The only thing interesting about Howard Hughes was his Germ Obsession
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lvpilot1278 — 9 years ago(July 12, 2016 11:53 AM)
You bring up some very good points. I love this movie and I appreciate the man, mainly because I am a pilot and also interested in engineering and filmmaking, although I am phobia-less, and I have a family.
I think that in the overall realm of history, he did make some good contributions. If I were to believe the story about the CAB bill, that would have killed the modern airline industry as we know it. He did help further aircraft design overall, no matter how slight. Even though at the time, it was to further his own interests, he did end up making some headway into modern air travel.
But, at the end of the day, the man himself was pretty unimpressive save for his phobias and OCD. It would be interesting (to me at least) to see how he managed to overcome them during times of stress, like during his aircraft building, shooting movies, and senate hearing, only to fall back into the ocean of OCD and phobias once again after each success.
It's funny how there are so many movies dedicated to people of similar nature. Steve Jobs comes to mind. He was also someone who, while he had a vision and capital, was a person of no interesting qualities, and he has several movies about him. -
jjpiccio — 9 years ago(August 13, 2016 03:27 PM)
Never watched it but i would assume its another hate the white man film. Hey the 20s was a progressive era, they called it the roaring twentys but if time travel existed especially by Hollywood bigets, it probally be the hippie twentys. Very poor picture, slander. Canoli bashing rico law beep
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lonnieanixt — 9 years ago(October 17, 2016 02:01 PM)
The point is, that by the 1970s nobody really associated Hughes with anything else but being rich and being crazy. A kid growing up in the 1970s had no idea how Hughes got rich, it was just assumed he was born that way. Back then there was no internet, no youtube or Wikipedia. By 1970 he was forgotten, because he made no direct impact on humanity. It was fitting-he didn't care about other people and other people refused to give a damn about him. Once in a while an article in magazine would pop up about Hughes, but it was usually pure sensationalism, reporting on him and his germ obsession, how he refused to trim his toenails or cut his hair, stuff like that. By the 1970s he was no more that a side show, an oddity.