Marxists at the Movies
đŹ The Breakfast Club (1985): The Revolution That Stayed in the Library It's April, and we're crashing Saturday detention â Marxist-style. đ«â Marxists at the Movies takes John Hughes's generation-defining classic through a dual-track analysis: Marxist critique meets developmental psychology and neuroscience. We're talking Baumrind's parenting styles, Elkind's Imaginary Audience, Hot Cognition, and the specific way high-control environments shape the adolescent brain â and the film that almost named all of it but flinched at the last second. We cover the studio interference that lobotomized the original cut, the toxic relationship modeling nobody interrogated in 1985, the blinding whiteness of Shermer's "universal" empathy â and we make the case that Ally Sheedy essentially co-wrote this movie and got a makeover scene for her trouble. đšâïž This month's Comrade of the Week? You already know. Don't you forget about her. đ± Executive Producer Myron approves this message from a sunny windowsill. â° Patreon members got this one a full month early! Join the CineMarch Media Information Club at patreon.com/cinemarchmedia â Marxists at the Movies starts at just $7/month, or go Full Spectrum Comrade at $12/month and add CultFroggy to your roster. đ Everything we do lives at cinemarchmedia.com Leftist nostalgia for the people. đœïžđš
45 episodios
Comentarios
0SĂ© la primera persona en comentar
ÂĄRegĂstrate ahora y Ășnete a la comunidad de Marxists at the Movies!