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When

Jan 13, 2009 7:00 pm - 9:30 pm (Tuesday)

Where

4 S San Francisco St #4 (map)

4 South San Francisco Street #4
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
What
Location: Cline Library Description: January 13 Network (Sidney Lumet, 1976, 121 minutes) “This groundbreaking film is a rare example of a really good satire that was popular...
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Description
Location:
Cline Library

Description:
January 13 Network (Sidney Lumet, 1976, 121 minutes) “This groundbreaking film is a rare example of a really good satire that was popular with film critics and the public -- and even with entertainment industry insiders, who might not be expected to get the joke or appreciate the abuse. …One evening, Howard Beale (Peter Finch), a network news anchor, becomes fed up with the pabulum of network news, decides he’s mad as hell, he can’t take it any more, and he’s going to start telling the truth (or kill himself). Panicked producers fire him, but not before his ratings soar; so he’s brought back as a commentator. Over the next few weeks, Beale becomes increasingly unstable and even delusional, but continues to tell the truth. The network’s ratings soar, driving events forward to a tragic conclusion. Paddy Chayefsky's screenplay attacks television from more angles than anyone else ever thought of. Chayefsky’s maniacal, ruthless TV producers, led by Faye Dunaway (whose character seems to be modeled after Lady Macbeth), stage fake political revolutions for ratings and brainwash the public with psychics, televangelists, etc. Even TV's psychological effects are explored (e.g. Dunaway's character is unable to make a relationship last longer than soap-opera duration, and climaxes too soon during sex because TV has shortened her attention span to one minute). Of course, the movie’s nightmare vision of a TV network pandering to the lowest common denominator with lesbian cops, psychics, and psychotic news commentators does not seem like fiction now. It has become reality. But give the filmmakers credit for being ahead of their time. Having already made a great film, Chayefsky sends the last part of the film in an unexpected direction as Finch’s mad newscaster starts proselytizing for a vision of holistic, global capitalism that is uncannily similar to today’s Internet and “New Economy” hype. But Americans aren’t ready to become atoms in a vast network of global consumption and they start tuning out, leading the show's producers to the logical, inevitable conclusion. Given the media's chokehold on public opinion today, this movie begs to be remade and updated. But don't expect Hollywood to do that anytime soon -- or to release another political satire this penetrating and subversive, either”-- David Bezanson. William Holden also stars and he is the AFI # 24 best actor of all time. The film received 10 Oscar nominations and won three.
Cost
Free
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