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Encyclopedia > Crossfire (movie)

Crossfire is a 1947 film which dealt with the theme of anti-semitism, as did that year's Academy Award for Best Picture winner, Gentleman's Agreement.


A Jew is killed by a recently demobilized drunken soldier simply because he is Jewish. The film also addresses the post World War II issue of soldiers being released from the military with no training other than as soldiers. The movie was based on the novel The Brick Foxhole by Richard Brooks, in which the victim was homosexual. The theme of homosexuality was considered too controversial for a film study at that time, however the subject of anti-semitism was highly topical and was therefore substituted. Robert Young and Robert Mitchum had major roles in the film.


Although the film was nominated for five Academy Awards, it did not win any. It has been suggested that this may have been partly due to the refusal by Dmytryk and Scott as members of the Hollywood ten, to testify before the House Unamerican Activities Committee.


Academy Award Nominations:


See Also: List of movies - List of actors - List of directors - List of documentaries - List of Hollywood movie studios


  Results from FactBites:
 
Crossfire (movie) - definition of Crossfire (movie) in Encyclopedia (226 words)
Crossfire is a 1947 film which dealt with the theme of anti-semitism, as did that year's Academy Award for Best Picture winner, Gentleman's Agreement.
The movie was based on the novel The Brick Foxhole by Richard Brooks, in which the victim was homosexual.
The theme of homosexuality was considered too controversial for a film study at that time, however the subject of anti-semitism was highly topical and was therefore substituted.
Crossfire (738 words)
A crossfire is a military term for the siting of weapons (often automatic weapons such as machine guns) so that their arcs of fire overlap.
The significance of crossfires is that they rendered useless what had been the most effective weapon of warfare since the Greek phalanx: massed infantry.
Three things changed between WWI and WWII that rendered the crossfire obsolete: the advance of armored vehicles (especially tanks), the advent of aerial bombardment, and the invention of the proximity fuse.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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