Unfortunate Implications/Film: Difference between revisions

That particular comment bases its foundation on a factual claim that is simply not accurate, and so it has to go.
(That particular comment bases its foundation on a factual claim that is simply not accurate, and so it has to go.)
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{{quote|"The message of Rules of Engagement is the necessity to kill all those who actively oppose the United States and that the murder of women and children is acceptable in such cases."}}
** This example counts as something of a [[Shocking Swerve]]. Throughout the movie, the Marines' attack on the protesting crowd was presented as abhorrent as it was believed that only a few people in the crowd were actually armed and that the Colonel (played by [[Samuel L. Jackson]]) overreacted by ordering his men to [[There Is No Kill Like Overkill|open fire on the entire crowd, armed or not]]. It was only after finding the security videotape that the audience finds out that 90+% of the crowd was in on the attack and that Jackson was justified (legally if not morally) in opening fire on a crowd of civilians.
*** Errrr, if 90+% of the crowd is armed and firing then that isn't a crowd of 'civilians'.
** In the DVD commentary the director said the original scene was supposed to be unclear about whether the crowd was actually shooting, or if that's just what [[Samuel L. Jackson]] convinced himself into believing. However, the test audience [[Viewers are Morons|wanted a literal interpretation]], so that's what the film ultimately got. Also the Arab doctor is one of the people with the most moral fiber (note how he is able to make a tough choice when none of the American witnesses can).
** Rules of Engagement doesn't have [[Unfortunate Implications]]- it's simply straight up racist. Shortly after a time when thousands of Iraqi civilians were being killed or crippled by American troops every week- a movie where we are shown how even a five year old Arab girl is pointing (sort of, the extra can't properly lift the prop) a desert eagle at American troops, so gunning her down is a-okay. Saying "but the crowd was armed!" would be like making a movie where every black person is a drug dealer- and saying it's not racist because "they were all dealing drugs!"
* David Lean's ''Ryan's Daughter'' has the supposedly Irish heroine is played by the [[Fake Nationality|very English Sarah Miles]]. She is contrasted heavily with the ugly, loud, cruel and stupid locals played by Irish actors and actresses.