Turner Movie Classics on February 27th showed its viewers My Son John, a 1952 film which Robert Osborne advised his audience had been deliberately put out of circulation since soon after it was released. In his introduction to the film, Osborne acknowledges that the film’s stars and producers were first rate. The cast included Helen Hayes, Van Heflin, and Robert Walker. Osborne also makes it clear that the film is an embarrassment to the film industry, full of childish anti-Communism and the foolish paranoia of America in the 1950s.
My Son John, in
fact, is a chilling prediction of the growth of those evils which have dragged
America to its present sickness. The main theme of the film was the
dangers of communism. In the last twenty years we have learned that
Soviet penetration of America in the 1940s was greater
than most anti-Communists had believed. Scholars have examined the
mass murder or democide
of Soviet Russia and Maoist China and determined that these two communist
regimes each killed more people than the Nazis or the Japanese in the Second
World War. It is just as impossible to be moral without condemning
communism than it is to be moral without condemning the Holocaust.
Yet many
professors in America hate anti-communism. Michael Moore has made a
film championing the health care system of Marxist Cuba, despite its grim
awfulness. Communists paid an important role in the life of Obama.
Communism, a misology which is, perhaps, the most destructive in human history,
is taken as seriously in America now than it was when My Son John was
made. Even calling communism bad today is considered bad manners.
Dean Jagger, the father of John
in the film, plays a school teacher who is threatened with termination for
mentioning the word “God” in his classroom. Almost sixty years ago, a few
ridiculed voices were warning that the attack on faith in the public square was
very real and quite relentless. Today we live in an America in which
judicial edicts against the expression of God haunt our schools, our parks, and
all aspects of our public lives.
Jagger also speaks in the film
about the danger of assuming that our liberties are bestowed by the state
instead of given by God. The menace, which is greater now than in
1952, of enshrining government as the answer to every question in life was
directly addressed in My Son John. The film saw the future
of America and provided a clear warning of the threat and its cure.
The mockery of fatherhood,
which wise social scientists have described as the heart of many problems in
black America, is also specifically noted in the film. Destroying the
nuclear family, a tragic crime which has wreaked endless misery in modern life,
is identified as one of the principal goals of communism in America. The
explosion of out of wedlock births in America not only plagues black America,
but four out of every ten births in America – regardless of race – are out of wedlock
today.
My Son John makes
its most telling indictment in tying the threads of liberalism with the
amorality and mendacity of communism. The great separation which has been
ongoing in American society for the last sixty years is portrayed clearly in
the gradual disintegration of decency in John, the liberal son who in college
was bewitched and later captured by communism. The wedge which keeps
pulling John away from a loving family and a good life is the growing web of
lies which he must accept without any impulse of conscience. John tells
lies about everything and to everyone, even the mother who adores
him. It is this patent contempt for truth, even about relatively
trivial matters, that finally breaks even the umbilical cord – the bond of
maternal love - the last connection John had with an honorable life.
What have we seen in the last
sixty years is the separation of well-intentioned and noble “liberals” from
creepy moral flotsam like Al Gore. Grand and nasty frauds like
Man-Made Man-Made Global Warming are not the product of any system of thought
which values truth. It has become almost impossible to be a leftist who
does not live a life of lies. Gradually, tragically, an ideological
persuasion which once was embraced by decent and honest people has been
squeezed into an ugly, thuggish gang of pathological liars and intellectually
sterile minds. Liberalism has become the totalitarianism which communism
has always been.
The soulless wretch in My
Son John resembles another John of modern leftism, John Edwards. This
John lies whenever it is more convenient to lie than to tell the
truth. He lies even when his lies are daggers through the hearts of
family members. He strives to look pretty, to sound glib, to seem caring,
to think seriously – and yet everything about this very real modern John is as
much a lie as the fictional character in My Son John.
The world of film today is
almost all dull emptiness, uninspired repetition, and valueless lives.
Yet the denizens of Hollywood applaud themselves for trite
accomplishments. Six decades ago, brave souls – for it took courage to
denounce real evil even then – described with horrifying clarity the collapse
of American life into an ideologically intoxicated collapse. Those
who cared about the art of filmmaking should rejoice in this triumphant of
cinema. Instead, as always, they mock what is true, wise, and noble.
© 2010 Bruce Walker — All Rights
Reserved
This is February 19th. Why does this commentary begin by referring to a showing on February 27th in the past tense? "Turner Movie Classics on February 27th showed its viewers ...."
Posted by: Pascal (the derivative) | February 20, 2010 at 01:20 AM
They can do that; Canadians are ahead of America in time. They have socialized medicine.
Posted by: Larrry Rivera | February 21, 2010 at 10:17 AM