Tag: hacksaw ridge

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. Oscar Reflections

 

Miss me, Ricochet? I’ve been busy trying to place my reflections on American-prestige-at-the-movies in various venues, trying to tell conservative America: Pay attention, at least a little attention, at least during awards season! The ugly truth is, it’s really hard to get people to care, but very easy to get them angry and contemptuous at Hollywood out-of-touch-elitism, so I’m busy trying to avoid all the dark passions. But while people still make lovely movies worth the praise, I will try to show you what they’re about and how to navigate through the sophisticated concerns that give poetry its great dignity.

So here’s my list of Awards movies conservatives should support, nay cherish. They’re all but one featured at the Oscars. I picked three all-American stories, two of which are true stories such that the movies actually understate the miracles they depict. They’ve all been remarkably successful at European art-movie festivals, even at the highest level. They’ve not been too successful in America, but they’re doing ok mostly, and getting another chance at prestige in awards season. This is the sort of stuff conservatives should support, both because it is poetry worth supporting and because it supports the conservative case for American goodness and greatness.

  1. Hacksaw Ridge. The best show of Christian America at war I can think of — so naturally, the conservative press ignores it altogether. A war picture, a remarkable technical achievement, independently financed and produced with great savvy — and then it gets lots of Oscar nominations, including the first for Mr. Mel Gibson in perhaps 20 years. Shock after shock. I think we should be bipartisan about this and do at least as much as Hollywood liberals have done, so I’m doing my part!
  2. Kubo and the Two Strings. This is the most beautiful surprise of 2016. A film almost entirely free of the sordid, which tells a broken-family story Americans should love, while at the same time doing the sophisticate poetic work of analyzing grief in terms of the grief song, threnody, and trying to show where poetry stands in-between the city and the moon.
  3. Hell or High Water. This was the anguished manliness movie of the year. I’ve written about it at length on my website, but those are notes for a very limited audience. I’ve also produced a popular essay, but I’ve not found someone willing to publish it yet…
  4. Loving. This is the most surprising sort of civil rights picture you’re going to see. It’s a respectful and very American portrayal of the moral virtues that make private life a joy, a shelter, and a benefit to the country as a whole at the same time. It’s one those true stories that makes so many of us wonder at the ways in which Americans are blessed and innocent.

Then there are movies really worth the attention of conservatives who care about the culture, but they are not really lovable and I cannot recommend them. I suppose I don’t need to, either, as they’ve been plenty successful:

Contributor Post Created with Sketch. Recommended by Ricochet Members Created with Sketch. Hacksaw ridge

 

hacksaw

My friends here, as well as the larger public, have recently had to put up with my complaints about the philistinism of our political alliance. Some of us here believe conservatives should be investing in what we call the culture. Well, one part of that work is a defense of Christianity. & one part of that is telling well the true stories of Christian sacrifice & service in America. Conservative men of principle & moderation do not seem to care much about that; one Catholic man of very questionable morality & character has done it again–I’m talking about Mr. Mel Gibson.

This is the story of Desmond Doss, a Seventh Day Adventist who enlisted in WWII as a conscientious objector, having figured out that he could serve his country as a medic without having to take up arms. The military did not look kindly upon his lack of manliness. The story is supposed to show, among other things, why he was awarded, by your government, the Congressional Medal of Honor, for his actions during the fighting on Okinawa. It is also designed to show the Christian faith of America as a dedication to life & the faith of Imperial Japan as a death cult. It is, finally, supposed to show that Christianity provides America with the true understanding of equality–the equal worth of each human life, as defended by Desmond Doss.