We'll Always Have the Movies explores how movies made in
Hollywood during World War II were vehicles for helping Americans
understand the war. Far from being simplistic, flag-waving
propaganda designed to evoke emotional reactions, these films
offered audiences narrative structures that formed a foundation for
grasping the nuances of war. These films asked audiences to
consider the implications of the Nazi threat, they put a face on
both our enemies and allies, and they explored changing wartime
gender roles. We'll Always Have the Movies reveals how film after
film repeated the narratives, character types, and rhetoric that
made the war and each American's role in it comprehensible.
Robert L. McLaughlin and Sally E. Parry have screened more than
600 movies made between 1937 and 1946 -- including many never
before discussed in this context -- and have analyzed the cultural
and historical importance of these films in explaining the war to
moviegoers. Pre-Pearl Harbor films such as Sergeant York, Foreign
Correspondent, and The Great Dictator established the rationale for
the war in Europe. After the United States entered the war, films
such as Air Force, So Proudly We Hail and Back to Bataan conveyed
reasons for U.S. involvement in the Pacific. The Hitler Gang,
Sahara, and Bataan defined our enemies; and Mrs. Miniver, Mission
to Moscow, and Dragon Seed defined our allies. Some movies -- The
Miracle of Morgan's Creek, Hail the Conquering Hero, and Lifeboat
among them -- explored homefront anxieties about the war's effects
on American society.
Of the many films that sought to explain the politics behind and
the social impact of the war -- and why it concerned Americans --
Casablanca is perhaps one of the most widely recognized. McLaughlin
and Parry argue that Rick's Caf? Am?ricain serves as a United
Nations, sheltering characters who represent countries being
oppressed by Germany. At Rick's, these characters learn that they
share a common love of freedom, which is embodied in patriotism;
from this commonality, they overcome their differences and work
together to solve a conflict that affects them all. As the
representative American, Rick Blain (Humphrey Bogart) cannot idly
stand by in the face of injustice, and he ultimately sides with
those being oppressed. Bogart's character is a metaphor for
America, which could also come out of its isolationism to be a true
world leader and unite with its allies to defeat a common
enemy.
Collectively, Hollywood's war-era films created a mythic history
of the war that, even today, has more currency than the actual
events of World War II.
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