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Powerline Blog
Power Line
6 Aug 2023
Scott Johnson


NextImg:Two movie notes

I ventured out to a movie theater for the first time post-Covid for the annual Grateful Dead meet-up in November 2022 (a href=”https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2022/11/at-the-grateful-dead-meet-up-4.php”>here) and again this year in June (a here). I wrote up my assessments for the benefit of commenters who can’t refrain from displaying their superiority with derision. It is my privilege to share my enthusiasms on Power Line. The Grateful Dead is certainly one.

It took the Dead to draw me back into a movie theater. Over the past week I have gone out to two more films that are of current interest.

Sound of Freedom

Last weekend we attended the wildly successful — successful with conservative audiences, I take it — Sound of Freedom. The film stars Jim Cavelziel, whom I don’t think I have seen since his star turn in Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ.

We went to the film based on the urging of a friend who took the trouble to blast an email to 61 of his closest friends (he has a lot of friends). He advised us that we had made the cut. He and I have been friends since second grade, so it was good to know.

I really wish he had let me know that the email followed up on the appeal that Cavelziel makes in a statement following the movie’s credits. Cavelziel pleads with the audience to undertake word-of-mouth marketing on behalf of the film. We owe it to the children, or something like that.

Based on a true story, as they say, the film depicts the horrors of human trafficking. Cavelziel plays the hero, former DHS special agent Tim Ballard. There aren’t any shades of grey in the film. There are good guys and bad guys. Ballard is beyond good. He is a superhero posing as an ordinary guy. The Department of State has posted a brief profile of Ballard here.

I (we) found just about everything in the film to ring false. Whatever was true in the film rang false to me, even the sound of freedom. It lacked the art to induce my (our) suspension of disbelief for a second.

When Cavelziel seeks to enlist the audience in the film’s marketing campaign as well as Ballard’s anti-human trafficking campaign, I wondered who supports the trafficking of children depicted in the film. I oppose it. What am I supposed to do, other than promote the film? I’m taking a pass on promoting the film.

For an illuminating, entertaining, and positive assessment of the film, see John Podhoretz’s Washington Free Beacon review. John is my favorite reviewer. He only goes so far as to say that the film stretches credulity, a statement that stretched my own credulity.

Oppenheimer

I went to see Oppenheimer yesterday afternoon. It’s an old-fashioned biopic with all the bells and whistles available to writer/director Christopher Nolan and it has a lot of them. I saw it on an Emagine “premium large format” screen with excruciating sound.

Robert J. Oppenheimer is the physicist who was enlisted by General Leslie Groves to lead the development of the atomic bomb before the Nazis did. The film’s depiction of the work at Los Alamos is stirring and intense. I loved the character of General Groves (played by Matt Damon, whom I did not recognize). Groves is canny, shrewd, and even funny. The story of the Manhattan Project as depicted will inspire some viewers to check into it, perhaps via Richard Rhodes’s Making of the Atomic Bomb/em>.