Anachronism: Reference to John Wayne
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — 1941
ericsugarland — 11 years ago(August 20, 2014 01:43 PM)
The Slim Pickens characters tells his captors, "I bet your going to bomb John Wayne's house." While Wayne had been in movies for more than a decade at this point his persona was not yet tied to the American character and the military the way it would be by the early 50's. It doesn't make sense. He should have said Clark Cable or Gary Cooper or someone like that.
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ericsugarland — 11 years ago(August 21, 2014 11:21 AM)
He had been in countless westerns in the 30's but he was hardly an icon. These were B-Westerns for Saturday afternoon. Stagecoach put him on the road to stardom but it would take until the late 40's and early 50's before his status was established.
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HevyChevy — 11 years ago(December 31, 2014 06:50 PM)
Something to remember, Eric, is that many of the people fighting the war at that time, grew up watching John Wayne (among others) a decade before, in Saturday matinee's at their local theatres.
It would be a natural assumption that these people would not only be aware of John Wayne, but already consider him "iconic", having witnessed his exploits on (literally) a weekly basis, when they were of a more impressionable age.
On top of that, Wayne had already filmed John Ford's vaunted blockbuster,
Stagecoach
, which made him an almost overnight international star.
By 1941, he could already be considered a major Movie Star to people of all ages.
and that goes for not only for Americans, but anyone in the world who grew up watching him at the movie theatre.like the Japanese we had just begun fighting.
Tell me, you love your country?
Well, I've just died for it.