Posted on 01/01/2018 1:18:16 PM PST by Rummyfan
By Peggy Noonan Dec. 28, 2017 7:03 p.m. ET 1222 COMMENTS We often write of the urgent need for more truth in politics. A hope for 2018 is more truth in art and entertainment, too.
The past week I watched the Netflix series The Crown and Steven Spielbergs movie The Post. Each is enjoyable, yet fails in the same significant way.
Theres dramatic license, which is necessary or nothings fun, and historical truth, which is necessary or nothings understood. Ideally in any work they more or less coexist, however imperfectly. But in The Crown and The Post the balance is far off. A cheap historical mindlessness marks much of the first, and theres a lie at the heart of the second.
I couldnt help like The Crown: it was so beautiful to me. The acting, the stillness, all the money and thought that went into making the rooms look right, the period clothing, right down to the cuff linksin these matters the creators are deeply faithful to reality. In its treatment of history, however, theres a deep, clueless carelessness.
(Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...
Can’t read the article without a subscription to the WSJ.
I have not seen them. But what Noonan saw is the current equivalent of Orwellian changes in history.
Nasty. Really nasty.
This site has some really weird, maybe computer translation? of the article.
You can get the drift, if you are able to see through mistranslations of many phrases. Here are the first three paragraphs:
“We incessantly write of the pressing want for extra reality in politics. A hope for 2018 is extra reality in artwork and leisure, too.
The previous week I watched the Netflix sequence The Crown and Steven Spielbergs film The Post. Each is pleasing, but fails in the similar important means.
Theres dramatic license, which is essential or not anythings amusing, and historic reality, which is essential or not anythings understood. Ideally in any paintings they roughly coexist, on the other hand imperfectly. But in The Crown and The Post the steadiness is a long way off. An inexpensive historic mindlessness marks a lot of the primary, and theres a lie on the middle of the second one.”
http://businesstimeless.com/the-lies-of-the-crown-and-the-post/
Very strange version of Peggy’s article.
To summarize without the firewalled story. The Washington Post movie is a sham. They were a second-day story after the Pentagon Papers news broke in the times. The whole premise of the movie is false. Ha, ha, Fake News!
Noonan died for us here at FR a long time ago.
She certainly steps in it, and not infrequently.
Peggy is a self-important, swamp dwelling wind bag and loves the Beltway cocktail crowd on Morning Murder Joe. She is dumber than the escargot I’m sure she eats. Her drivel should be read with such preface...and read with one’s nose tilted upward so if out in the sun, a risk of sunburn is real on the underside of one’s nose.
Peggy has turned into a nasty old scold.
Tried to watch Crown. It’s a really bad soap opera with people whose charisma, charm and intellect rate a 5.
Too bad Churchill died. Nothing else could save this turkey.
Boooooring.
Inadvertently giggle-worthy: one of the most slapdash machine-translations I’ve ever seen.
I loved The Crown.
Summary: “The Crown” and “The Post” are both 90% fiction.
I was okay with “The Crown” until it became little more than an ermine-draped soap opera. Okay, so Elizabeth and Philip had marriage problems. Not much of a surprise, I don’t suppose. But I’m a lot less interested in the cheesy tabloid scandals than I am in the historical context, and unfortunately, the former gets 90 percent of the attention. The history is just a backdrop.
Steel Jacket nails it. I watched the first season of the crown amd thought why all the focus on their fabricated personal lives. It was a waste of time.
If you want interesting entertainment from the Brits, watch the doc Martin series. Interesting, funny, and sad in parts.
We enjoyed the series. Hollywood also injects some, well, Hollywood, into its productions.
I’ve watched all the season of “Doc Martin.” The last one dropped off considerably, but the first several were delightful.
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