Hollywood Loses The War In Iraq

You noticing a pattern here? The dems in Congress won’t listen to the American people and open domestic drilling within our own country … Bad business men and women, on many levels.
Hollywood refuses to write, produce movies that lift-up the American spirit during a time of war, as was done during WWII. They can’t even have the business sense to stay away from the “craps table” when they have continually thrown the dice and come up at huge losses … No, they keep on throwing the dice and crapping out.
In the last couple days “The Dark Knight” has broken box office records all over the place. In it, a clear cut hero who knows the tough and dirty job that needs done to takedown and take out the clear cut maniacal bad villain who kills anybody in his way, and so is a deadly threat to everybody. The hero is dark, almost businesslike, and equipped with the high-powered weapons he needs in order to do his duty and his job and protect society from this evil that knows no boundaries, plays by no rules, and whose work isn’t deemed “collateral damage” because everyone is fair game. A classic clear cut man vs. man, good vs. evil winning formula for any fiction … or reality.
Hollywood has forgotten that simple tried and true formula, and decided it would contemplate and attempt outsourcing blame and cause to ’subjects’ within the ’story’ that just doesn’t fit … A basic and blatant distortion of reality … Fictionalizing reality to fit the writer/director/producer’s opinions and political agenda, despite the whole picture … the context of the whole situation. And the public literally doesn’t buy it … The purchasing public WANTS to cheer for the good guy, and cheer when the bad guy goes down.
But hey, they got their “opinion and agenda” out there … and it only cost millions and millions of dollars in losses … BAD business men and women … on many levels.
No wonder they are such strong purveyors and trumpeters, supporters of communism and socialism … It’s not for the sake of “the poor unwashed masses” … No, THEY want that government safety net to catch them when they finally fall down off that high and mighty HOLLYWOOD sign … after they are all crapped-out.

by John Nolte (PJM)
Will Hollywood ever wake up and realize that all films about the Iraq war aren’t doomed to failure — it’s their bias that’s the problem?
After the well-reviewed Stop-Loss failed to pack ‘em in opening weekend, a studio source told Deadline Hollywood Daily’s Nikki Finke:
No one wants to see Iraq war movies. No matter what we put out there in terms of great cast or trailers, people were completely turned off. It’s a function of the marketplace not being ready to address this conflict in a dramatic way because the war itself is something that’s unresolved yet. It’s a shame because it’s a good movie that’s just ahead of its time.
Stop-Loss was far from “ahead of it’s time,” and thankfully, through emerging new media, the public was clued in by talk radio and Internet blogs to the fact that Stop-Loss was yet another anti-war screed where the filmmakers take their war bitterness out on our troops by portraying them as drunks, crazies, and wife-beaters. The public was also clued in that by any reasonable artistic standard Stop-Loss was a melodramatic mess filled with contrivances only awarded positive reviews because its politics were correct.
In March of 2008, Stop-Loss was about to open, but the Washington Post had already its obituary written:
After five years of conflict in Iraq, Hollywood seems to have learned a sobering lesson: The only things less popular than the war itself are dramatic films and television shows about the conflict.
A spate of Iraq-themed movies and TV shows haven’t just failed at the box office. They’ve usually failed spectacularly, despite big stars, big budgets and serious intentions.
The underwhelming reception from the public raises a question: Are audiences turned off by the war, or are they simply voting against the way filmmakers have depicted it?
The Post, as you can see, followed the studio narrative in lamenting the box office failure of “Iraq-themed” films, as opposed to what they really are: pro-defeat films that in some cases are outright anti-American and too often defame the troops. This focus on the term “Iraq-themed” to explain box office humiliation is still in use by the left-wing media for reasons obvious to anyone interested in what audiences are truly interested in seeing.
Had the media (and Hollywood, for that matter) broadened their focus from “Iraq-themed” to “War on Terror-themed” films this would have forced them to talk about the single war film that made a profit: Vantage Point, a little Islamic terrorist thriller starring Dennis Quaid and William Hurt. This $40 million film was released the month before the Washington Post piece was written to lukewarm reviews, but still it managed to make a respectable $73 million here in America and another $78 million overseas — making it by far the biggest moneymaker of all the war-themed films to come out this last year.
No one wants to talk about the standalone success of Vantage Point because it’s a pro-American film that portrays the American President (Hurt) as a noble, brave, and selfless man. Imagine the denial some would be forced to overcome in reporting that a dozen pro-defeat films failed miserably, but the one pro-American one didn’t.
It’s not just narrative anti-war films cratering at the box office. Documentaries are somehow doing worse. Even after winning last year’s Best Documentary Oscar, Taxi To The Darkside cleared an abysmal $286,000 at the box office. So in denial is Alex Gibney, the film’s director, that he’s suing his distributor for failing to publicize the film properly, as though an Oscar win wasn’t publicity enough.
Ever the studio enablers, the L.A. Times covered this recent spate of documentary flops but saw no correlation other than genre:
Critically acclaimed films about provocative subjects struggle to make money all the time, but rarely have so many lauded documentaries consistently failed to connect at the box office.
The article goes on to list a half-dozen box office failures, most of which approach their subjects from a decidedly left-of-center point of view: Jimmy Carter: Man From Plains, Standard Operating Procedure, Taxi To The Darkside, and Bigger, Strong, Faster, (a look at steroid use, promoted with an odd Bush-bashing trailer from Magnolia’s Mark Cuban, who should know better after his Redacted failed to clear $66,000 domestically).
Like the Washington Post’s refusal to mention Vantage Point in their look at narrative war-themed failures, The L.A. Times conspicuously ignored a title, as well: Ben Stein’s conservative look at the intelligent design debate, Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed.
Stein’s conservative leaning Expelled may not have set the box office afire, but with a domestic gross of $7.6 million it made more than most of the left-wing documentary flops put together and currently ranks #5 as the all-time box office champ in the political documentary genre. But the L.A. Times remarkably (or not, if you’re a longtime reader) did not find this worth mentioning.
Media perpetrators of liberal bias generally look for refuge from criticism behind a “facts” defense, as though being “factually correct” is all that’s necessary in the proper and responsible reporting of a story. Bias, of course, as fair-minded people well know, is rarely as blatant and bizarre as Dan Rather’s attempt to usher John Kerry into the White House reporting on thirty-year-old military documents produced on a new computer. Instead, bias is generally the result of what is and isn’t covered — a lack of context.
One of the biggest entertainment stories of the year has been covered by Big Media in a way that can only be defended as “factually correct,” but the real story hasn’t been told.
What’s most worrisome is that Hollywood, the industry that stands to most profit from giving the public what it wants, appears to be even less interested.



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Plus all of the funding they get from Congress.
July 20th, 2008 at 5:59 pm“…Redacted failed to clear $66,000 domestically…”
ROFLMAO!!!
I hadn’t heard exactly how bad it had done. THAT’S fucking awesome!!! FUCK YOU AGAIN CUBAN!!!
Oh, if only John Q. Public would come to his senses and realize that it’s America that is the villain. The cause of all the evil terrorists, evil SUV’s, blah, blah, blah in the world.
July 20th, 2008 at 6:55 pmHey SUVs ARE dumb. I wish all those SUVs would just go away. Or better yet, just get rid of the idiots driving them. I mean hell I’m riding around on my sportsbike and some dumbass SUV driver just comes swerving through the lanes talking on their cell phones. Idiots. And people wonder why I laugh when I see one roll over because the dumb girl driving it thought it was a sports car.
Enough ranting….I still have enough to smoke an SUV on the highway. 
July 20th, 2008 at 8:01 pmRob said - “…I mean hell I’m riding around on my sportsbike…”
_________________________________________
Welcome to just one of your possible futures… good luck Dude.
http://nothingtoxic.com/media/1126936800/Motorcycle_Hits_a_Deer
July 20th, 2008 at 9:16 pmGreat post! Fuck Hollywood and the demented actors in Congress!
July 20th, 2008 at 10:56 pmHey, if Hollywood Babylon is losing money, that can’t be a bad thing. We can only hope it becomes a habit that puts them out of business.
July 21st, 2008 at 12:14 amThey’re undoubtedly afraid now to produce even one big pro-US film because it would so hugely outperform all the leftist-screeds-on-screen that no one could miss the lesson. Heh.
July 21st, 2008 at 7:21 amwow- I have to watch “Vantage Point” On Demand tonight and I am going to go and see Batman soon..
F Hollywood and those losers who think the rest of America believes their claptrap..
July 21st, 2008 at 9:57 amI WANT A PURE UNCHANGED LONE SURVIVOR
July 21st, 2008 at 2:53 pm