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Monday, December 29, 2008
Diana West :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Respite from Reality
by Diana West
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


With alarm over the effortless and near-total socialization of the U.S. economy, and with worry over concessions in the Status of Forces Agreement with Iraq, a reader writes: "It is hard to feel joyful during the holiday season while our country and Constitution are in such peril."

Having sifted through the mailbag, I am sorry to say that such sentiments are not unique among readers lately -- at least those among the 45.6 million Americans who didn't vote for Barack Obama. I can't exactly say help is on the way, but how about the next best thing?

Escape.

As one who continually presents reports and even eyewitness dispatches to readers of my column and blog (www.dianawest.net) about the ever-receding tide of Western civilization, I think I probably owe a little escape -- or, better, escapism -- to readers, some respite from reality. At least until the end of the holidays.

And so, after sorting through the vaults for some diverting holiday fare, here is a festival's worth of A-list movies set in some of the great cities and tourist spots of the world -- the same places that serve as backdrops to some of my rather more depressing columns about the ongoing multi-pronged war on the West that, alas, characterizes our era. But enough of that for now.

Given the gloom, some parameters. First, freshness. While these movies are what you could certainly call Cinema Antique, some of them may well prove to be new discoveries. In other words, no "It's a Wonderful Life" or "Casablanca" here -- although "Casablanca" wouldn't make this particular cut because of my second criterion: total uplift. There are no world wars brewing in these pictures, no bad cases of rotten luck. And no poignant states of marginal truth.

Let's kick off this cinematic tour in New York City with "Easy Living" (1937), an especially carefree A-list romantic comedy written by Preston Sturges about what happens when career girl Jean Arthur crosses paths with a Wall Street millionaire (who never heard of subprime "toxic paper") played by Edward Arnold. Ray Milland portrays the handsome son. And if you haven't seen "The Band Wagon" (1953), an all-time best musical with songs by Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz and starring Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, Jack Buchanan and Oscar Levant (who built a comedic career on his neurosis), it will lend a high note to any holiday.

We'll hop the pond with "Dodsworth" (1936), a grown-up drama of the first rank. Starring the nonpareil Walter Huston and Ruth Chatterton, this movie version of the Sinclair Lewis novel follows a retired American automobile magnate (who never needed a bailout) and his wife from the American Midwest to Europe (Paris, Vienna, Florence). There, they find themselves -- or, rather, different things about themselves -- beginning in London. London also serves as backdrop to a key section of "Random Harvest" (1942), a deeply satisfying, everything-works-out weepie, in which Ronald Colman plays a shellshocked veteran of the Great War who loses his memory of everything, including wife Greer Garson.

I wasn't sure I could come up with a movie set even partially set in Brussels, backdrop to many recent columns. But I did with "The Cat and the Fiddle" (1934), a charming adaptation of a frothy and tuneful Jerome Kern/Otto Harbach musical starring Jeanette McDonald and Ramon Novarro, which shifts between Brussels and Paris.

Paris, the inspiration of so many movies, is easy. My first choice is the unsurpassed romantic comedy "Midnight" (1939), starring Claudette Colbert as a broke American chorus girl who bluffs her way into French society. Don Ameche, John Barrymore and Mary Astor also star. Next is "Desire" (1936), a romantic comedy starring the exotic Marlene Dietrich as a continental jewel thief who crosses paths (in Paris, Biarritz and Spain) with straight arrow Gary Cooper, who, come to think of it, is another Yank from the automobile industry.

For Swiss Alps escapism, the movie is "Private Lives" (1931), a completely perfect, eternally crackling Noel Coward comedy that opens on the French Riviera. There, a divorced couple (Norma Shearer and Robert Montgomery) find themselves honeymooning with their new spouses in adjoining suites, ultimately running off together to a Swiss chalet.

Moving on to Prague, there is "The Shop Around the Corner" (1940), one of the most tenderly affecting romantic comedies ever made. Starring Jimmy Stewart and Margaret Sullivan, it was remade as "You've Got Mail" in 1998.

Last stop on the tour is Vienna, the setting for "The Great Waltz" (1938). This overlooked gem is based loosely and exuberantly on the life of Viennese waltz king Johann Strauss; it stars Fernand Gravet, Luise Rainer and the phenomenal coloratura soprano Miliza Korjus -- enchantment for music lovers.

So there you have it. Around the world in 1,075 minutes. And guaranteed to boost low spirits and blow out holiday blahs.

Happy New Year.

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About The Author
Diana West is a contributing columnist for Townhall.com and author of the new book, The Death of the Grown-up: How America's Arrested Development Is Bringing Down Western Civilization.
 
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Don't forget old family friendly movies

For "Family friendly" Laughs how about old Don Knott's movies like the Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Shakiest Gun in The West,or the Incredible Mr Limpit.

There is also Operation Petticoat with William Holden,or, Man's Favorite Sport with Rock Hudson, Pillow Talk also Rock Hudson.

Disney's Live Action oldies but goodies:
Monkey's Go Home
The Ugly Dachshund
Black Beards Ghost

Families across the board are feeling the turmoil so we need to distract the kids too.

Oldies But Goodies
I especially liked the musicals of the fifties.The elaborate clothes and presentations that you don't see today. It was in a time of more innocence and no vulgarity. family friendly. I miss it.

Rowly you're so right
Annie Get your Gun with Ethel Merman is one of my all time Favorites as well as Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,South Pacific, The King and I with Yule Brenner,Hans Christian Anderson with Danny Kaye Dr. DoLittle with Rex Harrison (not Eddie Murphy remake)...I agree are great picks

Oh I forgot to add to Disney's pre-weird list:

Miracle of the White Stallions,
Song Of The South

Edna Eagle
I remember most of those. I liked The Greatest Show on Earth and loved Red Buttons and the whole crew. All the Esther Williams Movies,I agree were great Synchronized Swimming.Ah...


Later on,one of my favorite old movies was Written On The Wind. Seeing it years later on tv was not the same.

I believe there would be a market for some good clean movies now and there are some. Trouble is,there are some not-so-good stuff thrown in before the main show.

Escape
Rent or buy some good old comedies, the Marx Brothers alway lift our spirits. See our take on the Marx Brothers at,http://stopthepresses2.blogspot.com/2008/12/palin-attacked-again.html
or the old TV show Alf at,http://stopthepresses2.blogspot.com/2008/12/lawyer-lays-out-defense-blago-not-from.html
or our take on the cartoon Pinky and the Brain http://stopthepresses2.blogspot.com/2008/12/today-newspape rs-tomorrow-television.html

Rowly, I missed the SYC swimming movies
And alot of these movies we seen by me as reruns
I wish I had seen them in the theater but alas I was born in 1961
I now have them on VHS and DVD and My 25 year old sons favorite is Mans Favorite Sport and my 24 year old loved Monkeys Go Home (Dean Jones and Maurice Chivallier (sp?)

I've always controlled what my kids watched because of the junk they were coming out with I didn't like the messages so they didn't seen anything more vulgar than the occasional gosh darn it till they were old enough to know it wasn't the way to talk (13+)

I know..old fashioned but I raised great responsible kids and now I have a "suprise" 8 year old and I'm using the same method and she's turning out just fine too!

Then and Now
Almost any and all movies from the 1930s through the 1950s are enjoyable escapisms. Also, the American Life Network has some TV series from the old days that are fun to watch.

It's odd to see men in these old shows being in the lead. Today the women go to work, fight the bad guys, rescue victims, solve crimes and accomplish things while the "men" bear and nurse the children and clip coupons while doing the laundry.

The "males" in today's shows are the smaller of the two sexes, quiver, twitch, bite their lips, and cry when their live-in life partners get home from work, or Iraq, late and the dinner is cold.

The modern women that we watch are on the go, taking on new challenges and new careers while their "male" spouses whine about the kids and being neglected.

The white "men" in today's shows are all idiots and infantile. Everyone has to roll their eyes whenever these caucasian eunuchs say or do something stupid.

I watch absolutely no modern sitcoms, dramas, reality shows, and now even "news". The messages are the same on all of them: America and Western culture is obsolete, outmoded and irrelevant, males are morons, women weighing 95 pounds can chase down, overpower and kill an army of NFL players, young hipsters solve crimes and problems by merely seeing and sensing reality and never make mistakes, and Muslims are inherently good.

Old and middle aged white men are useless appendages to society and things the cool multi-cultural, diverse technoids have to work around.

Violence is rarely used to thwart evil doers who can always be coaxed or hoodwinked into giving up their hostages and demands. If shooting is required, girls can strategically wound the kidnappers with one shot from a J frame revolver at 300 yards.

Obama is our savior and we are to await His solutions to all our problems.

movies and TV ..it started benign
TV Trivia factoids:

The Brady Bunch were the first TV show to show a couple that slept in the same bed....

The Courtship Of Eddies Father...1st single parent to raise a kid alone....

Star Trek....1st interracial kiss

Now it's sex in the city and other weird stuff

Benign to bizzare


Edna Eagle
Edna, I hate to disagree with you, But Operation Petticoat starred Cary Grant and Tony Curtis. Hope you have a wonderful and joyous New Years!!!

Edna Eagle
When my boys were growing up the movies were so much less violent and sexually explicit as in the last several years. No swearing and nudity.

I am sometimes appalled at what my grandchildren are allowed to watch. I wish times were as innocent as when my own children were growing up. But,alas,that is not to be.

Another great movie I remember seeing in it's heyday was Showboat with Howard Keel and Kathryn Grayson. Oh,I loved that one!

Foreign contender Ms. West?
When escaping backward to Paris, consider the French 1931 film "Le Million."

You won't have to have savored the 'moveable feast' to feel the fanciful Parisian life as it was almost eighty years ago when viewing this celluloid classic.

"Le Million" is a great farce about a winning lottery ticket lost in a coat pocket given away by an angry lover in a fit of pique.

It's " A Mad, Mad, .... World" meets a French musical that pumps up the madcap and leaves the viewer with a song for the heart.

Thanks!
I plan to look up some of these gems!

What's to escape from?
Well, Diane, you are correct about sentiments. But I might boil it down in metaphor form. We were told the financial system was in spiral and we needed to bail it out. Confidence now is still a problem. How do we bail we bail out our political system, which by all measures we have little confidence in? And in turn it seems to have little confidence or respect for the will and moral/ethical concerns of “we the people”. (actually they have little care about American's desires, including our deluded power at the voting booth)

Seems to me the countries leaders have an escape plan from us. And we have little escape from the effects. What’s the cure for that?

Great Movies
Being a sentimental one,I loved 'Shadowlands',a movie about C.S Lewis' life,starring Debra Winger and Anthony Hopkins,my favorite actor. It cam out a few years ago.

At the theater it was a beautiful,sad movie,made in England. The landscape is gorgeous and the storyline is good.

expressit
only escape is to send Pelosi packing in 2010.

Steven
Take a good look in the mirror my Republican friend!

All Republicans are Socialists. They all believe in wealth redistribution.

Farm subsidies sky-rocketed under George Bush and Ronald Reagan. That's wealth redistribution from blue states to red states. It's nigh time to get these teat suckers off the government sow.

U.S. sugar farmers could not compete against the other countries without sucking at the teat of the government sow.

Economists have criticized farm subsidies on several counts. First, farm subsidies typically transfer income from consumers and taxpayers to relatively wealthy farmland owners and farm operators. Second, they impose net losses on society, often called deadweight losses, and have no clear broad social benefit.

The U.S. government heavily subsidizes grains, oilseeds, cotton, sugar, and dairy products.

U.S. farm programs have cost about $20 billion per year in government budget outlays in recent years. But budget costs are not a particularly useful measure of the degree of support or subsidy. Some subsidy programs, such as import tariffs, actually generate tax revenue for the government but also impose costs on consumers that exceed the government’s revenue gain.

The forms of subsidy vary by country and commodity as well. The main forms of subsidy include: (1) direct payments to farmers and landlords; (2) price supports implemented with government purchases and storage; (3) regulations that set minimum prices by location, end use, or some other characteristic; (4) subsidies for such items as crop insurance, disaster response, credit, marketing, and irrigation water; (5) export subsidies; and (6) import barriers in the form of quotas, tariffs, or regulations. Often, supply control programs such as land-idling requirements, production quotas, or similar schemes accompany price supports or other programs.

Thanks for the ideas Rowly
There are a few good movies made today.
For the grandkids...
The American Girl Series are extremely clean and well made. each deals with a different time in US History. (boys like them too)

Felicity is based in 1775
Samantha is 1904
Kit is 1932
Molly is 1945

The all end around Christmas and are pro-USA, pro-family
In Molly for example the ending is at a CHRISTMAS Celebration at her school and they have a nativity scene speak of the reason for Christmas...won't say more will spoil the ending
And they're all like that.

I took my Dad and daughter to see Kit in the theater and he loved it and he won't go to the movies put out these days because of the smut.


ESCAPE?
Seems to me, the majority of Americans have had their heads in the sand 'escaping' reality quite a while and long enough that we've not payed attention to the mess our Countrys government has been getting us into. Most everything, the MSM, TV, radio, movies, the election process is geared to 'entertaining' the American public so that 'reality' escapes us all.
Anyone, by chance, read the article in the Washington Post yesterday about the Russian Professor, who has predicted the Fall and disintegration of the US in 2010? REALITY?



a few items to consider
First, I agree with zap. All subsidies should end. I am sure there are people far smarter than both of us who can tell us why they are necessary, but I am a skeptic. That being said, I would rather tax money be filtered back to those who actually pay taxes (sugar farmers, corporations, etc. surely pay their share of taxes). If I ever needed proof that the "War on Poverty" was an abysmal failure--I surely got it when Katrina hit New Orleans. In the clear light of day, you have to admit to one cold fact--contributing members of society are more valuable than non-contributers.

Second, uh...Robert--wth? Your post was weird! To what did it pertain? Did I miss something, or did you just send it in from left field?

Last, The movie "It Happened One Night," was wonderful! Also, there are some good movies still being made. I have not seen it, but I read the book, "The Tale of Despereaux," to my kids, and I would bet the movie is lovely.

Equality
If Pelosi and Reid want to push the Fareness Doctrine, why don't they push to stop the Garbage on TV and the Movies. What is shown on TV is by far worse for kids than Hannity, Rush, and Dobbs being truthful. We need more of the 40's and 50's movies again to show kids what the real worlds like. Movies of today like Sweet Home Alabama and Serendipity , we need more like them. We don't need drunks, violence, nudity and nasty talk for all to see . The kids do what they see as well us some idiot adults.

It makes me nervous...
...that almost all these movies are set in the 1930's, on the precipice of WWII.

You forgot "HARVEY"

Miss West you forgot to name the movie "HARVEY"
Jimmy Stewart starred as Elwood P. Dowd. His Co Star was a six foot invisible rabbit, Harvey. Harvey was a pookah.

It is one of the best movies ever made. It gave me a philosophy to live my life by. It comes straight from Elwood. I will share it here.

"Years ago my mother used to say to me, she'd say,in this world Elwood, she always called me Elwood- In this world you must be oh so smart or oh so pleasant.
Well for years I was smart.I recommend pleasant. And you may quote me."

Elwood P. Dowd

Well, there are a lot more that you forgot..,but a biggie is "Arsenic and Old Lace" starring Cary Grant.

West's intellect....
never ceases to amaze. Unfortunately I have difficulty turning on the left brain even for a moments relaxation , necessary to enjoy this kind of film. Too much news and politics I guess.
Happy New Year to all.
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