Objectivist Bad Guys?
Posted by Zero 11 years, 4 months ago to Entertainment
I was kinda harsh on Hiraghm the other day with his THREE DAYS OF A CONDOR post, so figured I'd stick my neck out with one of my favorites.
Frank, the titular Thief, is just about as close to an Objectivist as I've found in movie bad guys.
(If only he stole from the state instead of the private sector. Of course Ragnar not only stole from the state but he gave the money back to those it was taken from. Big difference!)
Anyway, one cool thing about this show, it reminds you that the distance between Objectivism and the average man is less than you might think. Frank makes a plan for his life and pursues it with competence and integrity. That really resonates with the viewer.
If you haven't seen it, I'm pretty sure it's on Netflix.
So, does anyone remember this one? What did you think? Thumbs up? Down? Meh?
Frank, the titular Thief, is just about as close to an Objectivist as I've found in movie bad guys.
(If only he stole from the state instead of the private sector. Of course Ragnar not only stole from the state but he gave the money back to those it was taken from. Big difference!)
Anyway, one cool thing about this show, it reminds you that the distance between Objectivism and the average man is less than you might think. Frank makes a plan for his life and pursues it with competence and integrity. That really resonates with the viewer.
If you haven't seen it, I'm pretty sure it's on Netflix.
So, does anyone remember this one? What did you think? Thumbs up? Down? Meh?
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a little off topic, but, do you enjoy Tarrentino movies like Pulp Fiction?
Leaving aside all the other victims of his unjust witch hunts perpetrated for profit and power, what of his damage to Roark's career? A lesser man would not have survived such a brutal attack.
Yet Gayle was "close enough" that the perfect man could be friends with him - long before he ever repented his sins!
.
In comparison, your judgement of Frank seems particularly harsh.
But Wynand? Really? That monster ruthlessly destroyed peoples live without a second thought.
That he eventually blew his brains out only shows the true depth of his sin.
Frank did nothing anywhere near as evil. And he was an independent - never Mafioso.
that someone able to make all of these distinctions and miss the most obvious moral questions seems to me to be more immoral than the clueless moocher who was raised to eat out of another's hand
I look for excellence not perfection. I notice when they come close and I'll give them a nod.
But I hear you. Glossing over the thievery is like saying Jeffery Dahmer was "this close" to being an Objectivist except he ate the bodies of his murdered victims.
(I'm not really saying that about Dahmer - I know nothing about him except I'm glad he's dead.)
But Frank really wasn't that far away. He was non-violent until given cause. His back story showed a huge chunk of his life was taken from him unjustly. The high-end thievin' was just his way of catching up and taking back.
Again, I'm not saying he got that right. I never called him an Objectivist. More of a kindred spirit. A Gayle Wynand. So close, but...
(Make no mistake, Gayle was a "bad guy".)
Perhaps we need to make a distinction:
"Objectivist" - one of the followers of Rand's "Objectivist" philosophy..
and "objectivist"... someone who behaves in an objective manner.
But I'll throw one out there for you-
"Catch Me If You Can." This real life story depicted in a Hollywood movie has a somewhat desirable ending. The kid ends up using his superior skills morally. Now whether he actually understood the moral difference , we don't know-after all, he was tired of running and didn't want to spend the rest of his life in jail.
And I thoroughly enjoyed the movie.