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          <title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
          <link>http://www.reason.com/staff</link>
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          <managingEditor>info@reason.com</managingEditor>
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<title>Hollywood's Missing Movies</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/27732.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
Every so often someone in Hollywood uses his power to break the movie colony's
rules. Consider this year's &lt;em&gt;Total Eclipse&lt;/em&gt;. Odd as it may seem, this is
the  first serious American film set against the background of the 1939
Nazi-Soviet Pact, the deal that allied Europe's two totalitarian powers against
the West and helped plunge the world into war. With an ally on the eastern
front, Hitler sent his Panzers west while Stalin helped himself to the Baltic
states and invaded Finland. A film like this could easily have turned out as
big a didactic dud as the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's 1982 bomb, &lt;em&gt;Inchon&lt;/em&gt;, with
Laurence Olivier as Gen. Douglas MacArthur. But this time the verisimilitude of
the script, carried by some outstanding performances, is the source of the
film's dramatic power.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Dustin Hoffman's persuasive portrayal of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin obviously
emerges from his close study of how power and perversity converged in the
dictator. Likewise, Jurgen Prochnow sparkles as Hitler's foreign minister,
Joachim Von Ribbentrop, and so does Robert Duvall as Vyacheslav Molotov, his
Soviet counterpart. Duvall's delivery of Molotov's line that &quot;fascism is a
matter of taste&quot; is a key moment, and deserves at least as much admiration as
Duvall's famous quip from &lt;em&gt;Apocalypse Now&lt;/em&gt; about the smell of napalm in
the morning. The Molotov speech has drawn some objections for being over the
top, but it was not invented by screenwriter William Goldman (&lt;em&gt;Marathon
Man&lt;/em&gt;); it's an actual quote.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The sheer unexpectedness of the film is almost as shocking as its
content. In one of the film's more chilling sequences, the Soviets hand over a
number of German Communists, Jews who had taken refuge in Moscow, to the
Gestapo. Modern audiences may find this surprising, but that incident too is
taken from the historical record. Indeed, former KGB officials are credited as
advisers on the film, whose cast also includes some of their actual victims. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
There has simply been nothing like it on the screen in six decades. It has
taken that long for moviegoers to see Soviet forces invading Poland and meeting
their Nazi counterparts. Audiences would likely be similarly surprised by
cinematic treatments of Cuban prisons, the Khmer Rouge genocide, and the bloody
campaigns of Ethiopia's Stalinist Col. Mengistu, all still awaiting attention
from Hollywood. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;em&gt;Total Eclipse &lt;/em&gt;is rated PG-13 for violence, particularly graphic in some
of the mass murder scenes, images of starving infants from Stalin's 1932
forced famine in the Ukraine, and the torture of dissidents. Director Steven
Spielberg (&lt;em&gt;Schindler's List&lt;/em&gt;) deftly cuts from the Moscow trials to the
torture chambers of the Lubyanka. More controversial are the portrayals of
American communists during the period of the Pact. They are shown here
picketing the White House, calling President Roosevelt a warmonger, and
demanding that America stay out of the &quot;capitalist war&quot; in Europe. Harvey
Keitel turns in a powerful performance as American Communist boss Earl Browder,
and Linda Hunt brings depth to Lillian Hellman, who, when Hitler attacks the
USSR in September of 1939, actually did cry out, &quot;The motherland has been
invaded.&quot; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Painstakingly accurate and filled with historical surprises, this film is so
refreshing, so remarkable, that even at 162 minutes it seems too short.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Never heard of &lt;em&gt;Total Eclipse&lt;/em&gt;? It hasn't been produced or even written.
In all likelihood, such a film has never even been contemplated, at least in
Hollywood. Indeed, in the decade since the Berlin Wall fell, or even the decade
before that, no Hollywood film has addressed the actual history of communism,
the agony of the millions whose lives were poisoned by it, and the century of
international deceit that obscured communist reality. The simple but startling
truth is that the major conflict of our time, democracy versus Marxist-Leninist
totalitarianism--what &lt;em&gt;The New York Times&lt;/em&gt; recently called &quot;the holy war
of the 20th century&quot;--is almost entirely missing from American cinema. It is as
though since 1945, Hollywood had produced little or nothing about the victory
of the Allies and the crimes of National Socialism. This void is all the
stranger since the major conflict of our time would seem to be a natural draw
for Hollywood.  &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Though of global dimension, the conflict encompasses millions of dramatic
personal stories played out on a grand tapestry of history: courageous
Solidarity unionists against a Communist military junta; teenagers facing down
tanks in the streets of Budapest and Prague; Cuban gays oppressed by a
macho-Marxist dictatorship; writers and artists resisting the kitsch of
obscurantist materialism; families fleeing brutal persecution, risking their
lives to find freedom. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Furthermore, great villains make for great drama, and communism's central
casting department is crowded: Lenin, Stalin, Mao, H&amp;ouml;necker, Ceaucescu,
Pol Pot, Col. Mengistu--all of cosmic megalomania--along with their squads of
hacks, sycophants, and stooges, foreign and domestic. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
A few English-language films have drawn on this remarkable material, especially
book-into-film projects based on highly publicized works, among them &lt;em&gt;One Day
in the Life of Ivan Denisovich&lt;/em&gt; (a 1971 British-Norwegian production) and,
of course, &lt;em&gt;Doctor Zhivago&lt;/em&gt; (1965). But many other natural book-to-film
projects remain untouched, from the story of Stalin's daughter Svetlana (who
left Russia for the West) to works by such high-ranking defectors as Polish
Ambassador Romuald Spasowski (&lt;em&gt;The Liberation of One&lt;/em&gt;), KGB agent Arkady
Schevchenko (&lt;em&gt;Breaking With Moscow&lt;/em&gt;), and persecuted Cuban poets Armando
Valladares (&lt;em&gt;Against All Hope&lt;/em&gt;) and Heberto Padilla (&lt;em&gt;Heroes Are Grazing
in My Garden&lt;/em&gt;). In light of the most recent  revelations concerning the
espionage of Alger Hiss, Whittaker Chambers' &lt;em&gt;Witness &lt;/em&gt;is another obvious
candidate.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The reason this ample supply of stories remains unfilmed is not ignorance.
Though its films may not often reflect it, Hollywood is filled with
knowledgeable writers and producers. The reasons lie elsewhere, especially in
Hollywood's own convoluted political history, a history that has passed through
many stages. Perhaps the most pertinent of those stages involves the &quot;back
story&quot; of communism's own largely uncharted offensive in the studios.&lt;p&gt;
The cinema's great potential for persuasion excited Stalin and his wholly-owned
American subsidiary, the Communist Party of the United States of America
(CPUSA), which lived off Soviet cash until it criticized Gorbachev's reforms as
&quot;old social democratic thinking class collaboration.&quot; Correspondence between
American communists and their Soviet bosses can now be perused in &lt;em&gt;The Soviet
World of American Communism&lt;/em&gt; (1998). Editors John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr,
and Kyrill Anderson gathered newly declassified material from the Moscow-based
archives of the Communist International (Comintern), the Soviet organization
that controlled national communist parties. Members of the CPUSA made some
documentary films in the 1930s, but nothing that could compete with the
American commercial cinema, which the party set out to co-opt.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;One of the most pressing tasks confronting the Communist Party in the field of
propaganda,&quot; wrote the indefatigable Comintern agent Willi Muenzenberg in a
1925 &lt;em&gt;Daily Worker&lt;/em&gt; article, &quot;is the conquest of this supremely important
propaganda unit, until now the monopoly of the ruling class. We must wrest it
from them and turn it against them.&quot; It was an ambitious task, but conditions
would soon turn to the party's advantage. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The Depression convinced many that capitalism was on its last legs and that
socialism was the wave of the future. In the days of the Popular Front of the
mid-'30s, communists found it easy to make common cause with liberals against
Hitler and Spain's Franco. In 1935, V.J. Jerome, the CPUSA's cultural
commissar, set up a Hollywood branch of the party. This highly secretive unit
enjoyed great success, recruiting members, organizing entire unions, raising
money from unwitting Hollywood liberals, and using those funds to support
Soviet causes through front groups such as the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League. &quot;We
had our own sly arithmetic, we could find fronts and make two become one,&quot;
remembered screenwriter Walter Bernstein (&lt;em&gt;Fail Safe, The Front, The House on
Carroll Street&lt;/em&gt;) in his 1996 autobiography, &lt;em&gt;Inside Out&lt;/em&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
During the period of the Nazi-Soviet Pact, for example, actor Melvyn Douglas
(&lt;em&gt;Ninotchka&lt;/em&gt;) and screenwriter-director Philip Dunne (&lt;em&gt;Wild in the
Country&lt;/em&gt;) proposed that the Motion Picture Democratic Committee, a conclave
of industry Democrats, condemn Stalin's invasion of Finland in late 1939. But
the group was actually secretly dominated by Communists, and it rejected the
resolution. As Dunne later described it in his 1980 memoir, &lt;em&gt;Take Two: A Life
in Movies and Politics&lt;/em&gt;, &quot;All over town the industrious communist tail
wagged the lazy liberal dog.&quot; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&quot;There was never an organized, articulate, and effective liberal or left-wing
opposition to the communists in Hollywood,&quot; concluded John Cogley, a socialist,
in his 1956 &lt;em&gt;Report on Blacklisting. &lt;/em&gt;As former party member Budd
Schulberg (&lt;em&gt;On the Waterfront&lt;/em&gt;) put it, the party was &quot;the only game in
town.&quot; But even though the Communists were strongest in the Screen Writers
Guild, influencing the content of movies was a trickier matter. &lt;em&gt;&lt;/em&gt;&lt;p&gt;
&lt;em&gt;&lt;/em&gt;Communist cultural doctrine cast writers as &quot;artists in uniform,&quot;
producing works whose function was to transmit political messages and raise the
consciousness of their audiences. Otherwise, movies were mere bourgeois
decadence, a tool of capitalist distraction, and therefore subjugation. Party
bosses V.J. Jerome and John Howard Lawson (a co-founder of the Screen Writers
Guild and screenwriter of &lt;em&gt;Algiers &lt;/em&gt;and &lt;em&gt;Action in the North
Atlantic&lt;/em&gt;) enforced this art-is-a-weapon creed in Hollywood, as they had
done earlier among New York dramatists. Albert Maltz (&lt;em&gt;Destination Tokyo&lt;/em&gt;)
was to challenge the doctrine in a 1946 &lt;em&gt;New Masses&lt;/em&gt; article, arguing that
doctrinaire politics often resulted in poor writing. Responding to the notion
that &quot;art is a weapon,&quot; Maltz suggested, &quot;An artist can be a great artist
without being an integrated or logical or a progressive thinker on all
matters.&quot; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
As a result of such heresy, the party dragged him through a series of
humiliating inquisitions and forced him to publish a retraction. Maltz trashed
his original article as &quot;a one-sided, nondialectical treatment of complex
issues&quot; that was &quot;distinguished for its omissions&quot; and which &quot;succeeded in
merging my comments with the unprincipled attacks upon the left that I have
always repudiated and combated.&quot; Maltz was to defend that retraction until he
died in 1985. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Dalton Trumbo (&lt;em&gt;Kitty Foyle&lt;/em&gt;), a Communist Party member and for a time the
highest-paid screenwriter in town, described the screenwriting trade as
&quot;literary guerrilla warfare.&quot; The studio system, in which projects were closely
supervised, made the insertion of propaganda difficult if not impossible.
Hollywood did not become a bastion of Stalinist propaganda, except as part of
the war effort, when Russia was celebrated as an ally. Ayn Rand, then a
Hollywood screenwriter and one of the few in the movie community who had
actually lived under communism, was to point out that, in their zeal to provide
artistic lend-lease, American Communist screenwriters went to extraordinary and
absurd lengths. In such wartime movies as &lt;em&gt;North Star&lt;/em&gt; and &lt;em&gt;Song of
Russia&lt;/em&gt; (both 1943), they portrayed the USSR as a land of joyous, well-fed
workers who loved their masters. &lt;em&gt;Mission to Moscow &lt;/em&gt;(also 1943), starring
Walter Huston, went so far as to whitewash Stalin's murderous show trials of
the 1930s.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
	But if Comintern fantasies of a Soviet Hollywood were never realized, party
functionaries nevertheless played a significant role: They were sometimes able
to &lt;em&gt;prevent&lt;/em&gt; the production of movies they opposed.  The party had not
only helped organize the Screen Writers Guild, it had organized the Story
Analysts Guild as well. Story analysts judge scripts and film treatments early
in the decision making process. A dismissive report often means that a studio
will pass on a proposed production. The party was thus well positioned to quash
scripts and treatments with anti-Soviet content, along with stories that
portrayed business and religion in a favorable light. In &lt;em&gt;The Worker&lt;/em&gt;,
Dalton Trumbo openly bragged that the following works had not reached the
screen: Arthur Koestler's &lt;em&gt;Darkness at Noon&lt;/em&gt; and &lt;em&gt;The Yogi and the
Commissar&lt;/em&gt;; Victor Kravchenko's &lt;em&gt;I Chose Freedom&lt;/em&gt;; and &lt;em&gt;Bernard
Clare&lt;/em&gt; by James T. Farrell, also author of &lt;em&gt;Studs Lonigan&lt;/em&gt; and vilified
by party enforcer Mike Gold as &quot;a vicious, voluble Trotskyite.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Even talent agents sometimes answered to Moscow. Party organizer Robert Weber
landed with the William Morris agency, where he represented Communist writers
and directors such as Ring Lardner Jr. and Bernard Gordon. Weber carried
considerable clout regarding who worked and who didn't. So did George Willner,
a Communist agent representing screenwriters, who sold out his noncommunist
clients by deliberately neglecting to shop their stories. On a wider scale, the
party launched smear campaigns and blacklists against noncommunists, targeting
such figures as Barbara Stanwyck, Lana Turner, and Bette Davis.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
These were among the many actors defying the party-backed labor group, the
Conference of Studio Unions. The CSU, which was trying to shut down the
industry and force through jurisdictional concessions that would give it
supremacy in studio labor, clashed with the International Alliance of
Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) and its allies, who were trying to keep the
studios going. Katharine Hepburn stumped for the CSU, reading speeches written
by Dalton Trumbo, while Ronald Reagan, then a liberal Democrat, headed the
anti-communists in the talent guilds. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
These were the true front lines of the communist offensive, and bloody warfare
broke out in the streets outside every studio. The prospect of communist
influence in Hollywood got Washington snooping, but in classic style, the
politicians got it backward. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The first head of what eventually became the House Committee on Un-American
Activities was New York Democrat Samuel Dickstein. As the recently declassified
&quot;Venona&quot; documents  (decrypts of Soviet cables) reveal, Dickstein moonlighted
for Soviet intelligence--not out of ideology but for money. Initially concerned
with pro-fascist groups in the late 1930s, the committee after the war was
dominated by right-wing Republicans, though its most loathsome figure was
Mississippi Democrat John Rankin, a sulfuric anti-Semite.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
In 1947, while investigating Comintern agent Gerhart Eisler, whose brother
Hanns was a composer in Hollywood, the committee found movie people coming
forth with stories of Communist Party intrigue and decided that there was
enough to justify hearings. They selected fewer than 50 witnesses of various
job descriptions and political profiles, including party heavyweights John
Howard Lawson and Dalton Trumbo.  &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Eager to exploit Hollywood for publicity, the committee stupidly made film
content the issue, ignoring the party's vast organizing campaigns in the back
lots despite convincing testimony from, among others, Walt Disney. More
important, the committee ignored the reality that it wasn't what the party put
into &lt;em&gt;North Star&lt;/em&gt; and &lt;em&gt;Song of Russia&lt;/em&gt; that really mattered but the
anti-communist, anti-Soviet material it kept out. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
While the committee welcomed the publicity, the beleaguered film industry
circled the wagons. Studio bosses, although adamantly anti-communist, asserted
defiantly that no congressman could tell them how to run their business. A
celebrity support group, including such figures as Humphrey Bogart and Danny
Kaye, journeyed to Washington to defend their own.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
 The hearings featured a series of angry harangues by Stalinist writers who
came to be known as the Hollywood Ten. Dalton Trumbo, who joined the party
during the Nazi-Soviet Pact and even wrote a novel, &lt;em&gt;The Remarkable
Andrew&lt;/em&gt;, to support the Pact, bellowed, &quot;This is the beginning of the
American concentration camp.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Such performances shocked the studio bosses and the celebrity supporters, who
had been expecting an eloquent constitutional defense of freedom of expression.
Party membership itself was not illegal, and members could have alluded to the
wartime alliance with the Soviets. Many wanted to testify, a phenomenon Norman
Mailer dubbed &quot;subpoena envy.&quot; As director John Huston (&lt;em&gt;The Maltese
Falcon&lt;/em&gt;), who organized the celebrity support group, later learned to his
dismay, CPUSA lawyers had decided on the confrontational strategy, largely to
protect enforcer John Howard Lawson and others who had already testified to a
California committee that they were not communists. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;After another series of hearings in the early 1950s, studios produced a string
of now largely forgotten, mostly low-budget anti-communist films, among them
&lt;em&gt;Big Jim McClain&lt;/em&gt; and &lt;em&gt;My Son John, &lt;/em&gt;in which Helen Hayes informs to
the government on her son, Robert Walker. These dealt with communism as a kind
of domestic political mafia but left actual conditions under communist regimes
largely unexplored. More important was Hollywood's internal reaction. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Studio bosses, fearful of bad publicity, announced that they would indeed fire
communists, which they had previously refused to do. This was the beginning of
the blacklist, Hollywood's version of the conflict of our time, enshrined in
such films as &lt;em&gt;The Front&lt;/em&gt; (1976), starring Woody Allen and Zero Mostel and
written by Walter Bernstein, and the star-studded but bland &lt;em&gt;Guilty by
Suspicion&lt;/em&gt; (1991). Viewers of such fare could easily conclude that communism
scarcely existed except as a source of boundless optimism in the hearts of the
country's most creative writers. Much the same message emerged from
&lt;em&gt;Julia&lt;/em&gt;, the 1977 Jane Fonda vehicle based on an autohagiographical memoir
by Lillian Hellman. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Over the years, a number of book-length accounts have taken up the cause, some
written by relatives of the blacklisted, invoking &quot;inquisition&quot; and &quot;red scare&quot;
in their titles and bristling with terms such as &lt;em&gt;witch-hunt&lt;/em&gt; and
&lt;em&gt;McCarthyite&lt;/em&gt;. The senator from Wisconsin, it should be noted, played no
role in Hollywood, whose anti-communists, mostly liberal Democrats, found him
an impediment to their cause.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
As it plays out in the movies, the blacklist story is vintage Hollywood: black
hats vs. white hats. The evil government committee rides into town and, for no
apparent reason, makes life miserable for a group of noble artists. In one
subplot, the victims survive by selling scripts under fake names. The story
carries considerable appeal, though it misses the irony that those who thought
capitalism evil continued to take advantage of the kind of market that did not
exist in the socialist regimes they extolled. Albert Maltz championed East
Germany, while fellow Hollywood Ten alumnus Lester Cole favored that
bastion of artistic freedom, North Korea.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
 By the 1960s the blacklist was over; Kirk Douglas and Otto Preminger restored
the names of blacklisted writers to the credits of the films they actually
wrote. The Hollywood Ten and other communist writers were on their way, as
Philip Dunne put it, to being &quot;virtually deified.&quot; Dunne had been through it
all and found the revisionist accounts so distorted that, he said, &quot;I could
almost believe that I was reading the chronicle of some mythical kingdom.&quot; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The legend of the blacklist, sanitized of all references to Stalin or to the
Communist Party's actual record in the studios, became a continuing influence
on Hollywood's political life. Hollywood had entered its period of
anti-anti-communism, a well-known phenomenon in American cultural and
intellectual life. Those motivated by this ideology have vilified such critics
of the Soviet Union as Robert Conquest and Sidney Hook, while venerating such
paleo-leftists as journalist I.F. Stone, whose 1952 &lt;em&gt;Hidden History of the
Korean War&lt;/em&gt; parroted the party line that South Korea invaded the North.
Anti-anti-communism demonizes anti-communists, however truthful their
revelations, as paranoid and on the wrong side of history, while praising
apologists of totalitarianism as well-meaning idealists, however mendacious and
servile their record. Such a vision is not likely to promote a meaningful
cinematic treatment of communism.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Witness the longstanding campaign to prevent director Elia Kazan (&lt;em&gt;On
the Waterfront, East of Eden, A Streetcar Named Desire&lt;/em&gt;) from receiving a
lifetime achievement award from the Motion Picture Academy. Kazan, a former
communist, cooperated with HUAC and defended his position in a &lt;em&gt;New York
Times&lt;/em&gt; advertisement that called on liberals to take a stand against
communism. Since Kazan's cinematic achievements are undeniable, his career
violates a significant aspect of the Hollywood Ten legend: that those who
defied the committee were brilliant artists and noble idealists, while those
who cooperated were vile mediocrities who could build their careers only by
destroying others.&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;
Kazan finally received his award at last year's Oscars, but amid renewed
controversy over whether he should receive any applause at the event. (Abraham
Polonsky [&lt;em&gt;I Can Get It for You Wholesale&lt;/em&gt;], a leading Hollywood Communist
who led the assault on Albert Maltz, hoped in print that Kazan would be
assassinated.) But though Kazan finally received his due from Hollywood, Stalin
never has.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;According to Hollywood, American anti-communism derived not from any
deficiencies of socialism or threat from the USSR but from paranoia,
xenophobia, and the nefarious influence of Nazis who entered the United States
after the war. That was the theme of  Walter Bernstein's 1988 &lt;em&gt;The House on
Carroll Street&lt;/em&gt;, which featured a score more appropriate for a '50s monster
movie. Bernstein, incidentally, shows up in the Venona decrypts, which reveal
that he was a willing collaborator with the KGB. If nothing else, such a
revelation gives new meaning to the Hollywood phrase, &quot;Have your agent call my
agent.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On the rare occasion when life under communism is portrayed, its
characteristic brutality is virtually never actually represented. Consider, for
instance, Warren Beatty's Oscar-winning &lt;em&gt;Reds&lt;/em&gt; (1981), a psalm to Lenin
acolyte John Reed. In that film a character concedes that the Soviet regime
&quot;violates human rights&quot; but none of these violations appears on the screen.
Likewise, audiences don't see the Khmer Rouge murdering any of their nearly
2 million victims in &lt;em&gt;The Killing Fields &lt;/em&gt;(1984). Indeed, the real
villains in that tragedy, we learn, are Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, and
U.S. foreign policy.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
A similar theme runs through &lt;em&gt;Missing &lt;/em&gt;(1982), with Jack Lemmon, directed
by Constantine Costa-Gavras, a man of the left who, unlike his Hollywood
colleagues, is sometimes willing to address communist themes honestly.
Costa-Gavras' 1970 film &lt;em&gt;The Confession&lt;/em&gt; deals with the 1952 anti-Semitic
show trials in Czechoslovakia that resulted in 11 executions. After hanging,
the victims' bodies were incinerated; the film shows a policeman scattering
their ashes on frozen roads around Prague, which was what actually happened.
For Yves Montand, who played Czech Foreign Minister Artur London, &lt;em&gt;The
Confession &lt;/em&gt;was &quot;a farewell to the generous sentimentality of the Left,
a Left that had been blind to its own crimes and cultivates a messianic pose,
proposing to bring happiness to human beings, even if it means slaughtering
them.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
But Hollywood has yet to show itself capable of portraying what &lt;em&gt;The Black
Book of Communism&lt;/em&gt;, a recent scholarly assessment of communist crimes, calls
&quot;politically correct mass slaughter.&quot; In &lt;em&gt;Eleni &lt;/em&gt;(1985), John Malkovich
hunts down a Greek communist responsible for the death of his mother, but much
of the hostile action takes place off screen. &lt;em&gt;The Unbearable Lightness of
Being&lt;/em&gt; (1988), while generally anti-communist in tone, includes only
fleeting glimpses of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Odd as it may seem, one of the few Hollywood movies that does depict violence
in communist countries on screen is a Disney film. The 1983&lt;em&gt;
Night Crossing&lt;/em&gt; shows a daring escape from East Germany, Albert Maltz's
version of the good society. Viewers see German border guards, whom John Hurt
calls &quot;pigs,&quot; gunning down those who flee. Material abounds for this type of
film. Soviet Bloc archives are yielding their revelations about the Katyn
Forest murders of Polish officers by Soviet forces, KGB assassination campaigns
in the West, and the identity of Stalinist agents in Western governments.
Vitaly Shentalinsky's 1996 book, &lt;em&gt;Arrested Voices,&lt;/em&gt; documented Stalin's
campaigns against writers and artists, whose victims included Itzak Feffer and
Solomon Mikaels, both of whom had been showcased in Hollywood by Communists as
evidence that anti-Semitism did not exist in the Soviet Union.&lt;/p&gt;
 &lt;p&gt;
Films from former communist countries, the 1999 &lt;em&gt;Thief&lt;/em&gt; among them,
show that even the Russians are coming to terms with the communist legacy. But
the circus surrounding Kazan's Oscar and other recent events suggest that
Hollywood probably will not follow suit. The blacklist mythography casts too
long a shadow, one in which a fuller appreciation of the epic battle between
communism and democracy remains in the dark. &quot;Hollywood Remembers the
Blacklist,&quot; staged at the Motion Picture Academy's theater on the 50th
anniversary of the 1947 hearings, featured Billy Crystal and Kevin Spacey in
dramatic roles. Also appearing were Hollywood Ten veteran Ring Lardner Jr. and
fellow party member and &lt;em&gt;Song of Russia&lt;/em&gt; co-writer Paul Jarrico, who
compared the Hollywood Ten's performance with the stand that Jefferson took
against the Alien and Sedition Act. Actress Marsha Hunt said that &quot;for over a
decade, this was no longer the land of the free, nor the home of the brave.&quot; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
This event was a colorized, multimedia version of Philip Dunne's &quot;mythical
kingdom,&quot; but for the anti-anti-communist Hollywood crowd, it proved the
feel-good hit of the fall. Such events pass on the myths to younger filmmakers
who see themselves not just as entertainers but teachers.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
For instance, Tim Robbins' &lt;em&gt;Cradle Will Rock&lt;/em&gt;, released last fall, takes
its title from an agitprop musical written by Marc Blitztein, a doctrinaire
Stalinist. The original work was welcomed by the 1930s Federal Theater Project,
a group dominated by communists, precisely because of its Soviet-inspired
Socialist Realism. The progressive Works Progress Administration (WPA) closed
down the show out of budgetary considerations, though Robbins attempts to blame
it on an axis of HUAC and capitalists allied with Mussolini and Hitler. The
fascist-capitalist bosses, headed by Nelson Rockefeller, raking in the dough
selling goods to Hitler, are also out to get muralist Diego Rivera, played by
Ruben Blades. Audiences predictably stayed away from this film, but in
Hollywood, the mythology of the left remains powerful enough to see such a
project through production. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Late last year, the University of Southern California, whose film school is a
kind of Hollywood employment agency, unveiled a sculpture garden honoring the
Hollywood Ten as victims of the Cold War and champions of the First Amendment.
The mythology has become a monument, a kind of museum of anti-anti-communism in
a town that welcomed Daniel Ortega of the Sandinista junta but never took up
the cause of a single Soviet or Eastern European dissident. The specter that
once haunted Europe is gone, yet it still seems to hang over the palms of
Southern California, an ideological smog that obscures the view for millions of
filmgoers.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">27732@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2000 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Kenneth Lloyd Billingsley)</author>
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<item>
<title>Store-Bought Protection</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/30350.html</link>
<description> 
&lt;p&gt;When two heavily armed bandits grabbed $350,000 from a North Hollywood bank on
February 28, the ensuing shootout with Los Angeles police resulted in a
prime-time TV special and prompted politicians to call for stricter gun
control. Lost in the shuffle, though, is how the outgunned cops ended their
battle with robo-robbers Larry Eugene Phillips and Emil Matasareanu.&lt;p&gt;
The pair deployed five fully automatic rifles, each of which was illegal long
before the current outcry against so-called assault weapons. During the heist,
they sprayed anything that moved, including news helicopters, with rapid fire.
Police-issue 9mm pistols are hardly a match for fully automatic firepower. So
as the bullets flew, the outgunned cops headed not to the local precinct
but to nearby B&amp;amp;B Sales, a private gun store.&lt;p&gt;
The owner recognized some of the officers as previous customers and,
overlooking the 15-day waiting period a typical civilian would face before
being able to legally obtain firearms, quickly supplied them with four 5.56mm
Bushmaster XM-15 semi-automatic rifles with high-capacity magazines and two
Remington shotguns with rifled slugs. Once the officers were on a more equal
footing, they plunged back into the fray, taking down the bad guys with no loss
of innocent life. The LAPD offers no comment on the officers' use of these
privately obtained weapons during the onslaught, as it has been sued by the
robbers' families for refusing to give the crooks medical attention after
shooting them.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">30350@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Aug 1997 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Kenneth Lloyd Billingsley)</author>
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