Popular Culture
“programming” went from role modeling accurate good human behavior and
friendship in “Tom Sawyer” to role modeling bad, deviant behavior on TV with
“Jerry Springer”.
Women in the US
rebelled in the 1920s and the 1960s and the clothes came off.
Movies tracked the
popular books written at the time and reflected on the drama created by the
“good guys and bad guys”. The Victorian Era stressed modesty and lasted from
1837 to 1915. In the 1920s, movies and
women’s fashions rebelled and women got to vote.
Silent movies from the
1890s to 1927 were historic epics, cartoons, westerns, comedies and damsel in
distress dramas. In the 1920s women dropped their full cover swimwear and more
scantily clad damsels appeared on the movie screen. The Victorian Era of
modesty was over.
In 1927, the first
“talking movie” The Jazz Singer was released. Movies were popular during the
Great Depression in the 1930s and continued to be a mix of innocent musical
comedies, dramas about poverty and skin flicks, but the censors were active in
keeping adult content out of the movies. Historic epics, cartoons, musicals and
dramas persisted.
Movies in the 1940s
and 1950s were censored to limit nudity and bad behavior. Movies were dominated
by historical blockbusters, musicals, comedies, romance, classical horror,
mysteries and dramas.
The Roswell Incident
and numerous sighting of unidentified flying objects combined distrust of
government with extraterrestrial theories. This unleashed a never-ending round
of books and movies
In the 1950s and 1960s
instructive books were written to warn us about the virtue of skepticism and
those books turned into movies. George Orwell wrote “1984” in 1949 and warned
us to be wary of government and “progressive” ideas. Farenheit 451 was released
in 1953 to warn us about government overreach.
“Lord of the Flies” was written in 1954 and warned us not to leave our
youth unsupervised. The Manchurian Candidate was released in 1959 to alert us
to beware of brainwashing. In 1962, the
book, “A Clockwork Orange” was published to warn us not to be permissive with
youth crime. In 1967 Rosemary’s Baby was released to warn us that the Devil is
real. The Exorcist was released in 1971.
Movies in the 1960s
and 1970s continued these themes, but added more science fiction and edgier
topics like demonic possession, zombies, extraterrestrials, mass murder, spies,
cold war intrigue, adventure, These included Psycho, Goldfinger, Manchurian
Candidate, Rosemary’s Baby, Night of the Living Dead, Fahrenheit 451, In Cold
Blood, Fail Safe, In the 1970s we got A Clockwork Orange, The Godfather, Jaws,
Alien, Apocalypse Now, Halloween, The Exorcist, Carrie, Mad Max and Close
Encounters.
Movies in the 1980s
were dominated by teen movies and comedies, science fiction, horror and adult
content. These included The Shining, Blade Runner, Predator, Fast Times at
Ridgemont High, Blue Lagoon, Terminator, Body Heat, Platoon, Risky Business,
Red Dawn, Road House,
Movies in the 1990s
settled back to adult content
These included
American Pie, Silence of the Lambs, American Beauty, Pretty Woman, Scream, Deep
Impact,
Movies in the 2000s
settled back to magic and spies and included Harry Potter, Mission Impossible,
Lord of the Rings, Twilight, Transformers, Pirates of the Caribbean, Spiderman,
Monsters Inc. and Mean Girls,
The really funny
movies included Airplane, Police Squad Naked Gun, Young Frankenstein, Love and
Death, Space Balls and Monty Python.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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