard. It’s a fairly good and reasonable list, albeit tilted toward more recent films as these things usually are. I doubt, for example, that Spider-Man 2 and Kill Bill—Vol. 1 will make the list in future decades, even though they may be justified in making this one. Some titles I’m glad to see included are Drunken Master II: Legend of Drunken Master (feat. Jackie Chan; I think Drunken Master is better, however), The Adventures of Robin Hood (though it’s absolutely ridiculous that it’s not number 1 or 2), Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Hard-Boiled (John Woo’s highly influential film starring Chow Yun-Fat is an action film with heart and mind as well as the necessary amount of muscle) and Akira Kurosawa’s The Seven Samurai (although I like his Hidden Fortress a good deal more).

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Actor Fired After Homosexual Furor Is Putting Career Back in Order

June 26, 2007
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Actor Fired After Homosexual Furor Is Putting Career Back in Order

Actor Isaiah Washington, fired from ABC TV program Gray’s Anatomy, one of the top-rated shows on television, for calling a fellow actor a "faggot," may soon have a new job. Washington is in reportedly "sorting through" numerous offers of television and movie projects, and is leaning toward an undisclosed opportunity at NBC. Meanwhile, Washington has argued that the offended actor, T. R. Knight, used the incident to exploit a pro-homosexual spirit in Hollywood in order to bolster his own position on the show. 

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A Cinematic Blessing

June 25, 2007
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A Cinematic Blessing

Evan Almighty, which premiered last weekend to good but not massive box office, is getting very poor reviews.   Those reviewers are dead wrong.

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“Evan Almighty” Weak at Weekend Box Office

June 24, 2007
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“Evan Almighty” Weak at Weekend Box Office

Evan Almighty, the most expensive comedy film ever made—with an official reported cost of $175 million—opened less strongly than expected at the box office this weekend. The religiously themed comedy starring popular TV actor Steve Carell was number one at the box office during its first weekend, earning an estimated $32.1 million over its first three days. The studio had reportedly expected it to bring in something in the mid-$30 million dollar range and possibly break $40 million.

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The Admirable Conciseness of Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer

June 23, 2007
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The Admirable Conciseness of Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer

  Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer topped the U.S. box office during the past week, performing very well at the box office while garnering generally negative reviews. The audiences are right on this one (as usual).

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The Andy Griffith Show

June 22, 2007
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The Andy Griffith Show

I don’t want to leave this buried in the comments section, so I’ll put this here on the main page, though it’s very simple and brief. In reference to my post on "A Great Father," commenter Steve wrote, in part, that he still considers The Andy Griffith Show to be "the greatest American TV show ever done. So full of love and warmth and wisdom and kindness and, when needed, courage!" Steve says, "My childhood was better because of that show. I still watch reruns of TAGS. I also have several DVDs of selected episodes." My comment: The Andy Griffith Show is one of the great accomplishments of contemporary American culture.

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Nifong’s Disbarment, Lockout—and What Should Happen Next

June 20, 2007
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Nifong’s Disbarment, Lockout—and What Should Happen Next

The once and former Durham County, North Carolina District Attorney Thomas Nifong has been officially disbarred, and his bosses have taken away his badge and locked him out of the building. The arrogrant ex-lawyer had actually intended to remain on the job for another month after his disbarment. This author and this publication called for Nifong’s disbarment and removal from office very early last year, soon after the story hit the newspapers with a huge bang. I’m glad that Nifong has received his due, and I hope that the civil suits against him, brought by the young men he falsely prosecuted, will be highly successful. But there’s more to be done. 

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Media Getting Dirtier But Easier to Clean Up

June 20, 2007
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Media Getting Dirtier But Easier to Clean Up

The media are exposing children to too much overly sexual and violent content, but parents are increasingly finding ways to shield their children from programming of which they don’t approve. That’s the conclusion of a new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation. The Los Angeles Times reports:

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The 1930s Nancy Drew Films

June 19, 2007
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The 1930s Nancy Drew Films

Our friend Mike Tooney called our attention to the following passage in William K. Everson’s book The Detective in Film in which the author discusses the four 1930s Nancy Drew films produced by Warner Brothers and starring Bonita Granville as the title character. It’s a good capsule description of the series:

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