Atlas Shrugged Part 3
Posted by RickBulow1974 9 years, 10 months ago to Movies
I might be a little late to this, but I had seen Part 3 on DVD yesterday, and I have to say it was very good. Granted, the cast change from part 1 to part 2, and then from part 2 to part 3, frustrated me to no end, but Kristofer Polaha played a reasonably good John Galt. Of course, with the minimal screen time people like Ellis Wyatt, Midas Mulligan, and others who had disappeared during parts 1 and 2 had, I kind of expected them to have a cameo. However, overall I enjoyed the entire series.
in Part 2 before Rearden's trial, and in Part 3 after Galt's speech.
I would have expected the media to be back to the days of Eric Sevareid and John Chancellor commentaries, Channel Two Editorials, and Night at the Improv Editorial Replies. And even that last might not be permitted at the last.
I also missed Project X. If they do the miniseries, I hope they do that. I'm sure the folks at Dunkertown, Iowa, would be happy to get on the map. Dunkertown is the most likely site I could find for Harmony City.
Have to go back and watch the whole trilogy now. Going to binge it with some people and my daughter, after I get them movies back from my interested friends at work.
I hope the investors are able to break even or earn a profit. They deserve a reward for their efforts. I have read the book numerous times but I think the message is so important that exposing the story to as many people and in as many ways as possible is very important. Perhaps there will be those, in the future, that think they can do all or parts of the film better and there will be sequels.
I do some binge watching on Netflix, Mad Men, Downton Abbey, Marco Polo, Boss, House of Cards, Best of Youth, etc. and always think about how great it would be to have about 48 episodes of Atlas Shrugged.
Robert Stadler comes to a horrifying realization of the logical endpoint of his philosophy, and his associations. He does not try at the last minute to play the gangster, only to find out how a real gangster fights.
And Mulligan's Militia decides to snatch Eddie.
I had a better idea:
Eddie goes west, before Dr. Stadler's last meeting with John Galt. Eddie tells everybody he's going to San Francisco to negotiate a "treaty" with factions fighting a three-way civil war in California. But what he's actually planning is his own escape, and an attempt to reach Dan Conway in Maricopa County, Arizona (the seat of which is, of course, Phoenix, the southern terminus of the Phoenix-Durango Railroad).
The Comet breaks down out of Flagstaff, and the wagon train meets it. But this time Eddie agrees to join the wagon train--and as his fare, he offers them a destination, namely Maricopa County.
That evening, a small squadron of helicopters meets the wagon train. Aboard it:
Dan Conway, now hoping to re-activate the Phoenix-Durango RR.
Sheriff Joseph Arpaio, the long-running Sheriff of Maricopa County, who called his own great strike when John Galt made The Speech.
We leave it with Eddie signing on as Dan Conway's special assistant, as Conway puts together a crew to re-lay the rail back to Durango, Colorado--where, one may presume, Dagny Taggart can meet them, after driving a tunnel through the Red Mountains, under the now-abandoned switchbacks of the Million Dollar Highway.
This book and philosophy behind the book make me try very hard to be a maker and not a taker! In my heart, I want to be chosen to go to Galt's Gultch...
Of course, I immediately watched. I for some reason was touched emotionally by it. Usually, very little touches me emotionally.
Picture a 6 foot, 220 lb, Danny Trejo looking guy. (Yes, long hair, and ruddy complexion), with tears running down his face watching AS3.
I'm glad I wasn't in the theatre, that would've been embarrassing
Kristofer Polaha is very good as John Galt. He has the right self-assured presence for the character, and he says the Gulch pledge without a waver in his voice. While I imagine that some other actor could do better than him, I can't picture how the performance would have to be improved.
I would have loved to see the Dagny from the first movie play the Dagny in the third, but AS3's Dagny does at least an okay job.
I'm also happy with the presentation of the philosophy in the movie. While none of the movies are really ways to teach Objectivism to an unknowing audience, this movie does a good job of explaining why the strikers went on strike, and for what reasons and with what justifications.
I'm happy that the rumored "church scene" was cut from the film. There would have been little point.
Thanks to everyone involved for producing the films. I enjoyed them, and they set the bar for future efforts to bring AS to the screen.
Also, AS3 was a bit pedantic in that they talked about things too much instead of using the medium to show and lead people to the conclusions about the effectiveness of capitalism.
I get more motivation to return to capitalism in the US by watching news pieces of whats going on in Venezuela or Russia than by watching AS3.
The problem is, you could never get all the people of "capability" to stop providing that capability, particularly since many of them are also the crony's. They are capable, AND they work the system to their ill-gotten advantage. Just being capable doesn't mean you aren't a crony. That's the fundamental failing in the book, in my humble opinion.
http://www.hawes.com/1957/1957-11-10.pdf...
note the 4 above AS on the list are not memorable. But there at least two other books on that list which are well-known.
I'm still wondering why #3 was not for sale before Christmas. The $$$ of positive selfishness?
I have a brother who would have most certainly gifted that instead of the Alabama football fan sweater. Oh, well, I'll eventually have both cheap.
I might add that I too would like to see at least a cameo of Ellis Wyatt.
Yours in anticipation
Terry Wyatt