You know, you got to join together, serve your duty and beat those commies, which is communist in itself but that's a different debate altogether.
Though I think, if you viewed it as a real-life story (it really had that impact on me - like watching the life of the heroes day by day, almost minute by minute), the singing scene would have its importance as something that unified the heroes. It's boring to watch, but from my own experience I know such singing with guitar makes miracles at making friends with somebody. It's similar to sitting at a campfire with someone. Before the scene they all still kept their own separate problems, and didn't trust one another completely, after that they were one. I hope you know what I mean. This is what makes me think the singing scene should be there, only maybe a bit shorter.
I don't think it is. You could just as well say that it's nazist in itself or whatever. The danger is not in joining, the danger is in losing your own personality in the unity. Would you say this board's members are communists because they joined together to persuade the world to believe in Leone's greatness?
I mean, that's exactly what I liked on Rio Bravo. It wasn't like "join together and believe in the same things and be one and everything will be allright". The people were different, and often not very willing to join, and even after they joined, they kept having problems with it.
I understand the intention, but shouldn't a movie be, y'know, entertaining? This isn't a Goddard film, it's a Howard Hawks Western.
I was being facetious when I made the original post. In no way do I think that the characters or their motivations were communist. I was just playing on the notion of how Rio Bravo was made as a response to High Noon, which was interpeted by many as an allegory to McCarthyism (not to bring that Hollywood 10 crap to light, I don't want to discuss it). I guess I should use more emoticons from now on.
My entire reason for making the quip was that it makes more sense to create a film about the strengths of individualism, if hatred of communism is a catalyst for making a film.
Well, agree to disagree. I am quite tired of defending a comment made in jest.