Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 2 | Page 11

The Black Panther Party, Hollywood, and Popular Memory 7 of Woody Allen’s 1983 Zelig) employed by Zemeckis to place Forrest in juxtaposition with historical figures such as George Wallace, John Lennon, John Kennedy, and Lyndon Johnson. Conservative commentator Michael Medved found the film delightful, observing that Forrest Gump’s “unshakable innocence gives him a unique perspective on America’s loss of innocence during the 1960s and ’70s.” Medved, the author of a best-selling diatribe denouncing Hollywood’s embracing of anti-Americanism and a left-of-center political ideology, encountered nothing to complain about in the Zemeckis film’s right wing revisionist history of the 1960s as a period in which America lost its way but eventually triumphed through innocence and righteousness.^ Less ideological critics than Medved were fond of Hanks and the special effects, but discovered much to ponder in Forrest Gump's politics and examination of recent American history. For example, Janet Maslin of the New York Times foimd everything about Forrest Gump to be “a little too good to be true.” David Ansen of Newsweek described the core of the film as “disappointingly soft and elusive,” while Leslie Felperin Sharman, writing in the film journal Sight and Sounds asserted that Forrest Gump was a “feel-good movie” for wfiich it was “hard to feel anything at all.”^ Other commentaries, however, were perceptive to note that the politics of Forrest Gump were more reactionary than glib or shallow. On an ideological level, Forrest Gump seeks to discredit the political activism, social experimentation, and racial and gender liberation espoused during the social revolution of the 1960s. The film seems to suggest that what America needs is a strong-willed, albeit innocent, male to restore the traditional patriarchal and capitalistic order. In this scenario, Forrest Gump becomes Ronald Reagan returning America to the Puritan vision of a “city upon a hill.” Thus, J. Hoberman of the Village Voice concludes, “This bleak, yet saccharine tale of simple goodness triumphing over retardation, amputation, assassination, exploitation, intolerance, child abuse and AIDS embodies a sentimental populism that suggests Oprah as well as Capra. The right wing nature of Gump’s populism is evident in the film’s uncritical celebration of American virtue. David Sterritt of the Christian Science Monitor observes that Gump is a fairy tale about how great life would be if Americans would “stop fretting about improving the world and put our money on old-fashioned gumption.” The film’s warm embrace of capitalism and the competitive spirit is apparent in that Forrest, a successful football player for Bear Bryant at the University of Alabama, is able to make a small fortune in the shrimp business. Thus, Harry Pearson, Jr., writing for Films in Review, argues, “American values are what this picture is out to triumphantly trumpet, down to success as a jock and success in building upon that vestige of the ft'ee enterprise system, the small business.”® Clearly, the women’s movement of the 1960s was a threat to the capitalistic patriarchal order, and Forrest Gump turns into a male “rescue”