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    | | |  | Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? |  | List Price: $24.99 Your Price: $22.49
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| Product Info | Reviews |  | Features:
 
 
 Description:
 
 As those who are old enough to have lived through the Great Depression  disappear, the era seems more and more remote; it's nearly impossible for later  generations to understand just how desperate things were in the United States in  the 1930s. Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? captures not only the history  but also the culture of the time in a rather unusual documentary format. Totally  without the benefit of narration, the movie mixes newsreel footage with clips  from Hollywood films to tell the story, from the stock market crash through  Pearl Harbor. Movie-minded viewers will easily recognize footage from They  Made Me a Criminal, Public Enemy, Golddiggers of 1933,  Employee's Entrance, Little Caesar, Lady Killer, I Was a  Fugitive from a Chain Gang, and countless other Hollywood films from the  time--some classics, some more obscure. The scope of the film covers not only  historical landmarks such as the Dust Bowl, FDR's election, and the New Deal,  but dance marathons and the Louis-Schmeling heavyweight fight for a  comprehensive look at the country's social climate. The formula works well, for  the most part; especially before the imposition of the Hays Code chilled  Hollywood's tone, the '30s saw the birth of the "social consciousness" picture  that dealt with topical issues in straightforward ways. Brother only  falls down when it attempts to wrap up the film by bringing it up to the present  time (1975, anyway); its ending seems superfluous, tacked-on. Still, for history  buffs and movie fans alike, this is an interesting account of a pivotal decade  in American history. --Jerry Renshaw
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