February 21, 2020

"Shh! You'll wake up the monkey" — We now know Trump's favorite movie.



There was a time when this business had the eyes of the whole wide world. But that wasn't good enough. Oh, no! They wanted the ears of the world, too. So they opened their big mouths, and out came talk, talk, talk... And who have they got now? Some nobodies — a lot of pale little frogs croaking pish-posh.... Words! Words! You've made a rope of words and strangled this business! But there is a microphone right there to catch the last gurgles, and Technicolor to photograph the orange, swollen tongue!

Yes, Trump was raving last night. In Colorado Springs. One of his many topics was the fact that a South Korean film had won the Best Picture Oscar:
"How bad were the Academy Awards this year? Did you see? And the winner is: a movie from South Korea. What the hell was that all about? We've got enough problems with South Korea, with trade. On top of it, they give them the best movie of the year? Was it good? I don't know? I'm looking for — where? — can we get 'Gone with the Wind' back please? 'Sunset Boulevard.' So many great movies. The winner is: from South Korea. I thought it was Best Foreign Film. Best Foreign Movie. No. Has this ever happened before? And then you have Brad Pitt. I was never a big fan of his. He got up, said little wise guy statement.* Little wise guy. He's a little wise guy."
Now, the most interesting part of all that was saying "Sunset Boulevard."

Some people might say, no, the important thing was disrespecting South Korea or disrespecting films that are not American. But that's just his usual America-first rhetoric. We should be the best. Other countries may compete, and good for them, but we should play to win. Certainly, the film industry is a place where America has traditionally won big. So we should win every year.

Some people might say that the important thing was that when he needed to think of examples of American greatness in film, the first thing he thought of was "Gone with the Wind" — a movie that takes the Southern side in the Civil War and presents slavery in a positive light. How out of touch can you get? Or was he dog-whistling to present-day racists? Ah, "Gone with the Wind," those were the days! Is he nostalgic for old movies or for the Old South? Or is he just trying to sidetrack his critics into making weak accusations against him?

But I say the most interesting partis that after he cited "Gone with the Wind" — the most conspicuous Old Hollywood movie — he paused and said "Sunset Boulevard." Now, "Sunset Boulevard" is a great old movie. It's one of the few movies that has its own tag on this blog, one of my all-time favorites. But it is a smaller, more artsy, more film buff choice. It must be a movie he actually cares about. Does he identify with the main character, Norma Desmond? She's an aging actress, who has become sidelined, but she dreams of becoming big again, and it's all quite delusional. Think about what it means for Trump to identify with that... and then to find himself on the presidential stage.


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* Pitt's "little wise guy statement" — accepting the Best Supporting Actor Oscar — was: "They told me you only have 45 seconds up here, which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week. I'm thinking maybe Quentin does a movie about it. In the end, the adults do the right thing."

IN THE COMMENTS: Temujin says something that completely resonates with me:

I turned on Trump's speech and saw he had printed out old Drudge Report headlines from the Republican primary stage of 4 years ago. He was going over his lead in the polls- again- from 4 years ago. I could not watch him reciting poll numbers again.

Seriously, this is not a normal mind. He's got some real deal issues. He's somewhere on some spectrum. But he's a functioning person on that spectrum (whatever it is). And he's actually a highly functional person on that spectrum.

He's not nuts. He's...brain-different. But he's definitely not normal. I get that people will stand in line for days to catch one of his 'shows'. He's an entertainer. And though it's not a show I can watch, it still makes me smile and shake my head as I turn it off. But behind closed doors, in the Oval Office, he is trying to point the country in the direction he thinks works best for...get this...American citizens. It's such a novel approach it seems out of control and crazy to the Washington establishment, and the media (but I repeat myself).

We will never see the likes of Trump again. Enjoy the ride while it's here. You'll all be telling your kids and grandkids about it in a few years.

219 comments:

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tim in vermont said...

Productivity numbers are up too, BTW.

tim in vermont said...

"Obvious nonsense.”

And yet....

tim in vermont said...

"[W]age growth has been greater for workers than for managers"--finally, after "decades of stagnation." H/T Kausfiles

"These high wages are making us uncompetitive” - Democrats

Ralph L said...

I watched an old Dick Cavett show from 1972 ... a time where movies where a pillar of american culture.

But that was Hollywood's financial nadir--before Jaws and Star Wars.

Howard said...

Some say 1999 was the best year for Hollywood films.

That's an excellent list, Yancey.

I'm planning on screening The Great Escape for the grandsons. It's my duty to provide their dose of toxic masculinity.

Bilwick said...

Young Bernie Sanders: "Ready for my close-up, Comrade Stalin."

eddie willers said...

I've always said (and have had no reason to change this opinion so far) that Citizen Kane was the best film and GWTW was the best movie. (no wonder I like Trump)

Now I am NOT a Tarantino fan, but Once Upon A Time In Hollywood is a masterpiece. It, The Sweet Hereafter and Whiplash are the best films I have seen this century.

traditionalguy said...

For the racist racist spotters, GWTW is not about slavery. It is about a the people who lived in a civilization being conquered and that means being replaced by another one. It is a survival tale.

The Fitzgerald family lived in a slave based agricultural civilization and lived through its fall and replacement . It’s world wide appeal is because so many places lived through such a replacement trauma themselves. Trump can see that angle in his job.

Remember Empire of the Sun that tells the same tale seen through the eyes of a 12 year old Christian Bale. He survives the conquest of the British Empire by the Japanese Empire. And for good measure, the conquest of the Japanese Empire by the American Empire.

mockturtle said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Fernandinande said...

We just watched Sunset Boulevard, it was pretty corny.

cf said...

only time to have read the post, not enough to read comments, perhaps others have mentioned this.

No way, @RealDonaldTrump relates to the Norma Desmond character!

I say he relates to William Holden's character, with his fine sense of humor, keen observer of the crazed world and making it work for him.

cf said...

Schiff is wayyyy more Laura Desmond than @realDonaldTrump could ever pretend to be.

Beloved Commenter AReasonableMan said...

Aunty Trump said...
Another moldy talking point


The deaths of tens of thousands of your fellow citizens is a 'moldy talking point'. What a fucking piece of work you are.

tim in vermont said...

"The deaths of tens of thousands of your fellow citizens is a 'moldy talking point'. What a fucking piece of work you are.”

Yes, because “deaths of despair” which have been rising since 2000 have begun to decline under Trump. I gave you the link above. You are going to have to discard that talking point too. Your whole kitchen is starting to stink from these things.

If you really cared about these things you claim to care about, you would be on the Trump train. What you seem to really care about is that your party is. in control of the graft.

tim in vermont said...

It makes sense with record low unemployment that “deaths of despair” would fall, so I would have. thought that you would be up to date on the latest numbers, ARM.


Ha ha ha ha JKLOL! I wouldn’t think that about you at all ARM, what a fucking piece of work you are.

Sebastian said...

"Donald Trump identifying with an obviously over the hill actress with delusions of relevance?? Seriously? Maybe it's a rhetorical question, but the answer is "obviously fucking not,"

Yes, but Althouse's speculation is so much more "interesting"!

But here we have a blogger identifying with an obviously energetic male president very much relevant and enjoying his relevance, not over the hill, still climbing in fact. By Althousian psychoanalytic standards, that tells us all we need know, right?

Michael McNeil said...

“You can't give tax cuts to already obscenely wealthy and then claim that you are acting in the interests of working people.”

Some folks still beleive in the the idea of a tinkle-down economy. The theory is that if you give the ultra-wealthy even more $$$ then some of it will get pissed on down to the working class and poor.


Fortunately, in the case of the 2018 Trump tax reform bill, American poor and middle classes are getting their increased (less taxed) income right in their own paychecks and tax refund — no supposed “tinkle-down” from on-high involved or required.

zefal said...

I finally watched Sunset Boulevard for the first time about two years ago and was drawn in by it. It's not my type of movie and I'll never probably watch it again.

I hope Anne doesn't think I identify with Norma now!

EsoxLucius said...

The joke is the parasite occupied the white house.

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