polfilms

Wag the Dog

Barry Levinson’s Wag the Dog has been nominated for best film in 1998 promoting the need for greater democracy.  Similar to Catch 22, the film plays out a plausible scenario to an absurd conclusion.  In this case, a presidential candidacy wanes, provoking the incumbent to launch an external war in order to boost his re-election […]

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Men with Guns

A second nominee for the category peace is John Sayles’s Men with Guns, a story of a retired physician who seeks to learn the result of a project to send newly trained physicians to the provinces of a Spanish-speaking country where indigenous peoples live without proper medical care.  What the physician finds, instead of a

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The Boxer

The Boxer has been nominated for the best film promoting peace.  The classic Romeo and Juliet story, set in Northern Ireland, shows the human absurdity of  a war between the modern Capulets and Montagues.  The later peace agreement by British Prime Minister Tony Blair may be seen as a fulfillment of the ambitions of the

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The Big One

MICHAEL MOORE’S THE BIG ONE EXPOSES ARROGANT CEOs Although a documentary, not eligible for a Political Film Society award, Michael Moore (of Roger & Me fame) films his book tour of the United States and efforts to interview corporation heads regarding massive employment layoffs and corporate welfare in the context of megaprofits.  A highlight of

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Political Film Review #25

TWO FILMS NOMINATED FOR 1998 AWARDS PROMOTING PEACE Several films released in 1998 have already been nominated for awards.  The Boxer has been nominated for the best film promoting peace.  The classic Romeo and Juliet story, set in Northern Ireland, shows the human absurdity of  a war between the modern Capulets and Montagues.  The later

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Political Film Review #24

The Political Film Society, which has been based in Honolulu from 1985, has moved to Hollywood, effective today. Each year members of the Political Film Society select the films which best raise political consciousness in one of several categories.  Today, after balloting for the past three months, the following have been voted as the top

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Political Film Review #23

OFFICIAL BALLOT Cast your votes for the films that best raised political consciousness in 1997: DEMOCRACY ___          Red Corner (shows how extralegal considerations endemic in crony rule within China prevent the criminal justice system from producing a just outcome) ___          The Rainmaker (portrays the elusiveness of justice in the cases of a battered wife who

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Political Film Review #22

OFFICIAL BALLOT Cast your votes for the films that best raised political consciousness in 1997: DEMOCRACY ___          Red Corner (shows how extralegal considerations endemic in crony rule within China prevent the criminal justice system from producing a just outcome) ___          The Rainmaker (portrays the elusiveness of justice in the cases of a battered wife who

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The Wall

In Alain Berliner’s The Wall (Le Mur, with English subtitles), the year 2000 approaches in Belgium, a country of 10 million in a territory about the same size as Maryland. Although Belgians were ruled for nearly 1,800 years by conquerors, including Rome, the Franks, Burgundy, Spain, Austria, and France, then handed to Holland in 1815 after the

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Steam

Steam: The Turkish Bath   One of the most puzzling mysteries concerns one’s sexual identity. When does a man suddenly decide that he is gay? For many men who have never had a sexual encounter with a member of the opposite sex, the realization often comes quite early, before puberty. What about the married man

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