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6/10
"There's An Eagle Blue In The White House Too"
bkoganbing16 September 2011
The Road Is Open Again containing a song of the same name was a short subject produced by Warner Brothers in support of the centerpiece of the New Deal's Depression Legislation, the National Recovery Act. In this motion picture studio known as the 'workingman's studio' management was obviously in support of the New Deal or at least in support of the folks who bought movie tickets and supported the NRA.

Dick Powell is a frustrated songwriter trying to come up with a marching song for the new National Recovery Administration when he gets visited by the spirits of Washington, Lincoln, and Wilson played by Alan Dinehart, Charles Middleton, and Samuel S. Hinds respectively. They explain to Powell what the NRA is and does and Powell responds like an eager student of economics and comes up with a song based on a phrase given him by the Washington spirit. Alan Dinehart assures us that the Federalist George Washington would have approved of the steps that his successor Franklin D. Roosevelt was taking in these times of crisis.

Of course that's all subject to debate and it is still being debated today as to how effective the NRA was in its life. With its various industrial codes and mechanisms for price fixing and collective bargaining for labor, the NRA was called both fascistic, socialistic, and Communism depending on who you listened to. The labor provisions did survive in the later Wagner Act down to this day. The NRA which was the closest thing to a planned economy we've ever experimented with was declared unconstitutional by a unanimous Supreme Court which included the Justices that normally voted to sustain FDR's New Deal legislation.

The symbol of the NRA was the Blue Eagle and businesses who supported it displayed the Blue Eagle logo. Membership was voluntary, but non-membership could get you boycotted and shunned like a sinning Amish. Note that films produced in this time period showed the logo, Warner Brothers most especially.

As Dick Powell was a noted Republican in later life I wonder how he looked back on this film.
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3/10
Some political propaganda here!
planktonrules23 February 2021
Propaganda is neither a good thing nor a bad one...it can be either, or something in between. "The Road Is Open Again" is, despite coming from Warner Brothers, blatant government propaganda designed to justify price controls and other socialist programs during the Depression though the NRA. In fact, the US Supreme Court later declared the National Recovery Act as unconstitutional, as it essentially turned much of the economy over to the federal government...something more common in much of the world today, but pretty radical for 1933.

The film begins with a song writer (Dick Powell) trying to write a song about how magnificent the National Recovery Act is. But he soon falls asleep and soon dreams that Woodrow Wilson, Abe Lincoln and George Washington visit him and encourage him in his task. What follows is somewhat catchy tune sung by Powell and a chorus that is pretty lame to watch because the message is so blatantly political. In other words, for folks going to the theaters for some escapism, it must have been a bit annoying to have such a message blasted at them!

Whether or not the NRA was a good idea, watching this limp film is a bit tough....though for historical reasons, it is a very important short.
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