MovieChat Forums > High Noon (1952) Discussion > Cooper was a Republican....

Cooper was a Republican....


I don't get the pro Communist angle of this movie.

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[deleted]

It's not so much pro-Communist as it is anti-blacklisting. Very different things, and I think the more conservative somebody is the more appalled they should be by the concept of a government committee using muscle and threats to drive people out of work for their ideological, political, or philosophical positions and opinions.

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Well said!

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This McCarthyism interpretation is certainly popular these days but it's not the only framework nor by any means the best fit, IMO.

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Agreed.

It's too good of a movie to be shackle to pure allegory; it's not confined to just being an anti-HUAC film.

What other lenses would you apply to the film?

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[deleted]

Yeah, it's not allegorical (no person or persons "represent" the HUAC, for instance), but it is applicable to that situation, that time, and the nature of blacklisting. But because it doesn't get preachy, it just feels real and true. As you say: it's human nature. In fact, because of this, a person might read a totally different message into the movie, warning about clumping into a group and forgetting the value of the individual (ie, anti-Communist!)

I found it to be a great movie, very nuanced, and the blacklisting thing didn't leap out at me until I was reading up on it later.

The film was filled with great characters and, yes, Kane's wife was probably the most sensible: knowing when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em, but also arguing (perhaps rightly) that Kane should just get out of town with her and prioritize her and their marriage above old debts and the village. Then again, who knows what would have happened to the town if Kane hadn't stood up to the criminal element moving in?

You're right: the Mexican lady cut and ran, but I did love that character. I got the feeling that she might actually have been useful in a fight, which made her boarding of the train all the more tragic.

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[deleted]

I wholly agree with your sentiments, especially the hypocritical turn of events in the present. I too avoided watching this until recently and was surprised at the subtle script and the McCarthy parallel. If it was remade today they'd be jamming that down the viewers throat.

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What you call communism here I see as anti-authoritarianism -- absolutely, not a Republican perspective NOW, but 70 years ago partisan politics didn't require anyone to forgo their autonomy.

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Cooper was against blacklisting.

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It's anti-Trumpism.

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