It's one of my favorite things to do with my 14-year-old daughter. When the mood hits us, we have a daddy-daughter night. That generally consists of us grabbing a bite to eat and catching a movie. The latest choice was hers. One I happily submitted to because I'd wanted to see it myself:I'm not a film critic, and this isn't a film review. It's a review of a review. Actually, it's a story about a review, because it's a window into the world of modern identity politics.
The movie was a blast. Time flew by as we watched the classic American story about competition, innovation, ambition and the sheer thrill of driving fast cars. And—as my daughter was happy to report—the male stars were pretty easy on the eyes, for old guys. The American people agreed, as the movie sped to its own No. 1 finish..
The result, according to Elliott, is another"film celebrating those nostalgic golden days when white men ruled." If we don't tell these stories, if we leave them"dead and gone," as the writer recommends, because they are not sufficiently"woke," then how will we learn? How will we grow?
Good example of industry rivalry but infact there are full of intricacy, intimidation.
Excellent review of a movie review! The Ford v Ferrari race car engineering turned into [white men] v [colored? men] race color stereotyping.👍👍👍
I am not outraged What a Horrible opinion article