Tuesday, August 14, 2007

September Nonsense

Black Diamond Pictures is about to screen a new movie about the insane but charismatic founder of a religious cult whose followers are inspired to commit mass slaughter against innocent civilians.

“Wot th’-!?” you say. “So Hollywood finally gets it about Islamic terrorism, eh?”

Well, not quite.

September DawnThese particular murderous religious fanatics are Mormons, the followers of Joseph Smith, and the year is 1857. The film in question is called September Dawn, and is coming on August 24th to a theater near you.

Here’s what Michael Medved has to say about the movie in USA Today:

The trailer for the film makes clear its hostile point of view, with Terrence Stamp as Brigham Young announcing in portentous and menacing tones: “I am the voice of God. And anyone who doesn’t like it will be hewn down.”

The narrator then informs potential viewers that in 1857, this monster acted “in the name of God” in the savage murder of 120 men, women and children. “Who ordered the massacre, and why, has been hidden in a cloak of secrecy and conspiracy,” he solemnly intones. “And the reputation of one of the nation’s mightiest religious figures has been preserved and protected — until now!” At that point, the trailer offers a black-hatted character screaming, “Mormons, do your duty!” to command stern-faced gunmen to blast away at innocent victims.

Nothing ‘hidden’ here

The historical “Mountain Meadows Massacre” portrayed in the film certainly constitutes an atrocity, with paramilitary forces of the new Mormon settlement in Utah slaughtering members of a wagon train from Arkansas. Far from being “hidden in a cloak of secrecy and conspiracy,” the awful occurrence has received regular historical commemoration (including regretful recognition from Mormon officials) and inspired numerous books, articles and documentary films.

These explorations reach no definitive conclusions on Brigham Young’s complicity in the massacre, but the movie leaves no doubt at all — using fierce quotations by Young, but using those words wildly out of context. The film, for instance, downplays events preceding the Mountain Meadows rampage, including brutal persecution of Mormon settlements in Ohio, Missouri and Illinois, that led to the trek to Utah. Just before the incident the film portrays, the federal government sent troops West with orders to remove Brigham Young as governor of the territory, and the movie never acknowledges Young’s ultimate agreement to step down peacefully, avoiding the feared bloodbath between U.S. soldiers and Mormon militia.
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[…]

In fact, Hollywood’s reluctance to portray Islamo-Nazi killers remains difficult, if not impossible, to explain. Since 2001’s devastating attacks, big studios have released numerous movies with terrorists as part of the plot, including Sum of All Fears, Red Eye, Live Free or Die Hard, The Bourne Ultimatum and many more, but virtually all of them show terrorists as Europeans or Americans with no Islamic connections. Even historically based thrillers downplay Muslim terrorism: Steven Spielberg’s Munich spends more than 80% of its running time showing Israelis as killers and Palestinians as victims, while Oliver Stone’s World Trade Center highlights the aftermath of the attacks with no depiction of those who perpetrated them. United 93 stands out among recent releases in showing Islamic killers in acts of terror — and it would be hard to tell that story without portraying the suicidal hijackers.

The idea that the makers of this movie are courageously shining a light on the truth and revealing a historical coverup is just the latest example of Hollywood’s preening narcissism. Run a Google search on “‘Mountain Meadows Massacre’ September 11 1857” and you’ll discover no fewer than 16,000 hits concerning the event, many of them with a copious wealth of historical detail. The Mountain Meadows Massacre is just about as hidden as Paris Hilton’s sex life.

So what’s the deal? Why make all this effort to create 9-11 relevance on a terrorism topic without tackling the real issue of today’s Islamic terrorism?

I can think of at least three reasons:

1. The bottom line. A terrorism hook will bring people into the theaters.
2. Fear. If they were to make a movie about the real terrorism, the moguls of Tinseltown could expect a mess of fatwas. “No thanks; we’ve seen what happened to Salman Rushdie.”
3. Intellectual dishonesty. No need to cover real terrorists. “We’ll push it off onto the Mormons, because we know they won’t be any suicide squads of LDS maniacs heading from Salt Lake City to L.A. to blow us up.”

What it will take before Hollywood makes an honest movie about Islamic terrorism?

Lord knows, the studios could turn a tidy profit on such a movie. Flight 93, the toppling of Saddam, the capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi — I can think of a dozen subjects that would make great cinema and have millions of moviegoers paying hard cash to see the action on a big screen.

Not bloody likely, though. Not in my lifetime.


Hat tip: Oriana.

13 comments:

spackle said...

While I am not one prone to believe in conspiracy theories I cant help but think this is an intentional swipe at not only Christianity but Mitt Romney as well. Mr. Romney has a decent shot at the nomination and Hollywood being what Hollywood is, I would not be surprised.

Spinoneone said...

Spackle is right but doesn't go far enough. Hollywood can always hit white Christian/Mormon men with absolute impunity. No one, not the ACLU, not CAIR, not NAACP, no on is going to defend them. Hollywood can't make a movie showing the jihadis is all their gory glory. That would be racist and Islamophobe and non-multiculturalist, and I don't know what all.
Spinoneone

kepiblanc said...

Tom Clancy's techno-thriller "The Sum of All Fears" - probably his best - was reduced to a boring D-movie by Holywood. On top of that, they replaced the Islamic terrorists with Germans - or some such. PC gone ballistic.

I never met a Mormon, but I love the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

anonym said...

Spineoneone

I'm sorry. What was it Munich was about again? What was it Sleeper Cell was about? What was it The Grid was about?

Unknown said...

The only way a movie will realistically portray terrorism is if someone makes it independently of Hollywood, à la The Passion of the Christ. Otherwise, it'll never happen.

AWOL Civilization said...

C'mon, folks, Hollywood is just trying to be even-handed.

/spit

Profitsbeard said...

I question the timing.

We're are war with militant Islamofascism on the March, and the Hollywoodheads attack ... Mormons?

Cowardice, thy name is glitterati.

rickl said...

There's an elephant in the room? Where? I don't see it.

Subvet said...

Question: "What will it take before Hollywood makes an honest movie about Islamic terrorism?"

Answer: An attack on Tinseltown itself by forces of the pedophile prophet. THEN we would see the Islamists portrayed less sympathetically!

It would be right in line with their avowed hatred of decadent Western culture for them to stage such an attack.

But sadly, I don't think the followers of Mo are that stupid. They realize our deluded elite in the entertainment field are some of their strongest allies. Too bad.

Panday said...

I never bought or rented "The DaVinci Code" until recently, when I got both the book and the film from the local library (ensuring that Dan Brown and the filmmakers would receive no money from me).

Yep. People are sawing off heads on videotape, oppressing other religions, and flying jumbojets into skyscrapers, but (ahem) the Catholic Church is apparently the biggest threat to civilization in the world.

Vol-in-Law said...

I find it interesting that *pre* 9/11 Hollywood was willing to portray Muslim terrorists in fiction, like the action movie "True Lies", but *post* 9/11 Hollywood will not use Muslims as fictional terrorists.

There's an argument that in cultural-Marxist dialectic, the worse a 'victim' group behaves, the better they must be portrayed, so the best way to insulate yourself from criticism is to behave *really* badly.

Jimmy the Dhimmi said...

Baron, don't forget number four:

4. Mormons are 'white' people, Muslims are 'brown' people. Its OK to criticise the religion and history of white peoples because they are the villain class, while it is taboo to criticise the religion and history of brown people because they are the oppressed class.

Oriana.it said...

No wonder Hollywood has other in mind, I still remember an italian movie, Il Mercante di pietre (the Stone Merchant), by Renzo Marinelli, with Harvey Keitel: the movie has been boycotted !