Tuesday, 30 January 2018

GI Joe: The Pro-War Toy Based On An Anti-War Movie

Everyone has fond memories of the classic G.I. Joe toys — even in countries other than the U.S. Which has to be various kinds of weird for them, bearing in mind the fact that they and their families might have suffered horrific fear at the hands of folks who seem a lot like him. But the real G.I. Joe was nothing like his plastic counterpart.

Yes, there was a real G.I. Joe. Well , not an actual G.I. named Joe. The epithet is just military slang, popularized by the 1945 conflict movie The Story Of G.I. Joe , which inspired Hasbro to develop their 1964 line of camouflaged activity figures. They apparently stopped attaches great importance at the opening credits, though, because the movie doesn’t exactly paint a comic book picture of war.

United Artists “Yo, Joe! “
“Yeah? “
“No, I entail the other Joe.”

Based on the activities of war correspondent Ernie Pyle( no relation to Gomer ), the characters in The Story Of G.I. Joe don’t make for awfully exciting action figures. They’re mostly miserable, exhausted, and frightened, which induces appreciation, because they’re fighting a goddamn campaign. Scenes include everyone trying not to fall asleep during the haphazard wedding of one of their comrades, a soldier having a nervous breakdown over sound recordings of the voice of the son he’s ever seen, and the unit’s leader stealing meat at gunpoint from a furnish lieutenant so his men can have something for Christmas dinner besides melancholy.

United Artists “Now bring us some figgy dessert, and bring it right here.”

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Pyle has to leave the front lines frequently to chase other tales, but he continues running into those same boys throughout his deployment … merely to be noted that every time he does, there are fewer of them. The movie ends when Pyle happens upon the corpse of the unit’s venerated leader. It is just … a bleak-ass premise on which to base a cartoon.

That’s probably why the dealership veered away from it wholly. The characters in the G.I. Joe cartoon are more of a frat than a military unit, investing more hour hanging out in their clubhouse than on the field. That seems like a bad behavior to fight a war, but can you even call it a conflict if nobody terminates up dead, disfigured, or at the very least imprisoned? The cartoon patently cleans the whole “war is hell” thing, to the extent that it appears both exciting and harmless.

The cartoon’s not bad or morally incorrect or anything; it’s just that it couldn’t have come from a weirder place. If The Story Of G.I. Joe were anything like the cartoon, the movie would have ended with Hitler fleeing on a airplane pack and cry that he’d get those Joes next time. It’s like if they made a cartoon series based on Saving Private Ryan and Captain Miller had a pun-loving dinosaur chum. It’s like turning Apocalypse Now into a theme park ride where you take the Wacky Water Slide Into Madness.

Actually, we’d be down for that one.

Henrik Magnusson also enjoys meaningless pop culture and online harassment masquerading as satire in comic form .</ i>

Yeah, this whole thing is still much “Make Love Not War” than Gears of War. War is bad .</ i ></ b>

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Read more: http :// www.cracked.com/ article_2 5200 _gi-joe-pro-war-toy-based-anti-war-movie.html



from
https://bestmovies.fun/2018/01/31/gi-joe-the-pro-war-toy-based-on-an-anti-war-movie/

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