Open Mic at the iMonk Cafe: Movies For and About Hard Times

I hesitate to open movies as a topic for discussion when a chunk of my audience is of the generation that thinks Pineapple Express is great cinema, but here’s the question.

What are some films “For and About Hard Times” that the IM audience should check out?

Economic hardship has been a theme for a lot of good stories, books, films and music. Just looking at our Netflix ques for now, what movies have depictions of or lessons about hard economic times?

I especially would like to hear about older movies with America’s Great Depression as the backdrop. Older movies are real treasures, and a lot of us just don’t know about them.

(Facing the Giants does not qualify. Thank you.)

80 thoughts on “Open Mic at the iMonk Cafe: Movies For and About Hard Times

  1. Zorba the Great, is a great film to show the highs and low and what collective madness can do a group. I highly recommend this forgotten movie. I think I will watch it once a year just as a reminder.

    Like

  2. treebeard’s screen name reminded me of a couple of scenes:

    “I wish the ring had never come to me. I wish none of this had ever happened.”

    “So do all who live to see such times, but that is not for them to decide. All you have to decide is how to use the time that is given to you.”

    and again:

    “I didn’t think it would end this way . . .

    “End? No, the journey doesn’t end here. Death is just another path… One we must all take. The gray rain-curtain of this world falls back, and all changes to silver glass… And then you see it.”

    “What? Gandalf? … See what?”

    “White shores…and beyond…the far green country, under a swift sunrise.”

    “Well, that isn’t so bad.”

    “No… No, it isn’t.”

    Like

  3. I’ll third the “Purple Rose of Cairo”! A delightful movie. And it’s a fitting recommendation for helping us think about how he deal with hard times, particularly in the context of this thread.

    Like

  4. Didn’t see anyone mention it, but I just watch Kit Kitteridge with my 5yo twins. Very good, more recent movie on the depiction of how folks easily fell on hard times. Foreclosures, soup kitchens, working for food. It explained who “hoboes” were in terms they could understand.

    Good family movie. Very relevant.

    Like

  5. This is off the subject of movies, but lately I’ve been watching reruns of “Little House on the Prairie,” and have been blown away. I had forgotten how deeply moving that show is. The episodes are often both tragic and uplifting. Very good viewing for these hard times, reminding us what really matters in life, and treating faith as something essential and respectable.

    Like

  6. Wow, I need to be more careful in editing my comments– I didn’t mean to have the same sentence in two paragraphs!

    Like

  7. I vote for “Fried Green Tomatoes” (I was hoping I’d be the first to list it)

    Towanda, Baby!

    If you want a fairly good film. very suited for younger children, Feature Films for Families made one called “Split Infinity.”

    Really, it’s not bad, kind of “Back to the future” meets “The Waltons” (without any technology, though)

    Like

  8. Cynthia,

    I guess whether or not one prefers to be around “happy” people depends greatly on one’s understanding of the word “happy.” Living with a physical disability from birth, I have found, too often, that people who greatly emphasize being “happy” refuse to really think about painful realities of life and don’t seem to want to empathize with other peoples’ pain. However, I’m not saying that you are such a person.

    My life has been quite hard at times. In addition to having endured various losses, I have Cerebral Palsy, use a wheelchair, cannot drive, and am currently unemployed. I guess whether or not one prefers to be around “happy” people depends greatly on one’s understanding of the word “happy.”

    From a Christian perspective, A person can have a happiness in Christ and still be willing to watch movies and read books which deal with tough issues, such as economic hardship. I don’t understand why one’s willingness to watch such films or read such books *necessarily* means that one is dwelling on unhappiness.

    Like

  9. on 23 Feb 2009 at 1:45 pm
    Headless Unicorn Guy;

    You are assuming that I have not been poor, hungry, homeless and that I am smug about it. My life has been very hard. I would rather be around a happy person then person that dwells on what is wrong and complains all the time.

    Please to not assume that I am evangelical Christian. This is why I do not and will not ever again join a church.

    Please do not put people down because they do not feel they way you do, I don’t think that it is very christian like do you?

    Like

  10. “Wit” and “Shadowlands” – both incredible character studies of protagonists dealing with their entire worlds being upended. Both with redemptive endings. I can’t watch them without crying.

    Like

  11. Totally add my Third to “Cinderella Man”– it really captures the gritty side of the Depression.

    How about:

    “Fried Green Tomatoes” (I know, I know, but it has its moments)

    “A Bridge Too Far” (parachuting into the middle of two SS Panzer Divisions definitely qualifies as Hard Times)

    “Flags of Our Fathers” (and its companion from the japanese side, “Letters from Iwo Jima”)

    and lastly:
    “Galaxy Quest” (seriously– who can’t identify with having to fight off giant Lobster aliens from outer space?) 😉

    Like

  12. “The Godfather II”‘s historical sequences tell a good story about the rise of a young mafia don’s son from refugee to kingpin.

    “The Apostle” shows how a preacher on the run from killing his wife’s lover (who happens to be their church’s youth pastor) survives with nothing but what he can carry. He lives in a tent in the yard of a handicapped man, fixes cars, and works as a short-order cook while pastoring, evangelizing, and hosting a radio show.

    “Schindler’s List” has good characterizations of what people will do in order to survive.

    “The Man Who Broke 1,000 Chains.”

    “A Scanner Darkly”: Spence, if you want to show a fictional movie about a fictional drug that depicts what real drugs will do to you, this is it.

    “Boyz in the Hood”: I thought Ice Cube’s final monologue, when he was heartbroken about all his dead friends and how his mother did not love him, as he predicted his own death, to walk back across the street dressed like a slob in slippers, kind of summed the lifestyle.

    “Office Space” encapsulates the rage against the machine most office workers feel. I suggested at a Christian’s New Year’s party that we watch it, b/c even if we wandered around in the party talking, no matter where the movie was, it would be showing a scene almost all of us could identify with.

    Like

  13. Cynthia,

    I think I understand where you are coming from, but there is a problem in evangelical Christianity that is the exact opposite of “dwelling on what is wrong.” Far too many Christians seem to want to just smile all the time and not even *think* about the fact that we do live in a fallen world. — Christopher Lake

    Somehow I don’t think that was what Larry Norman had in mind when he ended “Only Visiting This Planet” with “This World is Not My Home; I’m Just Passin’ Thru…”

    Nothing feels so phony as Shiny Happy Christians when everything hits the fan. All they end up projecting is smug indifference when your starving and/or hurting.

    Now for Depresson movies, anybody here seen the opening scenes (and constant undercurrent) of Pter Jackson’s version of King Kong?

    Like

  14. To End All Wars
    Sutherland is an American, as are others in the film and they are going through some very difficult times in a Japanese Prisoner of war camp during WWII.

    Great Movie. Powerful Ending, and that is an understatement.

    Like

  15. Empire of the Sun, directed by Stephen Spielberg. It’s at the same time heartbreaking and heroic, seeing a young Christian Bale live through the experience of being in a Japanese internment camp.

    Like

  16. These all had the Great Depression as the backdrop and are good movies:

    They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?
    The Color Purple
    The Purple Rose of Cairo

    Like

  17. Oh, sorry, and this one — “My Man Godfrey.” Again, screwball comedy that says more truth about poverty and striving and hope than any ABC documentary. Heart of the Great Depression, lots of the folk who don’t/didn’t/aren’t getting it (telling you part of how we got here in this mess, Mr. Madoff/Stanford/Thain, who would wander through the party at the opening just fine, without even a visit to the costuming department needed), and a taste of what a Hooverville might have been like and how (and how not) to reach out into one of ’em today.

    Like

  18. It’s been said twice at least here, but “Places In the Heart” and the amazing closing scene is all rooted right in the heart of Hard Times, USA; bookending that would be “The Trip To Bountiful.” Even teenagers start to get un-restless and attentive after the first half hour, Geraldine Page is that compelling as Carrie.

    And Preston Sturges’ “Sullivan’s Travels,” where the root gag for “O Brother Where Art Thou” comes from — kind of a meta approach, but the realization at the end of the film is as heartfelt as Sturges could manage, and he was right up there with Capra. (I’m assuming the entire Capraiad for the purposes of this discussion, not just “It’s a Wonderful Life.”)

    My big puzzlement is whether or not “Miracle at Morgan’s Creek” applies . . . maybe, maybe not. And if you want to go full on rural, Ozark style, there’s “The Shepherd of the Hills,” which even gives you a touch of The Duke. Which reminds me, in closing, that “The Quiet Man” is not only a March 17 staple, but has much to say about pride in poverty and facing your inner demons. For church purposes, you’d probably get a warning on domestic violence/abuse grounds for affirming the movie which contains the line “Here’s a stick for which to beat the lovely lady,” although Sean does toss the branch aside unused very shortly after receiving it.

    Like

  19. I’ll stand behind Cinderella Man, and I’d also throw out On The Waterfront with Marlon Brando. Cry, the Beloved Country was an alright movie, but a better book. And speaking of books, I’d also recommend reading What is the What by Dave Eggers.

    Like

  20. Geoff d
    “The Unforgiven with Clint Eastwood opened up with a scene of great poverty with Clint wallowing in the mud chasing pigs and his children living in destitute conditions.”

    Actually I thought it showed him as someone who had settled down. For the times he wasn’t bad off at all. A house, barn(?), livestock, land, money for a headstone, a horse (they cost real money back then), etc…

    Wallowing in the mud chasing pigs is what you got to do if you raised pigs. It just came with the territory.

    Like

  21. Seabiscuit is a depression era story of a horse who had broken his leg, the owner, and the one-eyed jockey who were losers on their own, but as a team soared to victory.
    I also enjoyed Sounder.

    Like

  22. Cynthia,

    I think I understand where you are coming from, but there is a problem in evangelical Christianity that is the exact opposite of “dwelling on what is wrong.” Far too many Christians seem to want to just smile all the time and not even *think* about the fact that we do live in a fallen world.

    Life in a fallen world often does have pain, and there is a middle ground between not even facing that pain and then unhealthily dwelling on it. As I understand it, Christianity calls us to live in that “middle ground” in this life. Watching movies which deal with hard times is not necessarily dwelling on darkness and pain.

    Like

  23. I think a great movie that gets very little recognition is “I’d Climb the Highest Mountain”

    It’s about a methodist circuit preacher in North GA circa turn of the century. I just think it’s great.

    Anybody else like it?

    Like

  24. The Unforgiven with Clint Eastwood opened up with a scene of great poverty with Clint wallowing in the mud chasing pigs and his children living in destitute conditions.

    Like

  25. Hmmmm, hard times movies. I see folks have already mentioned some of my personal faves, “The Best Years of Our Lives,” “It’s a Wonderful Life,” “Wings of Desire,” and “My Man Godfrey.”

    Two ‘purple’ movies set in the Depression but made in the 80s — How about “The Purple Rose of Cairo,” and “The Color Purple”?

    “Housekeeping” comes to mind . . . the Depression isn’t its backdrop, but it might as well be.

    Like

  26. Why must we dwell on what is wrong, don’t we know? Why not just think and do good and know that God is with us and everything is going to be okay? should we not be grateful for what we have, no matter how small it maybe?

    Like

  27. Hmm, I just realized that you asked especially for films about America during hard economic times, and three of the five movies that I listed are set in other countries! I’ll try to think of films closer to what you wanted!

    Like

  28. “The Hiding Place” (the 1975 film version of Corrie Ten Boom’s story– if only all “Christian films” were this good!)

    “Sophie Scholl: The Last Days” (a German film about a young woman’s involvement in The White Rose, a Christian anti-Hitler student movement)

    “The Best Years of Our Lives” (an ironic title in some ways, and I think, deliberately so– WWII from the POV of American soldiers returning home. A classic American film from, I believe, 1945.)

    “The Seventh Seal” (Ingmar Bergman’s Swedish classic about the struggle for faith, and against death, during a plague)

    “A Boy’s Life” (Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio (sic?) as, respectively, an abusive father and his son)

    Like

  29. Places in the Heart, a Sally Field movie is a beautiful portrayal of a mother struggling to survive and thrive in the difficult aftermath of losing her husband. It’s one of the only times John Malcovich plays a harmless malcontent.

    Like

  30. “Cabaret (pre-war Europe, but still…)”

    One of the most powerful movie scenes I’ve ever seen is:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMVql9RLP34

    And if you’ve never seen the movie you should play it without watching then again while watching and see if you were anywhere close to figuring it out the first time.

    Like

  31. On a different take.

    Gladiator
    If they think they have a hard life now…

    Ben Hur
    Life isn’t fair but it is just.

    1776
    Life is never neat and tidy.

    Godfather I & II (NBC TV version in order)
    Pursuit of greed never turns out very well.

    And make popcorn they way we did when iMonk and I and others were a kid. Oil, stove, a pot, and a hand full of kernels.

    I was someone ostracized letting my 5 and 8 grade kids watch Gladiator by the church crowd. I replied I wanted them to see the world as it existed in the 1st century.

    Like

  32. Are you serious? 33 responses and no one has mentioned the Mad Max/Road Warrior movies? They’re not so much movies as they are documentaries, folks.

    Like

  33. I show God Grew Tired of Us to all my students. I have two boys who were in refugee camps at one point.

    Slumdog won’t come any closer than 2 hours away. Sometimes….

    Like

  34. City of Joy
    Hotel Rawanda
    Slumdog Millionaire
    God Grew Tired of Us

    All make one realize how good we have it in America, even in the tough times. And the last one on the list is a great reminder that love and community is a lot more important than stuff.

    Like

  35. To Kill A Mockingbird; This Property Is Condemned; Spencer’s Mountain; Cabaret (pre-war Europe, but still…)

    During hard economic times, I’d much rather watch a good WWII (or WWII era) film, I think. Escapism for me.

    Like

  36. Most depression era movies actually tried to take people’s minds of hard times so they showed rich people rolling around in excessive wealth.

    If you don’t mind having a love story element to your films then I would suggest some screwball comedies (which were really popular in the 30’s and 40’s). They usually involve the divide between the classes as a major plot element, showing the ridiculousness and vanity of the rich. Someone mentioned Sullivan’s Travels (which although good, is not my favorite).

    Some other good ones are…

    It Happened One Night (won best picture in 1934)

    My Man Godfrey (1936)

    His Girl Friday (1940)

    The Philadelphia Story(1940, has less emphasis on the ridiculousness of the wealthy although the element is still there)

    Other movies I recommend are…

    Wings of Desire (1987). My absolute favorite film. I think it really encapsulates what it is to be human. It’s set in Berlin and involves an angel who decides to become human. He discovers the small pleasures of life without a cent to his name. It’s in German, so you’ll have to deal with subtitles. Don’t let that stop you from seeing it! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioGGQAkNKow

    The Straight Story(1999). Probably David Lynch’s only film with a positive outlook on humanity. It’s based on the true story of a man who unable to see well enough to drive a car, decides to drive a riding lawn mower across the country to see his ill brother. The protagonist is a poor working man, so I think people in hard economic times could definitely empathize with him. It’s a slow, but beautiful film with a lot of small grains of truth about life. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OnsVDKjhpc

    Hope that helped.

    Like

  37. And a couple more:

    “Annie” and “The Color Purple.” Both filmed in the 1980’s, but set during the Depression.

    Like

  38. Movies: I love Jan Troell’s “The Emigrants” and “The New Land,” which follow a small group of Swedes who come to the US in the middle of the 19th c. The 1st film is very neo-realist and gritty; the 2nd is more impressionistic.

    Not really about “hard times” per se, but still… Woody Allen’s “Radio Days.”

    Like

  39. >….It’s supposedly a modern retelling of the birth of Christ…lol

    Uh…..uh……must not be the movie I saw. A few clunky parallels, but….

    the novel makes much more sense in this regard, though I doubt P.D. James ever intended to make it a “modern retelling” of anything. It’s a dystopian novel where characters have to face many kinds of moral and spiritual (as well as practical) challenges. There are allusions to Biblical passages (the book’s title, for one) and an early version of The Book of Common Prayer.

    The screenplay diverges from the book on many important points, too.

    Like

  40. >….It’s supposedly a modern retelling of the birth of Christ…lol

    Uh…..uh……must not be the movie I saw. A few clunky parallels, but….

    Like

  41. I recommend “Children of Men”. The whole movie is mired in a violent, apocalyptic, chaotic setting. It’s supposedly a modern retelling of the birth of Christ…lol. But seriously, I highly recommend it!!!

    Like

  42. Neither American, or about economic hardship, but the movie Osama is fantastic. It’s about a young girl struggling to live under Taliban rule.

    It’s a sobering must see.

    Like

  43. Going out on a limb here: Grave of the Fire Flies. Excellent Japanese anime about two children orphaned during WWII.

    Like

  44. I can’t believe I’m about to say this.

    “It’s a Wonderful Life”

    Well… it is about hard times!

    Like

  45. Coal Miner’s Daughter
    Bonnie and Clyde
    The Homecoming: A Christmas Story
    (The Waltons pilot)

    Spencer’s Mountain
    October Sky
    The Pride of Jesse Hallam

    Like

  46. Charlie Chaplin’s “Modern Times” (1936)

    Modern Times opens with a critique of the mundane factory-life forced on many in the early 20th century, and it moves from there into the Depression Era, with Chaplin’s ‘Little Tramp’ suffering alongside the other unemployed and destitute. It’s of course a comedy (absolutely hilarious)–and my favorite of his films–but it’s also very astute and very poignant.

    It may be hard to find, but the movie is excellent.

    Like

  47. Oh, and pick up some Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly music – there is a tribute album ” A Vision Shared” that is ok, but not up to the originals

    There is a DVD of the performers doing the song with some period material, etc

    However I have not seen it – i just have the album (yes, vinyl)

    Like

  48. Great- the way to deal with hard times is to become a hit man for the Irish mob 🙂

    That is a excellent movie.

    I’ve never heard of American Madness.

    Like

  49. O Brother Where Art Thou – excellent

    Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men – the most classic of all Depression era novels, made into movies

    American Madness (forget It’s a wonderful life – American Madness is a far better Capra film about the depression)

    Mr. Deeds goes to Town

    While violent (extremely) – Road to Perdition

    Like

  50. Sullivan’s Travels is a good Depression-era comedy about a filmmaker who attempts to understand and tell the true story of the poor. The Coen Brothers took the title of “O Brother Where Art Thou” from this film.

    Like

Leave a comment