This one may surprise you--"Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead." Not exactly an Objectivist theme to it, but it is the only movie I've seen (prior to Atlas) with a woman named Dagny as the female lead--or in any role--who at one point tells her lover: "I thought we were making an exception..."
It is an imaginative movie, complete with it's own made up catch phrases and a lot of really interesting scenes.
The novelist/screenwriter James Clavell was an advocate for capitalism and free markets, which comes across in all of his work. Try the movie "King Rat" (1965 B&W) about a free market operating in a prison camp, and the epic Shogun (TV mini series) about an Englishman surviving in a strange land using only his wits and intelligence. Both novels are excellent.
I watched this movie first on a "pirate" streaming service then again on Amazon. I am amazed that this movie was ignored by the public, well done and terrific story. Don't want to sound like a broken record but I repeat my candidate for an objectivist themed movie "A Most Violent Year" because it depicts a man of principles, no matter the consequences.
Yes, there is a DVD. If yo don't get it in the US, I will buy one for you and give it to Dale in June. It did well in Spain. Christian groups opposed it in the U.S., and it had a very limited theatrical release.
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It is an imaginative movie, complete with it's own made up catch phrases and a lot of really interesting scenes.
Try the movie "King Rat" (1965 B&W) about a free market operating in a prison camp, and the epic Shogun (TV mini series) about an Englishman surviving in a strange land using only his wits and intelligence. Both novels are excellent.
Don't want to sound like a broken record but I repeat my candidate for an objectivist themed movie "A Most Violent Year" because it depicts a man of principles, no matter the consequences.