Friday, June 17, 2016

 

Dead Poets Society

If I'd taken note of it at the time I'd forgotten this was a Disney Joint. Along with School Ties three years later it proved to be a masterclass in acting for an entire classroom of 18-year-olds. Interesting to view this movie in light of more recent events in Robin Williams' life. Would Mr. Keating have chosen to end his own life?

What the movie makes clear is the fact that most schooling is a plot to train students for a 9-5 assembly line. Creativity and independent thought are to be discouraged or spanked out of kids though canings and paddlings as such are looked down on today. Private schools are seen as an opportunity to meet up with and make associations with the right kind of people from the right backgrounds to become the corporate movers and shakers their parents expect them to become. Any attempt to deviate from this path is strongly discouraged. The miss-guided control parents attempt to exercise over their children's lives is shown to tragic degree in this movie. My dislike of Kurtwood Smith probably stems from watching this film.

I was bussed 25 miles to a consolidated high school, no private residential school for me but this movie brings back memories. I may have had an average in the 90ies but I took great pleasure each June once I'd gotten my exam results in sitting in front of the old drum that fed smoke to our smokehouse and ritually burning an entire year's scribblers and classroom notes. Our books were provided so we had to turn them in at the end of term.

Watching a DVD provides the opportunity to see deleted scenes and other supplements. Watching the young actors 12 years later and now in their 30ies talk about the experience of making the movie makes me feel better about my own memory--they can't agree on some rather basic details.

What this movie drives home in spades is the fact that parents may encourage their children, empower them, give them opportunities to thrive, love them and praise them; but they should not expect to live their lives for them and certainly not fulfil their parents dreams.

I fell in love with Robert Sean Leonard as an actor with this movie and have followed his career ever since. His next movie had him playing Paul Newman's rather straight-laced son in Mr. and Mrs. Bridge, an entirely different role. In Safe Passage he plays a pot smoking free spirit. Leonard is proof that one can be a great actor without becoming a movie star. You've probably seen him in many roles and not even realized who was playing--to my mind that's the mark of a great actor. In this movie he definitely a leader among men.



Tuesday, June 14, 2016

 

Fury vs Saving Private Ryan

These two very different movies have some uncanny similarities. Both are set in the final year of WW#2 among a small group of soldiers whose leader ultimately dies. Each has a name actor playing the principal role who gets saddled with a 5-ft 9-inch clerk/typist who has no combat experience and survives the war. Both young men challenge the ethics and mechanics of warfare and are horrified by the experience. Both teams operate behind enemy lines. Every team seems to need a Bible-quoting conscience.

Saving Private Ryan
Fury
Tom Hanks
Brad Pitt
Jeremy Davies
Lyman Lerman
Timothy Upham
Norman Collier
Search Team
Tank Crew

"I was trained to type 60 words per minute."
"The army never made a mistake."
"FUBAR" "SNAFU"
The language in Fury is remarkably free of profanity.

The Allies won WW#2 despite the disadvantage of inferior technology and weapons and a defence wall years in the making due to the weight of superior fire-power throwing wave upon wave of troops at the enemy. It was a war of attrition that ground up an entire generation of young men ultimately depending on old men, women, and children in an all-out struggle to defend the Fatherland.

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