Films on Liberty and the State
Films
on Liberty and
the State
I have
come up with a list of some films I've happened upon that I think are
of particular interest to Austrians and libertarians. In addition to
having some libertarian angle, (and I, by no means, am vouching for
ideological purity in any of these films), I also selected for films
that are generally high quality (critically acclaimed).
Where
available, I have put links to full reviews by my trusted film
reviewer, James Berardinelli. Write me with any suggestions for
additions.
Stephen
W. Carson
Stephen@RadicalLiberation.com
A
Man For All Seasons
|
All
Quiet on the
Western Front |
Amazing Grace |
The Americanization of Emily
|
Bananas
|
Boom Town
|
Breaker
Morant |
Brazil
|
Burnt By
the Sun |
The Castle
|
Commanding
Heights: The
Battle for the World Economy |
Dr.
Strangelove or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to
Love the Bomb |
Doctor
Zhivago | Election |
Enemy of
the State |
Europa,
Europa |
Farewell
My Concubine |
The
Godfather trilogy |
Harry's
War |
Hate
|
The Inner
Circle |
JFK
|
The
Killing Fields |
Lagaan -
Once Upon a Time in India |
L'America
|
To Live
|
The Man in the White Suit
|
The
Man Who Would Be
King |
A
Midnight Clear |
Minority
Report |
The Mouse
That Roared |
No Man's
Land |
Once Were
Warriors |
The
Outlaw Josey Wales
|
The
Promise
|
The Quiet American| Rabbit-Proof Fence | Serenity
|
Seven Days in
May |
Shenandoah
|
Snow
Falling on Cedars
|
Sophie Scholl: The Final Days
|
Stalingrad
|
Star Wars
|
Sunshine
|
Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War
| Tailor of
Panama |
The Third
Man |
Three Kings
|
Tucker: A
Man and His Dream
|
Underground
|
V for Vendetta
|
Wag the Dog
|
War Letters:
American
Experience |
The
White Rose |
Xiu Xiu:
The Sent Down Girl
A
Man For All
Seasons
(1966)
|
Free
Market Film
Discussions
|
This
film is about
Thomas More
(1478-1535) who
served the King of England loyally and honestly but was eventually
executed for his silent opposition to Henry VIII's self-aggrandizing
moves against the Roman Catholic Church. What makes the film enjoyable
to watch, despite the conclusion being well known, is the rigorous,
witty character of Thomas More himself, a man of true integrity. An
exchange that illustrates this well occurs when William Roper urges
More, when he is chancellor, to arrest a man who is a threat to More
but who has committed no crimes. When More refuses, Roper can't believe
it: "You'd give the devil benefit of law!" "Yes," More replies, "What
would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the devil?"
Roper: "Yes! I'd cut down every law in England to do that!" More: "Oh?
And when the last law was down and the devil turned round on you where
would you hide, the laws all being flat? ...Yes, I'd give the devil
benefit of law for my own safety's sake."
In
this masterful
telling of the
true story of
one man who stood up to the State, merely by refusing to change his
mind, there are numerous timely elements. The quick transformation by
the English king of a former ally (in this case the Roman Catholic
Church) into an enemy, with harsh punishment for any who do not adopt
the new party line with sufficient speed. The denial of the right of
Habeas Corpus so as to persecute someone who has not broken
any
laws. The abuse of religion to serve the purposes of the State. But the
most disturbing aspect is well summarized in the
words of
Randolph Bourne, "The State is a jealous God and will brook no rivals."
More must be eliminated not because he is leading a rebellion against
the State, indeed he does not even speak out against those things he
disagrees with. It is merely his refusal to enthusiastically assent to
the actions of the State that brings wrath down on him. A jealous God
indeed. This film deservedly swept the 1967 oscars winning Best
Picture, Best Actor, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay.
All
Quiet on the Western Front
(1930)
This
classic film is every bit as good as it's reputation promises.
Often censored in countries whooping it up for war, this is one of the
great anti-war films of all time. At the beginning of the film, young
German students are encouraged to volunteer in World War I by their
professor: "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. Sweet and fitting it
is to die for the fatherland." The young students enlist as a class
with visions of being admired in their new uniforms and returning as
heroes. After several years of front line combat, few of the boys are
left alive and uninjured. The central character Paul has a chance to
hear his old professor giving the same lecture to a new batch of
students. This times Paul has something to say: "It's dirty and painful
to die for your country. When it comes to dying for your country, it's
better not to die at all!" See Rick
Gee's
LewRockwell.com review
Amazing
Grace
(2007)
What could be more
opposed to the principle of self-ownership than slavery, an institution
that is, very possibly, older than the state? And what, therefore, has
been a greater victory in the modern age than the peaceful (outside of
the U.S.) abolition of slavery? This movie tells the first crucial part
of that inspiring tale: the abolition of the deadly slave trade led by
William Wilberforce.
The story begins with
Wilberforce wanting to leave politics
for religious reasons. John Newton, a reformed slave trader (and the
author of the hymn "Amazing Grace"), urges Wilberforce to remain in
politics to fight for the abolition of the slave trade. Wilberforce and
other abolitionists work feverishly to gather evidence against the
slave trade so they can present a bill against it. When the bill goes
up for a vote it is easily defeated. This disheartening failure leads
them to realize that they are going to have to change public opinion
first before political change will happen. Thus the battle of ideas
begins.
Who are the enemies in
the film? Of course there are the
businessmen in the slave trade and the politicians in bed with them.
But there is also a conservatism that stands by the unjust institution
simply because it is old. There are even wrong-headed economic
arguments, like that the prosperity of Britain is built on slavery, (as
opposed to, say, the industrial revolution). But the enemy that looms
over the whole long crusade is simply despair. It is hopelessness and
the desire to give up that Wilberforce struggles with most when initial
efforts fail.
As one would hope from
the story of one of the greatest
libertarian victories, strategic lessons abound:
- The abolitionists are radical but patient.
- Gradualism is not an aid to attaining abolition, it is
deployed to slow it down.
- The fundamental argument is a moral one, based on an appeal
to natural law.
- The abolitionists carefully document and publicize the
violence and brutality of the system.
- Public opinion can win even against massive entrenched
interests.
- War is a strategic obstacle to liberation and a support for
entrenched interests.
The
Americanization of Emily (1964)
Sometimes under the guise
of comedy,
art is at its most brutally honest. A case in point is this delightful
anti-war classic starring Julie Andrews and James Garner as cynical
WWII military man Charlie Madison who has rejected the "nobility" of
war. In one of several stunning bits of dialogue, he calmly explains,
"It’s not greed or ambition that makes war: it’s
goodness.
Wars are always fought for the best of reasons: for liberation or
manifest destiny. Always against tyranny and always in the interest of
humanity. So far this war, we’ve managed to butcher some ten
million humans in the interest of humanity. Next war it seems
we’ll have to destroy all of man in order to preserve his
damn
dignity."
In addition to Charlie Madison's penetrating comments on war, worth the
film alone, there is also a hilarious send-up of the military high
command. The film portrays them as more concerned about the women that
Madison procures for them and inter-service jockeying than about the
lives of the men they command. Despite, or because of, the brutal
honesty this is a genuinely enjoyable film that confronts the issue of
how to live free in a world of pointlessly fighting states. Unrated,
but some risqué scenes. See Rick Gee's
LewRockwell.com review.
Bananas
(1971)
Woody Allen's hilarious
second film,
in addition to some inspired
comedy gags (like Howard Cosell providing live commentary for a
political assassination), shows a remarkably even-handed (neither left
nor right) insight into political events. As Fielding Mellish (Allen)
gets caught up in a left-wing revolution in a small Latin American
country, he learns that the U.S. is supporting the brutal military
dictatorship. But when the revolutionaries take over, Mellish's naive
trust in the left-wing leader is betrayed, "Soon we'll hold free
elections and let the people choose their own leaders. You can
voluntarily step down..." The rebel leader responds, "These people are
peasants. They are too ignorant to vote... I am the ruler of this
country. There will be no elections until I decree it."
The film cleverly satirizes U.S. intervention abroad in a way that is,
unfortunately, still relevant. As U.S. troops fly to South America to
take part in the events, one of them asks, "We fighting for or against
the government?". Another answers "C.I.A.'s not taking any chances this
time. Some of us are for and some of us are going to be against them."
Rated PG-13 for brief nudity.
Boom
Town
(1940)
A marvelous and fun ode
to entrepreneurship starring Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy as two
wildcatters that take wild risks hunting for oil in 1918 Texas. Risk,
capital and entrepreneurial insight are all portrayed wonderfully. The
cherry on top is when competitors invoke the Sherman Antitrust Act to
go after a company they can't defeat fair and square in the marketplace
(imagine that!)
The courtroom speech at the end includes an argument indicating how
private owners of capital are motivated to wisely manage natural
resources(!) and this wonderful tribute to entrepreneurs: "McMasters is
a wildcatter. If it wasn't for automobiles he'd be driving a covered
wagon. It's always been his breed that has opened up the country and
made it what it is. So now, I'm wondering... Is it getting to be out of
line in these Unites States for a man like him to make a million
dollars with his brains and with his hands? Because if that's true,
then we'd better rewrite this land-of-opportunity stuff." Did Hollywood
really make this film? Wow!
Breaker
Morant (1980)
"It's
a new kind of war, George. It's a new war for a new century. I
suppose this is the first time the enemy hasn't been in uniform.
They're farmers. They're people from small towns. They shoot at us from
houses and from paddocks. Some of them are women, some of them are
children and some of them are missionaries."
In
this movie, set in the Boer war of 1899-1902 in South Africa, the
moral nightmare of the modern imperialist war is explored. The film
deals with the trial of three Australian soldiers who are accused of
killing enemy prisoners of war and a German missionary. The British
Empire is concerned that the killing of the missionary, in particular,
may draw the Germans into the war on the Boer side. So they would like
to see these soldiers take the fall, and quick. The soldiers plead
guilty with an explanation. Namely, they were acting under orders and,
in fact, they were following standard procedure for this "gloves off"
fight with an unorthodox enemy. "War changes men's natures. The
barbarities of war are seldom committed by abnormal men. The tragedy of
war is that these horrors are committed by normal men in abnormal
situations."
Part
of what makes this movie so fascinating, besides being well
done by director Bruce Beresford, is the central character of
gentleman/poet/rogue Harry "Breaker" Morant who is still considered
somewhat of a hero by Australians. Morant was famed as a horseman and a
"bush" poet (in the same league with Henry Lawson and "Banjo" Paterson,
who wrote "Waltzing Matilda" and "The Man from Snowy River" [a ballad,
then a song, and finally a movie]). But what makes this movie about
something a hundred years ago so terribly relevant is the accurate
portrayal of the atrocities and confusion that follow from an invasion
force that, rather than defending its ownborders, is out among the
farms and towns of foreigners who understandably resent their presence
and in desperation fight not just as an army, but as a people. (For a
libertarian pro-Boer, or at least anti-Empire, view of the Boer war see
Joseph Stromberg's excellent
article.)
My
favorite line in this film comes near the beginning. The head of
the British army in South Africa is explaining to the eager, young
prosecutor about the German interest in the Boers: "Needless to say,
the Germans couldn't give a damn about the Boers. It's the diamonds and
gold of South Africa they're interested in." "They lack our altruism,
sir." [Awkward pause] "Quite."
Brazil
(1985)
|
In
House DVDs of the
Mises Institute
- The
Adventures of Robin Hood
(1938)
- Antz
(1998): Anti-fascist,
anti-communist story of oppressed ants confronting military leader
plotting to overthrow the reigning monarchy and institute all-round
regimentation. Woody Allen stars in this animated Dreamworks creation.
- Apocalypse
Now Redux (2001): An
improved version of the classic look at US involvement in Vietnam
- Batman
(1989): Aristocrat and
techno-wizard turns private crime fighter in a city overrun by
criminals and corrupt politicians.
- Braveheart
(1995): The heroism
of the Scottish independence battle.
- Brazil
(1985)
- Breaker
Morant (1980)
- Dr.
Strangelove (1964)
- Enemy
at the Gates (2001): The
story of Vassili Zaitsev, a Russian sniper credited with over 140 kills
during the Battle of Stalingrad. Offers a telling look into military
life under the total state.
- Gangs
of New York (2003)
- Equilibrium
(2002): With a plot
far clearer than Matrix, the setting is a total state in which all
emotions have been made illegal in an attempt to supress hate and war.
A high-level state killer gradually shifts to the side of the
liberators.
- Gladiator
(1999): Set in the
final days of Marcus Aurelius' reign. Commodus kills his father and
takes over the state while ordering the death of Maximus, a military
hero. Maximus flees and hides his identity by becoming slave and a
gladiator. Maximus journeys back to Rome to overthrow the tyrant to the
cheers of the people.
- The
Godfather I (1972)
- The
Godfather II (1974)
- The
Godfather III (1990)
- Gods
and Generals (2002):
Recounts the fierce allegiances and combat of the War of Northern
Aggression.
- Legends
of the Fall (1994)
- The
Master of Ballantrae (1952)
- Matrix
(1999): "You've felt it
your entire life, that there's something wrong with the world. You
don't know what it is, but it's there, like a splinter in your mind,
driving you mad." Is this movie Marxist? Rothbardian? Who knows, but a
very exciting film in any case.
- Meet
John Doe (1941): A
journalist hoax turns to national cultural movement which is then taken
over by a would-be fascist dictator working hand-in-glove with unions
and business. A wonderful movie!
- Memento
(2000): The craziest,
upside-down movie ever, relentlessly stunning. Fascinating for any
Austrian for its commentary on the role of memory and the passage of
time.
- The
Outlaw Josey Wales (1976):
Josey Wales is a simple farmer in Missouri. When a vicious band of
Union Red Legs, led by Terrill (Bill McKinney), burns his home to the
ground, killing his wife and son, Wales joins a gang of Confederate
raiders, determined to get revenge.
- Platoon
(1986): A horrifying
look at the war on Vietnam.
- The
Quiet American (2002)
- Red
Dawn (1984): A group of
teens escape to the nearby forest to protect themselves when the Soviet
Union and Cuba launch an attack on the United States and paratroop into
their small Midwestern town. Shows the guerilla tactics necessary to
win a war.
- Ride
With the Devil (1999)
- Seven
Days in May (1964)
- Star
Wars I: The Phantom Menace
(2001)
- Star
Wars II: Attack of the Clones
(2002)
- The
Third Man (1949)
- Wag
the Dog (1997)
|
Master
filmmaker, and former Monty Python animator, Terry Gilliam
(Time Bandits, Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The Fisher King) borrows
liberally from 1984 and Brave New World to make this visually stunning
dystopian film. There are definite moments of quirky humour, but make
no mistake, the oppressive government in this film is portrayed in a
suitably dark light, (you definitely don't want to be called for a
visit to "Information Retrieval"). Don't miss Robert DeNiro as the
heroic black market entrepreneur who keeps one step ahead of the
government so that he can do good home repairs without all the
bureaucracy. Rated R for language and implied torture. See also Robert
Blumen's 2-part review, 1
and 2.
Burnt
By the Sun (1994)
A
hero of the Bolshevik revolution finds his vacation interrupted by
the visit of his young wife's former lover. Unfortunately, it is 1936,
the period of Stalin's purges and the old boyfriend is in the NKVD,
(later the KGB). Outstanding performances by the director as the lead
character and by his real life six year old daughter.
I
have somewhat mixed feelings about this film since we're supposed
to sympathize with a Communist butcher as some sort of innocent, but
with a little imagination this film gives a useful depiction of the
tragic destruction of family and social life by political terror. Won
the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. In Russian with
English subtitles. Rated R for brief nudity, sex and violence. See this
review.
The
Castle (1997)
"A
man's home is his castle," goes the old English saying. In this
film, a cheerful, lowbrow and rather eccentric Australian family finds
their "castle" under attack from an expanding airport. But when the
Kerrigan family receives a letter stating that their home will be
"compulsorily acquired", the optimistic father of the family, Darryl,
decides to fight back. His lawyer explains to him the hopelessness of
his resistance, "There is an ironclad agreement between federal, state
and local governments and the Airports Commission." His common sense
response, "Well, where's the agreement with Darryl Kerrigan, 3 Highview
Crescent, Coolaroo?!" Further investigation reveals that the eviction
comes from wealthy businessmen in cahoots with the government, "It's a
way of privatizing without privatizing". When they offer Darryl ever
more compensation, he replies, "I don't wanna be compensated. You can't
buy what I've got." The movie cleverly weaves in the point that
interpersonal utility comparisons are invalid and comes out clearly for
(old-style) justice over the newer utilitarian uses of the courts.
This
is truly a movie about liberty. Though the conflict in the film
is with a corporatist state, the film is a comedy and it's central
focus is this quirky but loving family and their castle that is more
than a house...
It's a home. A great, fun, Rothbardian film. Inexplicably Rated R for
occasional profanity and nothing else objectionable. Read
a
review.
Commanding
Heights: The Battle for the
World Economy (2002)
This
six hour, 3 DVD documentary is well worth your time. Based on
the book by Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw of the same title, The
Commanding Heights takes on the daunting task of describing the
worldwide intellectual and political shift away from central planning
towards the market economy during the last quarter of the 20th century.
Of special interest are the interviews with key political and
intellectual players like Margaret Thatcher, Mikhail Gorbachev, Bill
Clinton, Milton Friedman and Hernando de Soto.
Part
I: The Battle of Ideas "In the
battle of ideas, the
pendulum had swung from government to market, from Keynes to Hayek."
Probably the most exciting of the 3 discs for Austrians, this section
deals with the intellectual shift by describing the rise and then fall
of central planning as represented by Keynes and the ascendency of
market-oriented ideas as represented by Austrian economist F. A. Hayek.
There are a few nitpicks that can be made about the historical
interpretation of the disc. There is a strange avoidance of
reinterpreting the effects of earlier interventions (FDR, Keynes).
Instead, the conventional, and wrong, historiogaphy of the 1930s and
1940s is presented, (e.g. FDR brought hope to the country with his
alphabet soup agencies, WWII ended the Depression in the U.S.). Mises
is presented briefly, unfortunately playing up the caricature of him as
a stodgy intransigent. Nevertheless, there are many wonderful and
interesting moments: interview footage of Hayek, the ceremony when the
Civil Aeronautics Board was disbanded, complete with Taps being played
and lots of helpful 20th century history for those of us too young to
have lived through it, (the history of mathonomic planning in India is
very interesting and was entirely new to me, especially Mahalanobis and
his single mathematical formula that supposedly decribed the entire
Indian economy).
Part
II: The Agony of Reform This
disc covers the political
rejection of comprehensive central planning in one state after another:
U.S., Britain, India, Chile, etc. Much focus is on Reagan and Thatcher
as setting the tone of market reform for much of the rest of the world.
Part
III: The New Rules of the Game
The final disc covers
the more recent government trade negotiations and protests (e.g.
Seattle) by anti-globalization forces. Time is spent on market
meltdowns in Russia and Southeast Asia as early market reforms are
revealed to be flawed.
Dr.
Strangelove or How I Stopped Worrying
and Learned to Love the Bomb
(1964)
"Gentleman,
you can't fight in here. This is the War Room." Stanley
Kubrick brilliantly realized that a subject as appalling and
unimaginable as global thermonuclear war needed to be dealt with in the
form of satire. With the help of Peter Sellers in three roles,
(including the former Nazi nuclear scientist Dr. Strangelove), he made
this satirical classic of nuclear gamesmanship. Top government and
military leaders talk offhandedly of "modest and acceptable civilian
casualties... no more than 10 to 20 million killed. Tops! Depending on
the breaks". When the President wonders how a nuclear confrontation
could be occurring due to a paranoid defense program he had approved,
the military leader in charge (George C. Scott) replies in typical
bureaucratic fashion, "I don't think it's fair to condemn a whole
program because of a single slipup, sir." In the guise of a comedy,
this film is a powerful meditation on the nonchalance with which our
"leaders" are ready to sacrifice millions of lives in their games of
global power politics. (By the way, on the left wing ridiculing of
anti-fluoridationists which this film indulges in, see Rothbard's essay
"Fluoridation Revisited" in The
Irrepressible Rothbard).
Doctor
Zhivago (1965)
"The
personal life is dead in Russia. History has killed it." With
these words, Commander Strelnikov sums up the effect of the Bolshevik
Revolution on a generation of Russians. The movie, based on Boris
Pasternak's novel, follows the poet Doctor Zhivago as his personal life
is taken from him, one piece at a time, by the violence of the great
utopian experiment. Beginning, significantly, with the seduction and
violation of a young woman named Lara, the film follows Lara and
Zhivago until they meet and become involved in a passionate love
affair. Both the book and the film were long banned in Russia, with the
film only becoming available there in 1994! Directed in epic style by
David Lean (Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia).
Election
(1999)
This bleak, black (and very funny) comedy has many targets but, as the
title suggests, democratic politics is a chief one. Our great electoral
exercises are here lampooned by focussing on elections for that most
meaningless of positions: high school student president. The earnest
seriousness of the usual contestants and the nearly religious
significance of the civic duty are eviscerated when Tammy (Jessica
Campbell) runs on a lark. Her rousing speech to the student assembly
would make the film worth it even if it wasn't brilliant otherwise:
Who cares about this stupid election? We all know it doesn't matter who
gets elected president of Carver. Do you really think it's gonna change
anything around here, make one single person smarter or happier or
nicer? The only person it does matter to is the one who gets elected.
The same pathetic charade happens every year, and everyone makes the
same pathetic promises just so they can put it on their transcripts
to get into college.
So vote for me because I don't even wanna go to college, and I don't
care. And as president, I won't do anything. The only promise I will
make is that, if elected, I will immediately dismantle the student
government so that none of us will ever have to sit through one of
these stupid assemblies again!
[Loud cheering]
Or don't vote for me! Who cares?! Don't vote at all!!
[Cheering] [Standing ovation]
Rated R for sexual themes & situations, profanity.
See this
review.
Enemy
of the State (1998)
A
delightfully paranoid warning about the power of government in a
technological age set in an action thriller format. Will Smith plays
the lead, a man who finds himself hunted by government agents for no
reason that he can fathom. This film is a sort of follow-up to "The
Conversation" by Francis Ford Coppola, a very different kind of film
which is more of a psychological exploration. Gene Hackman plays the
same character in each film, an expert on snooping technology whose
paranoia isolates him from others. Rated R for profanity and things
blowing up. See this review
Europa,
Europa (1990)
This
has to be seen to be believed. Based on the true story of a
German Jewish boy (Solomon Perel) who at various times during WWII
ended up in the Communist Youth League as well as the Hitler Youth(!).
An intriguing on-the-ground perspective of our ideologically
totalitarian age. In German & Russian with English subtitles.
Rated
R.
Farewell
My Concubine (1993)
Much
more overtly critical of Chinese Communists than "To Live",
this film covers the same time period but from the perspective of two
male Peking opera stars. The growing pain and distrust in their
friendship mirrors the shattering of Chinese society by the Communists.
In
Mandarin with English subtitles. Rated R, probably for bizarre
gender confusion in a love triangle. See this review.
The
Godfather trilogy (1972, 1974,
1990)
"Do
you know how naive you sound? ...Senators and presidents don't
have men killed." Mafioso Michael Corleone responds, "Oh -- who's being
naive, Kay?" As we watch Kay slowly lose her naivete, the Godfather
movies bring those who are willing to the recognition of the true
nature of men in power. Underneath all the pomp and circumstance, all
the glad-handing and talk of serving the people, the various gangsters
in power over us ultimately always have "an offer that you can't
refuse."
Lord
Acton taught us that "Power corrupts". In surveying mass murder
by the state, Professor Rummel updated that to "Power kills". In these
three masterpieces by Francis Ford Coppola, we have this lesson
re-taught for our times. If you thought these were just gangster films,
you missed the point. As Michael Corleone says in the third film, "All
my life I kept trying to go up in society. Where everything higher up
was legal. But the higher I go, the crookeder it becomes. Where the
hell does it end?"
All
rated R for gory violence. Reviews of Godfather
I. Godfather
II, and Godfather
III
Harry's
War (1981)
"Taxes
are the lifeblood of this nation," begins this comedy about a
man who decides to declare war on the Unitest States tax collection
agency, the I.R.S., after a 12 year personal vendetta of an I.R.S.
agent against an old lady. Being a comedy, this man's protest is
responded to by holing him up in his home, surrounding it with tanks,
declaring his children hostages... Where do they come up with such
unbelievable stuff?
Laced
with marvelous dialogue from government apologists, ("What do
you think this country's about?... It's about taxes."), as well as from
our hero Harry, ("Hitler would have loved the I.R.S."). Did Murray
Rothbard do any script writing on the side?
Hate
(1995)
Welcome
to the international welfare culture. Starting in a
government housing project in Paris, this black and white film follows
three bored and angry youth around for twenty four hours. Said, Vinz
and Hubert, who are Arab, Jewish and African French respectively, are
able to unite together despite racial differences in their hatred of
the life they feel trapped in. They are angry at the cops, the System
or anyone they run across. They don't know what precisely is wrong or
who is to blame but they know they want to hit back and break free of
it somehow.
Starkly
and compellingly told, the film presents no answers but
presents the questions urgently. This government housed and government
funded culture dots the urban landscape of the developed world, marked
by common elements that now transcend borders like graffiti and rap,
(in fact much of the soundtrack for this French film consists of
Americans rapping in English). The system has three messages for these
young men: you are not useful, you are not responsible and you are a
victim. It is not a system for humans. It must be stopped. In French
with English subtitles. Rated R for violence and language. Read a
review
The
Inner Circle
(1991)
A
kind-hearted projectionist (Tom Hulce, "Amadeus") in the Soviet
Union finds himself with his dream job, projecting films for beloved
Comrade Stalin. His love for Stalin knows no bounds, at one point
saying of him, "He's probably the kindest person in the world." But
when his lovely wife becomes involved with the lecherous head of the
secret police, Beria, he begins to slowly awaken to the true nature of
the regime he serves. A vivid and very personal account of life under
Communism that brings out the immense "idealism" and idolatry that
provided the necessary support for some of the worst crimes of human
history. Based on a true story. Filmed entirely in the Soviet Union
just before it fell. This is a truly outstanding film. Rated PG-13.
JFK
(1991)
"Kings
are killed. Politics is power, nothing more!" In this film on
the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, director Oliver Stone
delivers a scorching critique of the war-making United States
government. The mysterious informant, Mr. X, explains, "No war... No
money. The organizing principle of any society, Mr. Garrison, is for
war. The authority of the state over its people resides in its war
powers." Garrison later exclaims, "The war is the biggest business in
America, worth $80 billion a year! [1966 dollars]"
The
driving force of the film is a mystery... What really happened
on November 22, 1963? As revealed in the director commentary on the
film, Stone is not particularly attached to the theory the film puts
forward about what happened that day. His main thrust is to make
viewers dissatisfied with the official explanation. That he
accomplishes with great skill. A torrent of details comes hard and fast
in a movie that is extra long (206 minutes). Stone's skill makes what
could feel like an overlong lecture into a gripping mystery that makes
time fly. The film is flawed by Stone's naive view of Kennedy himself,
but this can be easily overlooked since the bulk of the film takes aim
at the political elite.
Jim
Garrison, then D.A. of New Orleans, is the only one to have
brought a case to trial related to the assassination. He is the
compelling central character of the film. In an appearance on a talk
show (it was actually on Johnny Carson's show), Garrison describes a
helpful thought experiment for those who are still naive about the
nature of power politics, "... ask yourself, if we had learned on
November 22, 1963 that the Russian Premier had been shot from a Moscow
building by a lonely capitalist sympathizer who, himself, was then
liquidated by a patriotic Muscovite within 48 hours while surrounded by
armed police. I think it would be pretty apparent to anyone that a coup
d'etat and a transfer of power had just taken place in the Soviet
Union." Rated R for language and brief nudity. See Murray
Rothbard's essay on the
Establishment hysteria over this film,
(they doth protest too much).
The
Killing Fields (1984)
Educated
in France with the best of socialist ideology, a group of
Cambodian students decided that they understood what had gone wrong
with previous socialist revolutions. Lenin, Stalin, Mao and others had
been too faint-hearted in advancing the revolution. What was needed was
to destroy the old order as swiftly and ruthlessly as possible so that
the new socialist order could arise unimpeded. An opportunity for them
was created when the conflict between communists and the U.S.
government spread from neighboring Vietnam into Cambodia. Calling
themselves the Khmer Rouge, they were able to seize power in the
de-stabilized nation and put their Super-Revolution into effect.
This
film tells that story through the perspective of New York Times
reporter Sydney Schanberg (Sam Waterston) and his Cambodian counterpart
Dith Pran (Dr. Haing S Ngor). The early part of the film focusses on
illegal U.S. bombing in Cambodia and Schanberg is the central figure.
But soon after the Khmer Rouge take power, Schanberg has to flee and
Dith Pran is left behind to experience life under the Khmer Rouge. It
is through his eyes and the power of Haing S Ngor's Academy Award
winning and magisterial performance that the reality of the Khmer Rouge
revolution is powerfully portrayed. Urban populations are immediately
driven out of the cities (including sick from the hospitals) by the
Communists to an agrarian existence supposedly free of corrupting
Western influences. Intellectuals or anyone who can speak a foreign
language are shot. War is declared on the traditional family and the
children become leaders precisely because of their lack of experience,
"We must honor the comrade children whose minds are not corrupted by
the past." A new world is declared in Cambodia, "...now is the year
zero and everything is to start anew". (The French Revolutionaries also
started the calendar over at zero).
Memorable
images abound including the forced expulsion from the
cities, the children Khmer Rouge soldiers (half of whom were under 15)
and, of course, the killing fields. The Khmer Rouge did, in a way,
accomplish more than all their forerunners. They hold the dubious
distinction of killing more of their subject population (somewhere
between a fourth and a third) and at a faster rate than any mass
murderers in the 20th century. In Cambodian, French and English with
subtitles. Rated R for violence, language and true horror.
Lagaan
- Once Upon a Time in India
(2001)
A
musical about tax resistance?! Why not! Rothbard once wrote, "...I
am notoriously hostile to films that are (a) slow, (b) dark and murky,
(c) with long close-ups of suffering actors' faces substituting for
dialogue, and (d) in a foreign language. Indeed these four elements
almost always go together." This film is, I admit, in a foreign
language. But it is neither slow, dark and murky nor lacking in witty
dialogue. Perhaps this is because it is not a product of the
pretentious and usually depressed European art house cinema, but of the
entrepreneurial and vibrant Bollywood, the Indian film industry that is
second only to Hollywood in size.
One of the pleasures of Bollywood films for fans of classic American
film is that, like in that classic era, Bollywood still considers the
musical film an acceptable, even preferred medium. So when it came time
to tell the story of a village resisting taxes in the 19th century they
produced a joyful and fun musical rather than a didactic screed. Poor
villagers are made to pay a tax, the Lagaan, to the Raja which actually
goes to the occupying British. When an argument breaks out among the
villagers about whether they are being oppressed by the native Raja or
the foreign occupiers, an insightful villager points out, "Whether we
put it into the right hand or the left, it's we
who
pay, Chief!" The hero of the tale asks the central question of the
film: "I feel rage in my heart when I pay Lagaan to the Raja... And he
gives it to those Whiteys with their dirty grasping hands... Who
ploughs this earth to sow the seeds? We do. Who waters it? We do. Why
should we fill their coffers with our produce?" Courtesy of an arrogant
British officer, the villagers are faced with a challenge: Beat the
British in cricket and pay no Lagaan for three years, lose and the
entire province will pay triple. This is a joyful, beautifully
photographed film that serves as a great, libertarian introduction to
Bollywood. In Hindi and English with subtitles.
L'America
(1994)
Two
Italians go to Albania to set up a development scam and make off
with Italian government funds. Once there, one of the men finds himself
caught up in the tragedy and confusion of post-communist Albania. In
Italian with English subtitles. See this review.
To
Live (1994)
Follows
a common family from the 1940s in China through civil war,
the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. Focusses on the
resilience of family in the face of political madness.In Mandarin with
English subtitles. See this review.
The
Man in the White Suit (1951)
In this hilarious film
Alec Guinness
plays Sidney Stratton, a brilliant scientist who is struggling to
complete his research on a new kind of fabric that will not only be
nearly indestructible but even repel dirt. He is booted out of one
industrial lab after another each time his personal project is
discovered until he finally gets the formal backing of a cloth
manufacturer. His experiments are a success and filled with pride and
joy about his invention that will benefit so many, he prepares to go to
the press conference. That's when a big business cartel and a labor
union attack ("capital and labor are hand in hand in this") fearing
that Stratton's invention will put them all out of work since people
won't need replacement clothes once they get clothes made from
Stratton's cloth. First the businessmen try to trick Stratton into
signing a contract that will give them full control of his invention,
but he asks "To suppress it?" and they respond "Yes". When trickery
doesn't work the businessmen and labor union turn to violence.
The movie strangely leaves out any government role as the union and the
cartel unabashedly use violence to put down their competitor. But only
a little imagination is required to see this movie as a critique of
real world big government/big business/big union fascism. This is a
great and funny film about entrepreneurial innovation and the "vested
interests, the dead hand of monopoly" who try to suppress it by force.
The
Man Who Would Be King (1975)
Ironically based on a
famous short
story by Imperialist Rudyard Kipling, this film is a clever parable of
Empire. Instead of a massive state invading a smaller country, this
invasion consists of only two men. Peachy Carnahan (Michael Caine) and
Daniel Dravot (Sean Connery) are the charming rogues who are going to
make something of their experience as soldiers for the British Empire
in India. When they explain to Kipling (cast as a character in the film
played by Christopher Plummer) their plan to take over Kafiristan, they
do not pretend to be doing it for Kafiristan's good. "It's a place of
warring tribes, which is to say, a land of opportunity for such as we,
who know how to train men and lead them into battle." Their plan is
simple, "We'll go there. We'll say to any chief we can find, 'Do you
want to vanquish your foes?' 'Of course' he'll say, 'go to it.' We'll
fight for him, make him king, then we'll subvert that king. We'll seize
his royal throne and loot the country 4 ways from Sunday."
It goes pretty much
according to plan,
at first. But eventually the unpredictability of the people they are
conning and, perhaps deadlier, themselves undoes them. Daniel Dravot
begins to believe his own propaganda and see himself as a true
benefactor. A more charming and enjoyable way to show the evil of
empire is hard to imagine. Highly recommended. Rated PG for violence
and brief nudity.
A
Midnight Clear (1992)
"Peace
on Earth. Good will to men." The words of the Christmas Carol
hang over this war film set during Christmas 1944 in the Ardennes
Forest near the French-German border. Inspired by William Wharton's
semi-autobiographical novel, the film tells the tale of a recon unit
put together from the highest IQ soldiers. The small squad is led by
Will Knott (Ethan Hawke) and contains Mother (Gary Sinise), who is
starting to lose it after hearing that his baby died while he was at
the front. The squad runs into a German unit that, they begin to
realize, wants to surrender to them but is concerned to make their
capture look real so their families won't be imprisoned by the Nazis.
(When called Nazis by the GIs, their vehement protest is translated,
"He said they're not Nazis. They're just regular German army. They're
regular army like we are.")
The
mock battle goes tragically wrong and Knott is faced with a
microcosm of the meaningless of war. This film is a melancholy,
dream-like poetic film. The battle scenes are few and quick. There are
numerous memorable images. Two soldiers standing frozen, locked in a
macabre death dance in the snow. The soldiers singing the Christmas
carol "Silent Night" together each in their respective languages. A
grenade used as a Christmas tree ornament. With tremendous art,
director Keith Gordon drives home his point: These soldiers have more
in common with each other than with their officers and political
leaders. So why are they killing each other? Rated R for language and
violence. See
this
review
Minority
Report (2002)
More
and more the State makes crimes of actions that don't cause any
harm, but might. Drunk driving, an improper paperwork trail for a large
transfer of money, violation of any of a multitude of gun purchasing
regulations. The point is no longer merely to punish the wrongdoer, but
to prevent the crime from happening in the first place. What is the
logical culmination of this? Minority Report shows us in a movie based
on a story by sci-fi author Philip K. Dick (who also inspired
Bladerunner and Total Recall). In 2054, Washington D.C. has gone from
being the murder capital of the nation to having no murders at all.
This is due to the Department of Pre-Crime which, with the help of 3
"pre-cogs", foresees murders before they occur and arrests the
predicted murderer before he can actually do the deed.
The
movie brilliantly explores issues of predestination and free
will while demonstrating the injustice of a "justice" system that
punishes not for actual crimes, but for ones that are yet to be
committed... The ultimate "tradeoff" of liberty for security. A timely
and masterfully executed collaboration between Tom Cruise and Steven
Spielberg, this is a parable for our time and an exciting movie to
watch. See
this review.
The
Mouse That Roared (1959)
Peter
Sellers stars in 3 different roles in this light comedy about
foreign aid, the Cold War and nuclear brinkmanship. The tiniest country
in the world has fallen on hard economic times and decides on a novel
way of getting out of their fix. The Prime Minister's proposal: "There
isn't a more profitable undertaking for any country than to declare war
on the United States and to be defeated. No sooner is the enemy
defeated than the Americans pour in food, machinery, clothing,
technical aid and lots and lots of money for the relief of its former
enemies... I move we declare war on the United States of America." The
leader of the loyal opposition responds, "As leader of the Party of the
Common Man, I say war is reprehensible, barbaric, unforgivable and
unthinkable! And I second the motion." Unfortunately for their
brilliant plan, they accidentally win the war. A fun film that lampoons
the state while also showing its insanely destructive nature.
No
Man's Land (2001)
In
the middle of the Serb-Bosnian conflict, the Bosnian Cera,
wounded and trapped on a land-mine that will go off if he moves,
finally tires of the bickering between the Serb and Bosnian trapped in
the trench with him, "Who cares who started the war? We're all in the
same s**t now." Cera's situation, trapped where he will die from his
wounds if he stays or die from the mine if he moves, becomes the
central catch-22 of many in this darkly comic and bluntly realistic
film.
Trapped
in the no man's land between enemy lines, the decisive
heroic action that war is supposed to engender is nowhere to be seen.
Every attempt to get out of the trap does nothing or makes things
worse. When UN soldiers (or "smurfs" as the Bosnians and Serbians
derisively refer to them because of their blue helmets) intervene with
the best of intentions, it just brings in media involvement and
everything gets more complicated without getting better. Nothing makes
the ancient enmities disappear and nothing gets Cera out of no man's
land, the destructive limbo of war. This is a remarkable film for its
ability to be poetic, darkly funny and grittily realistic all at the
same time. Winner of a special jury prize at the 2001 Cannes Film
Festival. In Bosnian, French and English with subtitles. Rated R for
profanity and violence. See this review.
Once
Were Warriors (1995)
Made
in the same year as Hate, (see review above), this film
documents another section of the international welfare system. This one
is in New Zealand and is "helping" the Maori, once a proud warrior
tribal people. At the film's beginning, Jake comes home to tell his
wife that he's been laid off, but that it's alright... Going on the
dole will bring in only 17 dollars less. Still, there's plenty to keep
Jake busy: drinking, bringing home friends from the bar for late night
parties and brutally beating his wife when he's drunk.
The
tragedy plays itself out in different ways in the lives of their
five children until Beth is forced to reconsider this new "culture"
before it completely destroys her family. This is an extremely powerful
film, with the portrayal of the alternately sweet and violent Jake
particularly convincing and frightening. Here's a mystery... How is it
that the welfare system, sponsored by such sensitive, multi-cultural
types, is so incredibly destructive of any traditional culture it comes
in contact with? Rated R for violence, rape and language. Read a
review
The
Outlaw Josey Wales (1976)
This
classic western directed by and starring Clint Eastwood
features a scathing portrayal of the state at war. Set at the end of
the War Between the States, Josey Wales is a Missouri farmer minding
his own business who decides to fight when Kansas raiders allied with
the North kill his wife and his child and burn his house down. Refusing
to surrender when his comrades do at the end of the war, he becomes a
hunted man. As he journeys to Texas with Union soldiers on his trail,
he begins to collect ragtag outcasts... Some of whom represent other
victims of the Union government like his Indian friend.
The
self-righteous crusading spirit of the Yankee so often described
by Murray Rothbard is summed up in a single line of dialogue.
"Fletcher: We get [kill]
Josey Wales and it ends. Union
officer: Doin' right ain't
got no end." The most amazing
speech, though, occurs when Wales comes to a Comanche chief (Ten Bears)
to make peace having had enough of fighting:
Josey:
Governments
don't live
together. People live
together. Governments don't give you a fair word or a fair fight. I've
come here to give you either one. Or get either one from you... I'm
saying that men can live together without butchering one another...
Ten
Bears: It's
sad that governments are chiefed by the
double-tongues.
A
great film with a sharp interpretation of history and a timeless
message about the state, society, war and peace. Contains brief nudity
and lots of violence.
The
Promise (1995)
Follows
a romance split by the Berlin Wall from shortly after the
Wall is put up to when the Wall comes down. Puts human faces on this
bizarre episode of the 20th century. In German with English subtitles.
Rated R for sexual situations, nudity and profanity. See this review.
The Quiet American
(2002)
After several decades,
Graham Greene's novel about the early days (1952) of American
involvement in Vietnam is finally given a proper film adaptation. The
earlier film version made in 1958, whatever its virtues, had the ending
changed to be Cold War friendly in stark contrast to Greene's novel
which was trenchantly critical of the American role. In this sad,
moving film, which features at its center a typically flawed Greene
protagonist, Thomas Fowler (Michael Caine), the "quiet American" Alden
Pyle (Brendan Fraser) is idealistic and full of grand visions about
helping the Vietnamese people. In one conversation Pyle is going on
about bringing liberty to the Vietnamese and Fowler interrupts him:
"'Liberty' is a very western word. How do you define it for the
Vietnamese?" Pyle responds with typical gung-ho idealism,"By giving
people the freedom to choose." Fowler's years of experience in Vietnam
speak, "OK, you give them the freedom to choose, they vote, and they
elect Ho Chi Minh... Things are more complicated then they seem."
Eventually Fowler discovers that Pyle is CIA and is funding a "third
force", neither French nor communist, through which he hopes Vietnam
will be saved. When his third force kills 30 civilians in a bombing in
a square in Saigon so they can pin it on the communists Fowler
confronts him about it. Pyle says "In a war you use the tools you've
got" and when pressed about the atrocity defends it: "What happened in
the square today makes me sick. But in the long run, I'm going to save
lives." A 1956 review of Greene's book by John Lehman of the New
Republic stated that Greene's novel was "icily anti-American". But we
might wonder if it is "American" to intervene militarily across the
globe and sponsor terrorist attacks on civilians in the name of a
greater good. This film, telling a story still relevant 50 years after
the novel was published, demonstrates that we are still wondering.
Rated R for violence and sexual situations. See
this review.
Rabbit-Proof
Fence (2002)
If only there were more
films like
this! This top quality film highlights an evil of the State that
actually occurred but at its center the film is about a courageous
quest for liberty worthy of Tolkien. In 1931 Australia, it is the
official policy of the government that all "half-caste" children (half
Aborigine, half white) are to be taken from their families and raised
by the State. When three young girls (aged 14, 10 and 8) are taken 1200
miles from their home, they escape and determine to make the epic
journey back across desert and wilderness with no resources and with
the minions of the State on their trail. The film is notable for the
sincere good intentions of the Chief Protector of the Aborigine
Populace, Mr. Neville (Kenneth Branagh) and the cleverness and bravery
of the 14 year old that leads the escape, Molly (Everlyn Sampi). A
libertarian aspect of Molly's story (a true one) that most reviewers
seem to have missed is that the breakdown between those who aid the
girls and those who seek to recapture them is not a racial one. The
Aboriginal tracker Moodoo (David Gulpilil) who works for the government
tries just as hard to recapture the girls as the whites. Conversely,
whites independent of the government are glad to help the children on
their way. Mr. Neville's chilling words sum up the view of the ruthless
social engineer: "We face an uphill battle with these people -
especially the Bush natives - who have to be protected against
themselves. If they would only understand what we are trying to do for
them." See this review.
Serenity (2005)
"Half of history is
hiding the truth."
This western in space portrays a well imagined future in which humans
have scattered across hundreds of planets and moons. The Alliance rules
a flourishing civilization which fought successfully to defeat the
secession of outlying settlements on the wild frontier. Serenity is a
ship with a crew of former independence fighters who now make their way
smuggling and hitting the Alliance when they can. The film brings the
crew face to face with the dark heart of the Alliance's mission to
bring enlightened civilization to all, whether they want it or not.
Filled with well wrought characters and a wonderful sense of humor,
this film insightfully portrays not only the empire but a doughty band
of independent spirits who just want to be allowed to go their own
way. Rated PG-13 for violence and sexual references. See this
review.
Seven
Days in May (1964)
Kirk Douglas plays Jiggs
Casey, a Marine Colonel who is aide to General
Scott (Burt Lancaster), head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Colonel
Casey begins to suspect his superior officer of planning something
sinister. General Scott, a popular political figure, has made it well
known that he disagrees with the President's attempt to negotiate
nuclear disarmament with the Soviet Union. As the story unfolds, it
becomes clear that Scott is planning a military coup against the
president to prevent this disarmament. When Colonel Casey goes to the
President with his suspicions, the tension mounts as there are only
days to prevent the coup. Not only is this a great political thriller,
but the film takes on the insanity of the National
Review
"nuke 'em 'til they glow" approach to the Cold War.
Shenandoah
(1965)
This
film starring Jimmy Stewart portrays a widower named Anderson
at the time of the War between the States who refuses to join either
side and just wants to be left alone. His crusty independence and
anti-war attitude have made this film a libertarian favourite. As an
exercise in nostalgia, Mr. Anderson's rugged individualism is
enjoyable. But don't forget how impractical it is... What if Americans
all started minding their own business like him? Imagine if all
Americans, like Mr. Anderson, focussed primarily on raising virtuous,
hard-working children and cultivating their own property instead of
"accepting responsibility" as world leaders and getting involved in
every two-bit border conflict on the globe and starving Iraqi children
out. Here's some favourite quotes from the film:
- "Virginia
needs all of her sons, Mr.
Anderson."
"That might be so, Johnson. But these are my sons. They don't belong to
the state. We never asked anything of the state & never
expected
anything."
- "What's
confiscate mean, Pa?" "Steal."
- "Like
all wars I suppose... The undertakers
are winning it."
Snow
Falling on Cedars (1999)
Set
as a courtroom drama in the years after WWII, the film's
emotional center is a past romance between a white boy of the town and
a Japanese girl. Among many other things, deals effectively with the
internment of Japanese Americans during WWII. This is a visually
stunning film. Rated PG-13 for violence, profanity, sex. See this review.
Sophie Scholl: The Final Days (2005)
On February 22, 1943, Sophie Scholl,
her brother Hans Scholl, and their friend Christoph Probst were
beheaded for treason by the Nazi regime. Sophie Scholl was 21. They had
committed no violence but had secretly written and distributed
pamphlets criticizing the regime. In court, Sophie said "Somebody,
after all, had to make a start. What we wrote and said is also believed
by many others. They just don't dare express themselves as we did."
This film focuses on Sophie Scholl's
last five days beginning with her group's last distribution of tracts
during which her and her brother are caught and arrested. Five days
later they are given a very brief trial, sentenced and executed the
same day. There are a number of striking details for the libertarian
that the film brings out. At several stages in the process she is
berated for being unthankful to the regime that was providing her
(socialist) university education. Evidently, there are strings attached
to these state "services". Notably, they are charged with breaking a
law having to do with not "supporting the troops".
The scene with Judge Roland Freisler, who was also the judge in the trial of the July 20 assassination
plotters later on, is really remarkable. Any pretense of a legal system
independent from the political rulers is completely gone in this
reductio ad absurdum of state "justice". Freisler rants and raves at
the accused, cutting them off and insulting them. The DVD has a short
clip of actual footage of Freisler in action as a bonus feature. If not
for that clip, I wouldn't have believed that any "judge" would behave
in such a manner.
Finally, though Sophie acquits herself
most remarkably before this maniac of a judge, her brother Hans gets in
one telling line: "If you and Hitler weren't afraid of our opinion, we
wouldn't be here." Despite how small these isolated resistors seem in
the face of the regime, Hans is right. The regime is in stark terror of
public opinion turning against them.
But over and above all these details
is Sophie Scholl herself: courageous, articulate, stubborn. Once it
becomes clear that they are truly found out, she does not beg for mercy
but instead speaks the truth again and again with inspiring boldness.
She is a standing rebuke to those who would keep silent merely to
further a career or curry favor with the establishment. In German with
English subtitles. Also see The White Rose.
Stalingrad
(1993)
There was a time when war
was limited by the king's purse. Soldiers were payed out of his private
money and if he stopped paying they stopped fighting. As imperfect a
barrier as it was, this served to keep war making
somewhat constrained. With modern taxation and conscription though, the
state became
able to make war on a new and terrifying scale as demonstrated by the
massive French revolutionary army under Napoleon. This development
seemed to culminate in the trenches of World War I which saw casualties
previously unimaginable. But there was worse to come.
World War II showed that
there were still constraints to be left behind. The targeting of
civilians through bombing and concentration camps, the subservience of
all economy activity to the state and the ideological commitment to
"unconditional surrender" led to the emergence of a new, in the modern
era at least, kind of war: Total war. With the possible exception of
the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the combat operation that
represents the horrifying pinnacle of total war is the battle of
Stalingrad.
With each side spending
human life like water, an estimated 1.7 to 2 million Axis and Soviet
casualties were lost in this battle that lasted 199 days and destroyed
an entire city. Though the battle is widely considered a turning point
in the war, this film is entirely uninterested in this battle as a
matter
of military strategy. Instead the story is about the human cost.
Stalingrad
wisely narrows its focus to 3 German soldiers heading to Stalingrad,
two veteran grunts, Fritz and Rollo, and an officer, Hans, new to
combat and full of patriotism. Upon arriving they realize that
something is different in Stalingrad when they see a soldier beating a
prisoner of war to death and the officers refusing to discipline the
soldier. Things go downhill from there as they face the brutal street
fighting that most characterized the battle and eventually the
encirclement of an entire German army in the merciless Russian winter.
The most dramatic transformation is that of Lieutenant Hans who changes
not only due to the general hopelessness of the situation but in
particular because of the shooting of civilians. De-humanization is a
constant theme throughout the film.
In a rare scene of
humanity a German unit calls for a truce with the Soviet unit in the
building next to them so each side can retrieve wounded. While doing
their grim work, a German soldier spies a Russian pocketing some bacon.
He pulls out a piece of bread and holds it out to the Russian. They
look at each other nervously and quickly make the exchange. A moment of
human cooperation in the midst of destruction.
How bad can the state
get? This film answers that question.
In German with English
subtitles. Rated R for gruesome war violence. See this review.
Star
Wars (1977, 1980, 1983, 1999,
2002,
2005)
The
ambitious Star Wars films tell of the rise, fall into evil &
ultimate redemption of Anakin Skywalker through his son Luke. Set
against the decline of the Old Republic into an evil Galactic Empire
and the rebellion against that Empire, this tale has profound relevance
for our time. Here's the top reasons why the Star Wars saga, in
addition to being an epic action-packed adventure is a great
pro-liberty tale:
- The
films claim to be pro-liberty! From the
scrolling-off-into-the-distance intro text: "...restore freedom to the
galaxy" (Episode IV), "a group of freedom fighters led by Luke
Skywalker..." (Episode V), "the small band of rebels struggling to
restore freedom to the galaxy" (Episode VI).
- The
theme of the Republic declining into an
evil empire is an ancient libertarian theme going back to Cato's
resistance to the onset of empire in Rome. The portrayal of the
bureaucratic/military empire vs. the "ragtag" people's resistance is
right on target.
- "So this is how liberty dies -
to thunderous
applause." (Padme)
- "War
does not make one great." (Yoda)
- "A
Jedi uses the Force for knowledge and
defense. Never for attack." (Yoda) How many other movies can you think
of that have such a clear presentation of the libertarian doctrine on
the use of force?
- In
the grand old Anglo-American tradition of
continuing to provide goods even when the government stupidly gets in
the way, we have the heroic smuggler Han Solo who specializes in
outfoxing the Empire to do business. And don't forget that Lando
Calrissian is originally running a black market mining operation when
he is introduced.
- No
conscription for these freedom fighters!
When the valuable pilot Han Solo plans to leave the Rebellion his
decision is respected: "He's got to follow his own path, no one can
choose it for him." (Leia)
- Empire,
accurately, is portrayed as a mass
murderer in the destruction of the peaceful planet of Alderan and
everyone on it. As a symbol to represent this past century of the
killer State, I propose the dreaded Death Star.
That
two generations have grown up with these films teaching them to
hate the "Empire" and it's plans to "bring order to the galaxy" bodes
well for our future.
See
these reviews of Episode
I,
II,
III,
IV,
V,
and VI.
Also, on Mises.org, see Mark Thornton's review of Episode
I and II.
Sunshine
(1999)
This
film follows three generations of Hungarian Jews as they
struggle through a 20th century filled with war and one bad government
after another. In each generation Ralph Fiennes (Schindler's List)
plays the main male of the family. The family starts the century
celebrating in 1900: "I predict this will be a century of love, justice
& tolerance." But soon World War I comes and tears apart the
Austro-Hungarian empire that provided a relatively just, if imperfect,
environment for the family's progress. As the old aristocratic
government is succeeded by national socialist and communist governments
it becomes clear just how good the family had had it. After a few
generations of this, the verdict is that "Politics has made a mess of
our lives".
Something
that amazes me about this film is just how good the
Austro-Hungarian empire looks by the end after various alternatives are
tried, (I believe this was unintentional on the part of the
filmmakers). A pair of contrasting scenes that bring this out are two
hunting scenes. Early in the film the aristocrats are out hunting with
their rifles, the scene is civilized and the men are temperate and
self-controlled. By the time the commies are in charge, a hunt for wild
boars is conducted with machine guns and the men are drunk as they
shoot wildly. This epic three hour film holds you throughout it's
length and is an excellent document of the tragic 20th century, the
century of the State. Rated R for violence, profanity and nudity. Review.
Tae
Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War (2004)
A film seriously dealing
with
conscription! The hinge of this film is when younger brother Jin-Seok,
the pride and hope of his family, is unwillingly impressed into the
South Korean army to fight the Korean War. His older brother, Jin-Tae,
races to take him off the train taking him away. When a soldier tells
him he is drafted too for his trouble, Jin-Tae sensibly responds "Then
who's going to look after my mother? You?" When Jin-Tae tries to leave
with his younger brother, he is brutally beaten by several soldiers.
The younger brother's heart condition is laughed at. The violence
inherent in the system is made abundantly manifest.
From there, the film only gets darker. Both North and South Korean
soldiers commit atrocities until finally the brothers are unable to
stop the murder of Jin-Tae's fiancé by their own "side".
When
the South Koreans also apparently kill Jin-Seok, Jin-Tae decides to
fight for the North instead. But that doesn't last either when his
family is again threatened. Eventually, the logic of the brothers
becomes clear. Family is for them, number one. Country and ideology
literally mean nothing to them. They kill anyone who threatens their
family. It would have been better for everyone if they had just been
left alone. Rated R for language and horrifying violence.
Tailor
of Panama (2001)
An
excellent and hilarious critique of spies and U.S. imperialism. A
British tailor (Goeffrey Rush of Shine) leading a quiet life in Panama
is caught up in international intrigue when he is pressured into spying
for a British spy (Pierce Brosnan). This spy is not your slick James
Bond, but a depraved loser who will sacrifice anyone to advance his
flagging career. The potrayal of the strategists at the Pentagon is
both hilarious and dark as they ready to attack a country on the
thinnest of evidence. Rated R for violence, profanity, sex and nudity.
Read a review
The
Third Man (1949)
"Nobody
thinks in terms of human beings. Governments don't. Why
should we? They talk about the people and the proletariat. I talk about
the suckers and the mugs. It's the same thing. They have their five
year plans, and so have I."
Orson
Welles' mysterious Harry Lime lurks over this classic film set
in post-World War II Vienna. When Lime's friend Holly Martins (Joseph
Cotton) arrives in the war wracked city, he enters immediately into the
chaos of the war's aftermath. Lime, who was to meet him, is dead.
Martins' investigation into the car accident that supposedly claimed
his friend's life turns up more questions than it answers. The deeper
he digs, the darker and more dangerous his quest becomes. By the time
he discovers that Lime is, in fact, still alive he already knows that
his friend has spent innocent lives for his personal gain and he is
deeply involved in a city that has been turned upside down by bombing
and post-war occupation. The regulations and price controls are so
endemic that essentially everyone is in the black market. In fact, the
black market is the market. Though one so massively hampered that the
people are reduced mostly to barter.
The
libertarian virtue of this film is the unmasking of the State
and its wars. Harry Lime, as a heart-rending visit with his victims
shows, is evil for the way he uses people and spends lives for his own
gain. But he is only doing what the State does on a smaller scale. At
the top of a ferris wheel, with the perspective of a bomber he says to
Martins, "Look down there. Would you feel any pity if one of those dots
stopped moving forever? If I offered you 20,000 pounds for every dot
that stopped, would you really, old man, tell me to keep the money? Or
would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spend?"
Lime's
perspective is the lofty, heartless perspective of the State
at war. Like the State and its apologists, he sees nobility only in
conflict and makes fun of peaceful bourgeois accomplishments, "In
Italy, for 30 years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror,
murder, bloodshed. But they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci
and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love. They had
500 years of democracy and peace, and what did they produce? The cuckoo
clock."
We
can see that Harry Lime's actions are evil, why are the same
actions taken by the State so much harder to see for what they are?
Three
Kings (1999)
Since
World War II ended, the United States has bombed about 25
different countries. Number 19 was Iraq. Three Kings follows several
U.S. soldiers as they separate from their Gulf War units on a cynical
quest of greed into the heart of Iraq. Their motivations come to mirror
the cynical motivations of the war itself. After getting a profound
exposure to the deadly realities of what had originally seemed like an
overseas adventure, the soldiers must make a choice between the gold
that they sought and the Iraqi people that they have come to feel
compassion for. A great anti-war film. Rated R for profanity, violence
and gore. See this review.
Tucker:
A Man and His Dream
(1988)
Directed
by Francis Ford Coppola and produced by George Lucas, this
is a love letter from these two great film entrepeneurs to the American
entrepeneur. Preston Tucker was an actual inventor who designed a car
in the 1940s to challenge the big three automakers. This film
dramatizes his struggle to bring his product to market and the
political/big business combination that puts a stop to his efforts.
Many of his innovations werelater (much later) adopted by the big three
automakers. At his trial, Tucker summarizes the terrible change in the
U.S.: "We invented the free enterprise system where anybody, no matter
who he was, where he came from, what class he belonged to, if he came
up with a better idea, about anything, there's no limit to how far he
could go. I grew up a generation too late, I guess, because now the way
the system works, the crackpot who comes up with some crazy idea that
everybody laughs at, that later turns out to revolutionize the world,
he's squashed from above." Though Tucker's efforts were frustrated, the
accent in the film is not on the tragedy but on the joy and genius of
the innovative entrepeneur. Coppola tried to match Tucker's spirit with
fun and inventive film techniques. It hard to imagine the Austrian
emphasis on the heroic entrepeneur being better represented in film.
Underground
(1995)
"No war is a war until a brother kills his brother." (Marko) This
absurdist, black satire by Emir Kusturica follows three friends in
Yugoslavia from the takeover by the National Socialists, through the
Communist period under Tito and into the civil war which tore
Yugoslavia apart in the 1990s. Marko and Blacky are two criminals who
join the Communists, but they're likable rogues. Blacky, for example,
is usually followed around in the film by a gypsy brass band playing
rousing, sometimes frenetic music. At one point, he shines his shoes
with a squalling black cat. But they both are crazy about Natalija, a
beautiful and famous actress. As their resistance to the Nazi-Sozis
becomes more dangerous, they move underground with many others to
produce weapons for the partisans in secret. Marko acts as the above
ground liaison, but to have Natalija for himself he treacherously does
not tell Blacky when the war ends. He continues to fool the underground
crew into grinding out weapons, while he lives off the profits and
becomes a socialist hero and friend to Tito. He keeps them there for 15
years. As they live trapped in a time warp singing absurdly patriotic
songs about Tito, they become an allegory for Yugoslavia under
Communism.
The film ends with Yugoslavia once again torn apart by war, this time
with U.N. troops in the middle of it all. An East European
correspondent reports that the distinctive gypsy music from this film
was played while the Bulgarian people protested rule by the Socialist
Party in the winter of 1996/1997, resulting in an election which tossed
the socialists out. This is a wild, darkly humorous and artistically
accomplished film that is an important document of the terrible
experience of East Europe under the Total State and its wars. Winner of
the 1995 Cannes Palme D'Or. In Serbo-Croatian & some German
with
English subtitles.
V
for Vendetta (2006)
"People shouldn't fear
their governments. Governments should
fear their people." With this arresting tagline, V for Vendetta
announces its two intertwined themes: Governments and the people that
fear them. Based on an explicitly anarchist comic book by Alan Moore,
the film is somewhat less explicit about its anarchism but entirely
clear on the theme of freedom and what it requires. It is fear that
keeps the people cowering before their tyrannical government. The
masked "V" of the film gets people's attention through spectacular,
violent pranks that teach them to distrust and ridicule the government.
This film is truly interesting and challenging, with enough ideas to
keep people discussing the film for years to come. Rated R for
violence. See this review.
Wag
the Dog (1997)
Hilarious
satire of Washington manipulation. The president needs a
war to distract from an embarrassing incident with a young girl,
(amazingly, made pre-Lewinski I believe), so with the help of a
Hollywood producer a war with Albania is staged. If only Washington's
distraction wars were simply theatrical! Stars Robert De Niro, Dustin
Hoffman. Rated R for profanity. See this review.
War
Letters: American Experience
(2002)
June 4, 1918, "...Ever since I've volunteered, I've felt like a cog in
a huge wheel. A cog may get smashed up, but the machine goes on." This
hour long documentary simply consists of the reading of letters written
by U.S. soldiers over appropriate war footage. The letters are culled
from "War Letters: Extraordinary Correspondence from American Wars"
edited by Andrew Carroll. The dates of the letters range from the
American Revolution to the 1991 Gulf War. I found this short, simple
documentary to be one of the most powerful and moving films I have
experienced... Nearly unbearable. I almost didn't make it through the
hour. Some letters are followed by a subtitle explaining that the
writer was killed in the next few days after the letter was written.
One letter from the Vietnam era notes that the government was lying
about the number of casualties. But what makes this war documentary so
powerful is that it simply ignores the great justifications and
majestic sweep of usual war histories, instead focussing on the
experience and fate of individuals. Most difficult is to be reminded of
how many American soldiers died needlessly, fighting on the other side
of the world in foreign wars.
The
White Rose (1983)
Tells
the true story of some German youth that revolt against Hitler
by printing subversive leaflets and pay the ultimate price for their
courage. Somewhat downplays the Christian faith that was actually
central to their decisions, but otherwise quite well done.In German
with English subtitles.
Xiu
Xiu: The Sent Down Girl (1998)
The
destruction of the Cultural Revolution in China is portrayed
through the corruption and debasement of a young girl sent off from the
city to discover a worker's life in a remote rural area. She finds
herself stuck with a largely silent, but complex, Chinese master horse
herder who watches helplessly as circumstances crush his young charge.
Absolutely devastating. Directed by Joan Chen, known to some through
her pivotal role in "Twin Peaks" as well as The Last Emporer. In
Mandarin with English Subtitles. No official rating, but sex, nudity
and gore. See this review.