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JackRiddler wrote:.
Hm, good point. Despite the usual Hollywoodized politics, and even with the two good-woman characters of "Pamela Lundy" and the one played by Julia Stiles (interestingly both female), both are rather isolated throughout and barely escape being killed or serving as the fall guy-gals. The Bourne movies are definitely bad for CIA recruitment.
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Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:CIA wants badass types, not the naive romanticists who think 007 is real.
'Jason Bourne' accomplishes this.
Better to advertise ugly and get realistic recruits.
the_last_name_left wrote:on the other hand, i'm often struck by how readily hollywood depicts police/military/government as faceless totalitarian goons interfering with everything that's "right".
Spielberg for example - and many monster/alien films.......
they generate sympathy and empathy for the alien, and pose civil and military defence as a domestic threat.
Who would join the police after watching ET?
LilyPatToo wrote:Have you noticed how both the Bourne movies and the just-cancelled My Own Worst Enemy portray mind control programing as something in which the victims consciously chose to participate?
IOW, the public picks up the notion that mind control is nasty but voluntary and that stalwart Good Guy warriors were just trying to do the right thing by heroically volunteering for the programs. Later, of course, their programing begins to break down and they rebel when they become aware of the terrible things they've been used to do.
Don't get me wrong--I'm thrilled to see the public at least become minimally aware of the programs' existence, but I deplore the deliberate and very misleading twist that's being placed on the reality of nonconsensual human experimentation and trafficking.
LilyPat
PS sunny, I'm a Bourne fan too. The announcement that there'll be a 4th installment thrilled me!
I can't help it. The idea of a heroic good guy, fighting the bad guys and beating them at their own game by turning what they taught him back against them...I don't know, it taps into something ancient and visceral and totally unrealistic, I must admit, this idea of a Knight on a white horse, saving the day. Nevertheless, the yearning fantasy thrives and it's a real pleasure seeing it enacted in such a gut-wrenching, breathtaking fashion by an actor who seems engulfed in the character and completely committed to the task.
LilyPatToo wrote:Same here. And if the knight/white horse concept is irresistible to you, imagine the visceral punch it has for people who've been endangered for as long as they can remember.
What I'd really love to know is whether Matt Damon's consciousness has been raised at all about the Real Life mind control programs as he's immersed himself in these three films? Most Liberals I know have completely bought into the "It's just one of those wacky conspiracy theories" crap, so most of them never bother to seek out the mostly hidden-in-plain-sight, thoroughly disinfo-corrupted history of mind control.
I've resigned myself to the likelihood that, should MC slaves ever be rescued/freed, it's overwhelmingly likely to be done by Conservative warrior-types. As of now, they seem to be the only ones who are paying attention to the evidence![]()
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LilyPat
I suspect it's the result of a half century of wildly successful "social engineering" via the mass media. And perhaps of a desire to believe the best of people.
brainpanhandler wrote:
Once a subject like mind control is dropped into the thought bottle, "that stuff only happens in the movies", on a large, society wide scale, the subject is forever closed off to a lot of people. The closest most people come to breaking open that bottle and looking closer at the contents is to wonder, "What if it's true?"
AlanStrangis wrote:the_last_name_left wrote:on the other hand, i'm often struck by how readily hollywood depicts police/military/government as faceless totalitarian goons interfering with everything that's "right".
Spielberg for example - and many monster/alien films.......
they generate sympathy and empathy for the alien, and pose civil and military defence as a domestic threat.
Who would join the police after watching ET?
Are you talking about Classic Spielberg's ET where the agents carried guns, or New Spielberg's ET, where all threat is removed digitally by replacing the guns with walkie talkies?
"Seriously, we're just trying to HELP the little guy"
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