Changes

Essay:Greatest Conservative Movies

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/* Live-action films */
|A 37-year-old father reverts to age 17 through a visit to a mysterious janitor and learns that choosing family, which he strives to support however he can, and life over death and possible material riches is much more rewarding and fulfilling even if it is not always apparent. The film stands up for [[abstinence]] and self-respect, and contains a strong speech for both of them, as in this quote: "Because there is no one that I'm in love with. It's called making love, isn't it? Maybe I'm old fashioned, but I think that means you do it with someone you love. And preferably when you're married, when you're ready to take that love and turn it into a baby." The concept of fatherhood is painted positively as well because he ultimately learns he was reverted to age 17 so he could see things from his children's perspectives and help them resolve their problems.
|$64,167,069<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=17again.htm</ref>
|-
|''42''
|2013
|PG-13
|Bio pick of American icon [[Jackie Robinson]]
|$95,020,213
|-
|''90 Minutes in Heaven''
|G
|A city-weary Los Angeles construction worker and his family settle for a more idyllic life in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, never to return. Two sequels followed in 1978 and 1979.
|-|''Air Force One''|1997|R|The strong and courageous U.S. President James Marshall (Harrison Ford), a military veteran, takes an uncompromising stance against Russian terrorists who hijack his airplane. The major themes include family, authority, respect for the military, and sacrifice for the greater good.|$172,956,409
|-
|''Alone Yet Not Alone''
|[[Christianity]]'s impact in building the United States is explored in depth. Liberals were shaken when it received an Oscar nomination, proving that there is still a prevalent conservative voice in Hollywood.
|$887,851<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=aloneyetnotalone.htm</ref>
|-
|''Alpha''
|2018
|PG-13
|This film set in Europe 20,000 years ago tells the story of a human and his relation with a wolf. It promotes family and friendship values with both the teenaged tribesman's relation with his family and with the wolf. It also is pro-[[hunting]] and pro-[[fishing]] as the human learns the importance of killing a rabbit in order to feed the wolf. The wolf and human also go fishing and hunt bison and wild boars.
|$11.7 million
|-
|''[[Amazing Grace (movie)|Amazing Grace]]''
|2012
|PG
|Widely considered to be the crowning achievement of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, this game-changing superhero film brings together several superheroes, all of whom previously starred in related films adapted from Marvel Comics, as they join the Norse god Thor (who is less of a god and more of an alien in this universe, thus averting support for paganism) in stopping his evil brother Loki from conquering the world with an extra-terrestrial extraterrestrial mercenary army. Despite being the first Marvel feature released by the liberal conglomerate [[Walt Disney Company]] and being directed by liberal Joss Whedon, the film condemns totalitarian ideals, namely Loki's actions. A pivotal scene has Loki forcing innocent Germans to kneel before him, but an old man refuses to submit to "men like him", comparing Loki's actions to Hitler and Nazi Germany's actions. Arriving to confront Loki in the next instant, Steve Rogers/Captain America references Hitler and Johan Schmidt/Red Skull's attempt at taking the world via a similar ideology. Furthermore, the film condemns communism because the heroic assassin character Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow, who works with the superheroes, implies that she regrets her time as a Soviet agent due to having to conduct various atrocities. Law-enforcement is depicted positively, too, as they join the Avengers in their climactic battle to defend New York City when Loki's army invades. Finally, while the film doesn't seem to favor any religion or non-religion in particular, it paints Christians positively when Captain America, before pursuing a fighting Thor and Loki, tells Black Widow, "There's only one God, ma'am, and I'm pretty sure He doesn't dress like that!" in an obvious reference to the Biblical God. Given that a lot of planning went into ''The Avengers'' even before Disney's acquisition of Marvel, it should come as no surprise that these conservative subtexts shine through.
|$1.519 billion
|-
|Based on true events of a U.S. military campaign in Somalia, in which 18 U.S. soldiers died fighting their way out of a Mogadishu mission, American bravery and comradeship are heralded in the face of impossible odds against Islamic terrorism.
|$172,000,000
|-
|''Black Panther''
|2018
|PG-13
|Based on the eponymous Marvel Comics superhero, the eighteenth installment of the Marvel Cinematic Universe tells of a young African king, who gains enhanced strength from consumption of a majestic heart-shaped herb, fighting against the force of a black supremacist, who seeks to take the king's throne. In the name of morality, this king, or "The Black Panther," seeks to destroy the villain and his plans to overthrow the other races and governments of the world. The Black Panther recognizes both the importance of helping those in need, as well as not going beyond one's governmental authority. Though there are plenty of pagan religious references, the film appeals in some ways to a general sense of Christian morality and governmental justice, and it never diverts into political correctness about black supremacism.
|$704,000,000.
|-
|''Black Sunday''
|2014
|PG-13
|A widowed father of three daughters and a divorced mother of two sons accidentally end up staying together in a resort where the parents fall in love. This shows how important it is for a family to have both a mother and a father. Plus it is against the homosexual agenda, as it favors traditional gender roles because the father’s oldest daughter gradually gives up her tomboyish style. Also has a celeberation celebration of baseball as well.
|$46,294,610
|-
|2014
|PG-13
|Patriotic superhero and Avengers co-leader Steve Rogers/Captain America unravels a government conspiracy involving HYDRA, the Nazi terror group he fought in World War II, and tries reconnecting with his long-lost best friend James "Bucky" Barnes, who, after being frozen in suspended animation for decades like Rogers was, is now a brainwashed assassin known only as "The Winter Soldier". All the while, he stays true to principles that the United States was founded on, unwilling to see them destroyed. The filmmakers based the villains of this film on the NSA and the [[Barack Hussein Obama|Obama]] regime.<ref>https://www.breitbart.com/california/2014/04/06/hollywood-turns-against-obama-with-captain-america-winter-soldier-2/</ref>
|$259,766,572
|-
|Based on the parallel lives of two British Olympians, devout Scottish Presbyterian [[Eric Liddell]], who wants to run for the glory of God, and Jewish Englishman [[Harold Abrahams]] both struggle to overcome prejudice in 1924 Britain. That year's Olympics Games was especially spiritual when Liddell refused the Prince of Wales' request that he perform his competition on a Sunday.
|$58,972,904
|-
|''Chappaquiddick''
|2018
|PG-13
|This Hollywood film doesn't feature any history revisionism and tells the cold hard truth about [[Ted Kennedy]] during the [[Chappaquiddick incident]]<ref>https://www.hollywoodintoto.com/chappaquiddick-review/</ref> angering liberal critics in the process.<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/06/opinion/chappaquiddick-ted-kennedy-distortortion.html</ref> To add insult to injury the film ended up overperforming as well<ref>http://missliberty.com/chappaquiddick-box-office-blows-past-projections/</ref>
|$17,894,212
|-
|''Cheaper by the Dozen''
|2005
|PG-13
|Based on the story of boxing heavyweight champion James Braddock, the protagonist prizes family because he takes up boxing so he can provide for them during the Great Depression. In addition, it promotes loyalty and integrity as well, as his promoter not only tried to help him with boxing, but had also gone as far alongside his wife to sell everything they had to aid Braddock in trying to win the titleship, with Braddock's wife learning this when about to tell his promoter off for apparently selling him out.
|$108.5 million
|-
| ''The Circle''
|2017
|PG-13
|Based on the Dave Eggers novel of the same name, the film showcases how "material success, intellectual enlightenment, technological advancement, and utilitarian ethics — ultimately cannot satisfy the existential longing each of us has." <ref>https://www.conservativereview.com/articles/the-circle-most-conservative-movie-of-2017/</ref>
|$40.6 million
|-
|''City Slickers''
|2008
|PG-13
|The sequel to ''Batman Begins'' contains a Christian allegory (specifically, the ending has Batman selflessly volunteering to have himself take the blame for the crimes that Harvey Dent committed after the latter went insane from grief and the Joker's influence in order to ensure that the criminals he locked up cannot be released onto the street after he was forced to kill Dent to save Gordon's son.) with messages of not giving in to terrorists and condemning of [[nihilism]] and [[anarchy]] via the actions of [[Joker (comics)|the Joker]], Batman's most infamous adversary.
|$533,316,061
|-
|A candid look at [[professor values]] along with problems associated with lack of assimilation; [[liberal]]s first praised the movie, but after realizing its [[conservative]] message, panned it.
|$30,041
|-
|''Darkest Hour''
|2017
|PG-13
|A biopic of heroic WWII leader [[Winston Churchill]] with no historical revisionism at all. It won 2 academy awards and was nominated for 6 more.
|$180,000,000
|-
|''The Death of Stalin''
|2017 (UK and Toronto)<br />2018 (America and France)
|R
|An adaptation of the French historical fiction graphic novel of the same name. Although largely a satirical black comedy, the movie nonetheless accurately shows the horrific events of the Soviet Union under Stalin's totalitarian rule and the events after his death, as well as the innately cowardly and treacherous nature of the Soviet Politburo (see [[Atheism and cowardice]] as well as [[Atheism and Mass Murder]]). It also is one of the few films to allude to the anti-Semitic [[Doctor's plot]] that Stalin had orchestrated prior to his death (which had ironically been precipitated due to the doctor's plot killing off all the best doctors in Moscow at the time), making clear that, contrary to what the left claims, the USSR and the left adhered to anti-Semitism. The director of the film, Armando Iannucci, admits that a large part of the reason he made the film was partly because of how Stalin was still revered in Russia to the extent that the Russian hotel he stayed at had a portrait of Stalin up, while pointing out that no one would dare do the same regarding Hitler in similar situations.<ref>https://www.rollingstone.com/movies/features/armando-iannucci-death-of-stalin-trumps-funeral-w517602</ref> As if reinforcing this, the movie also ended up banned in Russia at the order of [[Vladimir Putin]].
|$15.7 million
|-
|''Death Wish''
The film also depicts Israel in a positive light, as the Israelis assist the Americans by providing them with intel.
| $17,768,900
|-
|''Denial''
|2016
|PG-13
|Anti-history revisionist film. Writer and historian Deborah E. Lipstadt must battle for historical truth to prove the existence Holocaust when David Irving, a holocaust denier, sues her for libel .
|$4,073,489
|-
|''Dirty Harry''
|In this adaption of the conservative 1980s television series, Denzel Washington portrays retired intelligence agent-turned-vigilante Robert McCall, the role originated in the original series by British actor Edward Woodward.
|$101,530,738
|-
|''The Equalizer 2'''
|2018
|R
|Sequel to the 2014 film
|
|-
|''[[Escape from Hell]]''
|2007
|PG
|In the stand -alone sequel to ''Bruce Almighty'', God chooses an unlikely hero named Evan to build a modern -day ark to save his town from an upcoming storm.
|$100,462,298
|-
|PG-13
|The true story of [[John McCain]] when he served valiantly in the Vietnam War.
|
|-
|''Fat Kid Rules the World''
|2012
|R
|Based on a 2003 young adult novel of the same name, a six-foot-one and 296 pound 17-year-old boy named Troy Billings overcomes challenges, as things have been very hard on him with his mother deceased, living with his father and younger brother. It also rightfully shows the negatives of school [[bullying]] and suicide. Troy also befriends a non-conformist punk rocker named Marcus MacCrae who becomes hospitalized due to illicit drug use but he finally recovers in the end, thus giving the film an anti-drug message as well. It is also pro-family values as Troy learns the consequences of his actions. Despite all of the conservative messages, this movie is NOT for kids because it has a lot of foul language and even some violence.
|
|-
|1986
|PG-13
|A cool teen in Chicago plays hooky with his girlfriend, his best friend, and a vintage Ferrari restored by his best friend's unseen, car-obsessed father. The film shows how teenagers can have fun without drugs, alcohol, or tobacco; and the main character is faithful to his girlfriend, likely choosing abstinence. In a clear anti-socialist statement, Ferris says that "I'm not European, I don't plan on being European. So who gives a crap if they're socialists? They could be fascist anarchists, it still doesn't change the fact that I don't own a car. Not that I condone fascism." Since the movie mocks the liberal public education system, Ferris even directly states that he is not socialist and will never be such. Furthermore, the character arc experienced by Ferris' best friend Cameron Fry promotes family unity because, after taking out his anger on his father's Ferrari and ultimately wrecking it beyond repair, Cameron gains the emotional maturity and courage to confront Mr. Fry about neglecting his wife and son for some time due to his obsession with restoring the car. Conservative commentator, economist, and and comedian [[Ben Stein]] appears as one of Ferris's teachers.
|$70,136,369<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=ferrisbuellersdayoff.htm</ref>
|-
|Highly successful pro-Christian, pro-marriage film created by [[Sherwood Pictures]].
|$33,451,479
|-
|''First They Killed My Father''
|2017
|TV-MA
|An adaptation of Cambodian-America Loung Ung's memoir of the horrors [[Khmer Rouge]].
|Netflix film
|-
|''Flash of Genius''
|Shows the bravery of the passengers on Flight 93, which was hijacked on [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11th, 2001]], and crashed into a Pennsylvania field. The passengers fought back against the Islamic hijackers.
|NA - TV
|-
|''Flight of the Navigator''
|1986
|PG
|A boy named David Scott Freeman is abducted by a UFO and then wakes up in a ravine, only to discover that he's been transported 8 years into the future. The series contains strong pro-family themes as David's parents are shown to be filled with overwhelming joy and happiness after seeing David for the first time in 8 years. David's little brother, Jeff, has an antagonistic relationship with David early in the movie but when David disappears for 8 years, a now-16-year-old Jeff regrets the way he treated his brother and reconciles with him. David's family is very supportive in helping him adjust to his situation. When David is in the hospital for testing to find out why he hasn't aged, one of his family stays with him at all times so he won't be alone. When David goes back in time at the end of the film, he learns to have more appreciation for his family, including Jeff. The film also depicts government bureaucrats in a negative light, as NASA treats the UFO and David as mere science experiments and is unsympathetic to David's situation. The agents take David away from his family and put him in an isolated, locked room. David's father becomes enraged when he finds out how NASA has been treating David. The agents later place the whole family under House Arrest. When David goes to his family's home in 1986, the NASA agents are there to take him away again, and that's when he decides to go back in time to 1978 despite the ship's computer, Max, insisting that it's potentially dangerous.
|$18,564,613
|-
|''For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada''
|1994
|PG-13
|The film shows how the "counterculture" movements of the 1960s and 1970s, as well as drugs, lead to a miserable life. Gump has a more conservative lifestyle, while Jenny leaves her liberal lifestyle after she realizes the shortcomings of it, also suffering from AIDs from a brief relapse and dying as a result. <ref>https://www.worldlifestyle.com/sitcoms/forrest-gump-hid-from-fans-2-2/59?slides=1&utm_mediabuyer=SDJJ&utm_source=taboola&utm_campaign=TBLA_WL_JJ_GUMP0507V2_US_DT&utm_medium=cbsinteractive-gamefaqs&utm_content=84081643</ref> Finally, a main message is that Lyndon B. Johnson was largely responsible for the Vietnam War, not Richard Nixon as most liberals like [[George Lucas]] tend to think.
|$329,694,499<ref>[http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=forrestgump.htm Forrest Gump] (1994). ''Box Office Mojo''. Retrieved July 30, 2016.</ref>
|-
|2007
|PG
|Republican actor Vince Vaughn plays Fred Claus, the older brother of Christmas icon Santa Claus (born Nicholas "Nick" Claus in this universe), who must overcome his jealousy to remember the importance of their literally immortal family and save Christmas from being ruined. A major theme of redemption applies to Fred, the young orphan Samuel "Slam" Gibbons, and the evil efficiency expert Clyde Archibald Northcutt, all of whom learn the errors of their ways. Traditional gender roles are depicted by the elves: the men make baseball batsfor the boys, the women make hula hoopsfor the girls, etc. There is a positive establishment of American popular culture icon Superman (he's only mentioned, but toy Supermen and a minor character Clyde Northcutt is wearing a Superman cape are shown as wellonce reformed), and mild politically incorrect humor is featured.
|$72,006,777
|-
|Sapient animals use technology for good, but their help is shut down by the government agents (clearly been shown in negative life), while the secret villain of the movie is pushing anti-human sentiments. In the end, he realizes the error of his ways and learns that family matters most. The movie shows that you don't need authority to stop wrongdoing, and just be willing to fight for what is right.
|$119,436,770
|-
|''Gattaca''
|1997
|PG-13
|A condemnation of human genetic engineering, and a wonderful triumph of individualism in an extremely totalitarian regime. Unfortunately the movie ends with a materialistic message: "They say every atom in our bodies was once a part of a star. So, maybe I'm not leaving, maybe I'm going home" (A phrase said when the protagonist finally managed to go to space).
|$12,339,633
|-
|''[[Ghostbusters]]''
|In this sequel, roles are reversed, and the teacher, played by Christian conservative Melissa Joan Hart, is the protagonist as she tries to help her students reconnect their faith in God.
|$20,774,575
|-
|''Godzilla vs. Biollante''
|1989
|PG
|Although the Godzilla franchise has been politically neutral for the most part. This film does take jabs at [[genetic engineering]] and playing [[God]].
|$7 million
|-
|''Gosnell: The Trial of America's Biggest Serial Killer''
|2018
|R
|Pro-life film that, as indicated by the title, showcases the horrific aspects of the abortion industry and especially of the abortionist [[Kermit Gosnell]]. Unfortunately, despite lots of rave reviews, it was pulled from theaters early for political reasons.
|$2.5 million
|-
|''[[Gone With the Wind]]''
|The adventures of teenagers trying to find a long-lost treasure, before the criminals do.
|$61,503,218<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=goonies.htm</ref>
|-
|''The Gospel According to St. Matthew''
|1964
|
|In spite of his avowed homosexuality, Marxism and atheism, controversial Director Pier Paolo Pasolini shocked his critics and advocates alike with this surprisingly reverent portrayal of Christ in the gospel of Matthew. He expressed his sympathies for Christianity, even going as far as to portray the miracles and ultimately the resurrection of Christ in a brilliantly poetic and artistic light. The movie even received acclaim from the Vatican and is considered one of the best Christian films ever made.
|
|-
|''Gran Torino''
|Swedish actor Max Von Sydow brilliantly portrays [[Jesus]] in this aptly-named feature.
|$8,000,000 (U.S.), $20,000,0000 (worldwide)
|-
|''The Greatest Showman''
|2017
|PG
|Based on the true story of P. T. Barnum this musical celebrates the American Dream, as he helped build and create his own circus. Besides from that there various Christian values as well, such as the redemptive themes shown, the faithfulness, and being pro-marriage and pro-family. In addition it also promotes the idea of treating everyone with respect and dignity. Finally the film also promotes the concept of individualism. <ref>https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/trevin-wax/greatest-showman-captured-american-imagination/</ref>
|$174,340,174<ref>https://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=greatestshowman.htm</ref>
|-
|''The Green Berets''
|$11,000,000
|-
|''[[Groundhog Day]]''
|1993
|PG
|Arrogant While in the small Pennsylvania town of Punxsutawney to report on the annual Groundhog Day festivities, arrogant Pittsburg weather forecaster Phil Connors is trapped in a time loop that forces him to keep reliving the same [[Groundhog Day]] February 2 over and over again. After indulging in hedonism and , repeatedly failing to escape the time loop by seduce his attractive new producer Rita, sinking into depression, and exhausting every way to commit suicide, he begins reexamining his life and priorities, . He then gradually makes himself a more moraluses his memorization of the day's events, honestbesides the stories of various townspeople, to improve himself and talented person so help as many people in need as he can within a 24-hour limit, which ultimately allows him to win over the love of his life Rita and break free from the loop. Overall, this whimsical comedy is outstandingly conservative and Christian because no explanation other than God's will is given for the loop, especially since it gives Phil a chance at redemption for his past immoral behavior.
|$70,906,973
|-
|A sensational melodrama about the [[Hitler Youth]] of pre-WWII 1930s Nazi Germany, based on Gregor Ziemer's best selling "Education for Death: The Making of A Nazi".
|$3,355,000
|-
|''Hocus Pocus''
|1993
|PG
|A pro-family film in which they battle evil devil worshipping witches. The man character even risks his life in saving his sister. The ending of the film shows heaven.
|$39,514,713
|-
|''Home Alone''
|2017
|R
|A pro-family film about parents who set up their own casino, in order to pay for their daughter’s college. While promoting capitalism, the villain of the film is a corrupt government agent, whom is also shown to be somewhat of a socialist (stealing all of their money, in terms of eminent domain). In fact the whole reason they did not have money was because the at town meeting the government agent claimed the town could not afford the scholarship she earned, when the reality is, the governement agent he stole it all to have an affair with another government worker. On a side note , the police officer of the movie is shown in positive light, eventually realizing the parents were right, and helping them take down the corrupt government official.
|$25,584,504<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=thehouse.htm</ref>
|-
|1981, 1984, 1989, 2008
|PG
|During World War II (a time of great patriotism for America)the Great Depression, archaeologist and adventurer Dr. Henry "Indiana" Jones searches the world for artifacts of untold power and, along the way, combats some of America's most infamous enemies, in particular Nazis. The first and third films contain Christian themes since they are centered around the [[Ark of the Covenant]] and the [[Holy Grail]], respectively; while the second film condemns paganism due to its main villain being a pagan priest. A fourth film, ''Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull'', takes place in the early Cold War era with Soviet Communists as antagonists, although there's some debate as to how patriotic and conservative the movie is (see its entry in Debatable Whether Conservative for more details).
|1197.2 million (altogether)
|-
 
|''Invasion of the Body Snatchers''
|1956
|A science fiction condemnation of Communism, produced for only $420,000 and remade successfully in three additional movies in 1978, 1993 and 2007, with 1978's version the only one of the exact same title. Warner Bros. announced a fourth remake is in current development.
|$2,500,000
|-
|”The Interview”
|2014
|R
|It’s a raunchy comedy, but it has a strong pro-democracy and anti-communism premise. The main characters are CIA operatives disguised as news reporters who are assigned to visit [[North Korea]] and assassinate Kim Jong Un during an interview with the brutal dictator. The film was so controversial for its depiction of Kim Jong Un being killed that it was pulled from theatres and released straight to DVD. [[Donald Trump]] stated that The Interview was his favorite comedy of 2014.
|-
|''Invasion U.S.A.''
|1957
|NR
|A fictionalized verison version of the American War of Independence and the leadup to it. The titular character, after his dreams were dashed from a hand injury in an accident while working as a blacksmith's apprentice, ultimately plays a role alongside Paul Revere and various other key figures in the war in founding America.
|N/A
|-
|Action film starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as a tough Arizona sheriff who must stop an escaped Mexican drug lord from fleeing the country.
|$12,026,670
|-
|''The Last Starfighter''
|1984
|PG
|In this pro-just war and pro-military film, a young trailer park resident Alex Rogan (Lance Guest), after breaking the high score on the Starfighter video game, is approached by Centauri (played by Robert Preston in his last film role) who wants to recruit him into the Star League where he can be a real Starfighter. While Alex initially resists the idea due to it being a sudden shock, he eventually embraces the opportunity to do something significant with his life. The film also has a family theme as Alex and his navigator Grig (Dan O' Herlihy) reminisce about their respective families.
|$28,733,290
|-
|''Lean on Me''
|1989
|PG-13
|A true story about combating drug use, violence, and contempt for authority while exalting positive values like academic achievement and family values. Bio-drama about Paterson, New Jersey's real life [[Joe Clark]].<ref>httphttps://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097722/</ref>
|$31,906,454
|-
|$66,465,204
|-
|''Let There Be Light''
|2017
|PG-13
|Directed by and starring [[Kevin Sorbo]] and executive produced by and also starring [[Sean Hannity]]. Sol Harkens (played by Sorbo) is an alcoholic, divorced atheist going through a near-death experience after a car accident, where he learns the error of his ways and turns to Christianity and reconnects with his family.
|$7,233,471
|-
|''Liar Liar''
|1997
|2001
|PG-13
|Clear distinction between good and evil with positive themes of friendship, bravery, honor, sacrifice and overcoming temptationas well as redemption. Based upon the literary classic by J. R. R. TolkeinTolkien.
|$314,776,114
|-
|2002
|PG-13
|Strong portrayals of redemption and good over evil. Based upon the literary classic by J. R. R. TolkeinTolkien.
|$340,478,898
|-
|2003
|PG-13
|Bravery, heroism, sacrifice and good ultimately triumphing over evil. Based upon the literary classic by J. R. R. TolkeinTolkien.
|$377,027,325
|-
|2013
|PG-13
|[[Superman]] is portrayed as a Christ-flike like figure, shows bravery of the U.S. Military and shows the theme of protecting the ones you love. The film also has an anti-illegal immigrant like message, as the villain General Zod plans to turn Earth into his dead planet Krypton (an allegory for illegal aliens destroying American culture and changing it for their own purpose). During a climactic battle between Superman and Zod, a computer-generated avatar bearing the likeness of Jor-El, Superman's biological father, assists the Man of Steel and his human allies in fighting Zod and his forces, so there are some pro-family themes.
|$291,045,518
|-
|''The Man Who Invented Christmas''
|2017
|PG-13
|A historical drama dealing with the creation of [[Charles Dickens]]' seminal work ''[[A Christmas Carol]]'', and to a lesser extent an adaptation of ''A Christmas Carol'' in itself. It has strong redemptive themes as well as promoting to some extent the capitalist view. Forgiveness also plays a major role in the story, as well.
|$8.1 million
|-
|''[[Martin Luther]]''
|1964
|UR
|In one of the greatest motion picture masterpieces of all time, adapted from the novel by Australian-born British author P. L. Travers, a magical nanny is hired to take care of two children, Jane and Michael Banks, while their parents are engaged in their respective duties. Embarking on a series of fantastical adventures with Mary Poppins and her Cockney jack-of-all-trades performer friend, Bert, the siblings try to pass on some of their nanny's cheerful attitude and morals to their preoccupied parents. Also has an early condemnation of feminism, as one of the reasons the mom was preoccupied and why Mary Poppins was ultimately hired to help raise the kids was because the mother attempted to fight for women liberation. In the process, the Banks family become more closer and happier together than ever before. ''Mary Poppins'' is cited by many to be [[Walt Disney]]'s crowning achievement.
|$677,054,500
|-
|Film adaptation of Roald Dahl's children's novel of a bright little girl who uses her magical genius and help from a sympathetic teacher to free herself from the foolish, selfish people in her life: her self-absorbed parents, bratty brother and the horrible and brutish [[public school]] principal.
|$33,084,249
|-
|''Men in Black''
|1997
|PG-13
|A loose adaptation of the graphic novel of the same name. The film carries an implicit promotion of national borders and legal immigration/assimilation, as the titular organization keeps the existence of extraterrestrial immigrants secret and allows them in so long as the aliens specifically make sure they undergo naturalization first and that they obey certain laws. In addition, the opening scene has Kay and his partner stopping attempted illegal immigrants from crossing into the country and was implied to be working alongside the ICE and border patrol to prevent illegal immigrants into the country while trying to prevent a literal illegal alien, Mikey, from entering the country illegally, with the alien being depicted in a negative light due to him trying to kill an ICE agent before being atomized by Kay. Also condemns terrorism, as the main villain, Edgar the Bug, arrived on Earth to personally assassinate two extraterrestrial diplomats of two warring civilizations specifically to engineer a war with Earth and thus allow his kind to feast on any killed in battle. There's also a subtle mocking of the liberal news rag ''New York Times'', where one of the characters, Kay, when explaining to Jay that he was searching via tabloid articles, suggested he could use the ''New York Times'' as searching for information as "they sometimes get it right", implying that the ''New York Times'' was less reliable than tabloid articles.
|$589.4 million
|-
|''The Mill and the Cross'' (Polish original)
|While its predecessor stayed politically neutral, this film has pro-family message, in which father and his family must rescue their son from a Satanic cult who plans to resurrect an Egyptian demon, as well as the climax having the mother, in clear defiance of the father's insistence that she, her brother, and their son escape from the doomed temple without him, risks her life to save him, while in stark contrast, the female villain, the reincarnation of the woman whom the titular mummy had sacrificed everything to try and save, ends up abandoning him to his fate despite his begging for her help, and later ends up paying the price for her deed by falling into a pit of scarabs.
|$202,019,785
|-
|''The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor''
|2008
|PG-13
|Still has the same pro-family message, along with a [[Mao Zedong|Mao]]-like rogue army as the side villains.
|$102,491,776
|-
|''Mr. Skeffington''
|2006
|PG
|Divorced father Larry Daley tries to keep a steady job to be a good role model for his son. He takes a job at the American Museum of Natural History where everything comes to life at night. Features conservative president [[Theodore Roosevelt]] who talks to him about manning up and not giving up as Daley faces obstacles in Museum. Also contains a an inspirational quote about character and courage as, the wax Theodore Roosevelt says to Larry Daley "You gotta finish the job this time, you can't quit, I'm made of wax Larry, what are you made of?" Followed by two sequels in 2009 and 2014.
|$250,863,268
|-
|1939
|UR
|Anti-communism, pro-Capitalism.
|Unknown
|-
|2005
|PG
|Navy Seal Shane Wolfe (Vin Diesel) is assigned to be the guardian of five children in this pro-family and pro-military film. He learns from them the responsibilities of being in a family as they learn from him the importance of the military in protecting the country. The villains of the movie are North Korean spies. Also has a brief Anti-Nazi concept. There are plans being made for a an upcoming sequel. <ref>https://www.flickeringmyth.com/2015/12/vin-diesel-reveals-that-the-pacifier-2-is-in-development/</ref>
|$113,086,868
|-
|TV-PG
|Free-spirited Elizabeth must overcome her earlier misperceptions to find the truth about eligible bachelor Darcy, while Darcy must overcome his own pride.
|BBC <ref>httphttps://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112130/companycredits?ref_=ttspec_sa_5</ref>
|-
|''Prisoners''
|A film that shows hard work, dedication, loyalty and trust can result in success and "happiness" for any American, regardless of race, gender or creed. It is an instructional piece about the tradition of "stick-to-it-iveness" that has made America a land of hope and opportunity for so many. This film’s main themes—the primacy of the family, the blessings of free and open markets, the necessity of staying true to one’s ideals—are all conservative concepts.
|$307,077,300
|-
|''A Quiet Place''
|2018
|PG-13
|Metaphorical pro-life horror film<ref>https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/act-four/wp/2018/04/11/a-quiet-place-isnt-just-pro-life-it-makes-us-understand-what-being-pro-life-truly-means/?noredirect=on</ref>. Notable for being one of the biggest surprise hits of 2018.
|$329,861,495<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=aquietplace.htm</ref>
|-
|''Quo Vadis''
|2010
|PG-13
|An origins tale to the character, this rendition of Robin Hood, unlike most other adaptations, takes more after how he was originally presented as a man rebelling against an unlawful government and taking back funds stolen by Prince John and returning it to the people who actually worked for it, and not the "steal from the rich to give to the poor" revisionist version by [[Joseph Ritson]] during the time of the [[French Revolution]] that was made in solidarity to the [[Jacobins]]. It also has the The Magna Carta being portrayed in , which brought reform to English government after a positive mannerlong period of feudal oppression, is portrayed positively.<ref>http://www.wnd.com/2010/05/154853/</ref>
|$321.7 million
|-
|1976
|PG
|A Robert “Rocky” Balboa, a talented but down-on-his-luck fighter gets prize boxer, seizes a chance to challenge himself to the ends of his ability. This film - and its sequels and remakes - reinforces man's ability to overcome challenges. Included five sequels and one spin-off.
|$117,235,247
|-
|1994, 2002, 2006
|PG
|A divorced father of one must take on the responsibility of being Santa Claus after he is chosen. Along the way, he finds great joy and happiness in his new occupation. The film series also promotes the essence and importance of traditional marriage, family, and Christmas. Also has a strong message against the separation of the church and state. Spawned two sequels, although their quality has varied (see their entries in the Debatable whether great for Great section of this article more details).
|$189,800,000; $172,900,000; $110,800,000
|-
|1993
|R
|Tells the story of [[Oskar Schindler]], a German Christian businessman who saved , saves the lives of more than a thousand Jewish refugees during the Holocaust by employing them in his factories. The film also shows the danger negative effects of [[gun control]] are shown as German citizens are shown being shot by their Nazi oppressors without any way means of fighting backself-defense.
|$96,065,768
|-
|''Scrooged''
|1988
|PG-13
|A modern-day retelling of Charles Dickens' ''A Christmas Carol'' starring Bill Murray, this story focuses on television executive Frank Cross. Promotes the same themes of redemption and the spirit of Christmas as it's source material. Also Anti-Hollywood values as well, since the main reason Frank lost his long-time love Claire was because he was furthering his television career.
|$60.3 million
|-
|''Sergeant York''
|1953
|UR
|This Western about defending follows a homesteading familywhose patriarch fights to defend them.
|$20,000,000
|-
|Based on the true story of Stephen Glass (Hayden Christensen), a reporter in the late 1990s for the liberal magazine ''The New Republic'', lies and distorts news stories to make them entertaining. He begins by submitting an article about the Conservative Political Action Conference, in which he fabricated stories of drinking and sexual mischief. Then, after he writes a colorful but suspicious story on a superstar web hacker, a group from a small online news site begin to question his journalistic integrity.
|$2,220,008
|-
|''Short Circuit 2''
|1988
|PG
|Unlike it's liberal predecessor, this movie is pro-capitalism. Ben Jahvri, one of the co-creators of the No. 5 robot, is now a vendor attempting to sell his robot toys on the streets of New York. When an employee of a major toy company, Sandy Banatoni, Ben's love interest, becomes interested in his toys, Ben teams up with another capitalist named Fred Ritter (played by Michael Mckean) to produce 1000 of the toy robots. After a break-in scares of Fred's workers, No. 5, now known as Johnny Five, comes to New York to help Ben.
 
This movie is also pro-assimilation, Ben is shown working hard and studying to pass the test required for US citizenship (a test which most native-born US citizens couldn't pass). At the end of the movie, Ben is shown taking the Vow of Citizenship, along with Johnny Five who is being recognized as the first robotic citizen of the US.
|21.6 million
|-
|''Signs''
|An affectionate and beautifully filmed biography film on the life of Bernadette Soubirous. Illustrates the power and essence of faith, hope, charity, and forgiveness. Winner of four Academy Awards, including Best Actress in a Leading Role (Jennifer Jones).
|$7,000,000
|-
|''The Sons of Katie Elder''
|1965
|UR
|Brothers John Elder ([[John Wayne]]), Tom Elder ([[Dean Martin]]), Bud Elder (Michael Anderson Jr.) and Matt Elder (Earl Holliman) seek justice following the murder of their mother.
|$23 million
|-
|''Soul Surfer''
|1973
|PG
|[[Charlton Heston]] as plays a futuristic detective in a dying, polluted world, trying to solve its most bizarre secret of its time's only main food source for most of its people, only to find its most unspeakable answer as it the recipe directly involves them (people).
|
|-
|2002
|PG-13
|Praises moral virtue (Based on the flagship superhero of Marvel Comics, Peter Parker is a hard-working teenager, raised by his devout aunt, Aunt May and well-meaning uncle) Uncle Ben, who is bitten by a radioactive spider and gains spider-like abilities, such as climbing any surface and shooting webbing from his hands, which he vows to use to prevent crime after Uncle Ben’s murder. ''Spider-Man'' pokes fun at [[liberalsliberal]] (entertainers and journalists, particularly ''Daily Bugle'' publisher J. Jonah Jameson, who goes out of his way to unfairly smear and slander Spider-Man and foolishly question his heroic deeds). The Hero; For his relationship with classmate Mary Jane Watson, Peter Parker chooses [[abstinence]]. Also, Peter believes in individualism and capitalism as well, with rejecting : he rejects a job from a handout , claiming he would like to earn what he getsmakes. This was one of the most profitable films ever made and had two sequels.
|$403,706,375
|-
|Various super villains are given a second chance to fight for the greater good. Surprisingly, the film glorifies some conservative values. The villain's a [[Pagan]] goddess named Enchantress ( a rare film where liberal Hollywood actually portrays a Pagan as evil instead of the tragic hero nonsense we've seen). Also, even throughout the film is about supervillains, many of them regret their lives of crime, such as one of the characters Deadshot abandons his opportunity to kill Batman on his daughter's behalf and another character El Diablo who used his superpower for evil ends up accidentally killing his family, which has haunted him.
Moreover, in a dream sequence villain Harley Quinn shows her deepest desires which is being a housewife (points for having the guts for showing a female character not wanting to be part of the feminist agenda, especially in this day and age, even if it not surprisingly infuriated liberal critics<ref>http://www.avclub.com/article/margot-robbie-deserves-better-suicide-squads-sexis-240618</ref>). Some could also point out Enchantress plans to bribe the squad as reference to Luke 4:6-7. More interesting enough the director David Ayer is a Christian<ref>http://www.interviewmagazine.com/film/shia-labeouf/#page2</ref> who was once in the Navy.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/oct/16/david-ayer-something-maternal-about-tank-in-fury-brad-pitt</ref> So it's not surprising he added these values onto his film.
|$325,100,054
|-
|The definitive film portrayal of [[Exodus]]. Stars Charlton Heston as main character Moses and as the voice of God (the latter role shared with Delos Jewkes), John Carradine as Moses' brother [[Aaron]], Yul Brynner as Egyptian pharaoh and main antagonist [[Ramses II]], Edward G. Robinson as corrupt Hebrew overseer and secondary antagonist Dathan, Yvonne De Carlo as Moses' wife [[Zipporah|Sephora]], Anne Baxter as Moses' original love interest (and later Ramses II's wife) Nefretiri, Nina Foch as Moses' foster mother Bithia, John Derek as Hebrew stonecutter and Moses' right-hand man [[Joshua (Biblical leader)|Joshua]], Debra Paget as Joshua's love interest Lilia, Sir Cedric Hardwicke as Pharaoh Sethi, Judith Anderson as Bithia's servant Memnet, Vincent Price as Sethi's architect Baka, Martha Scott as Moses' biological mother [[Jochebed|Yochebel]] and Olive Deering as Moses' sister [[Miriam]].
|$65,500,000
|-
|''Thor''
|2011
|PG-13
|Based upon the Marvel Comics superhero, the fourth installment of the Marvel Cinematic Universe does not attempt to convert its audience to paganism regardless of what the title implies. Instead, the titular Norse god of thunder, who is alternately thought of as a god and as an alien in this universe, learns the consequences of dishonoring his father Odin and betraying his family: after his reckless actions reignite an ancient war between the people of the kingdom of Asgard, the home of Thor’s family, and a race of frost giants, Thor is stripped of powers, banished to earth, and forced to live among humans. He then remembers the importance of honoring his father and sacrifice for a greater good when his wicked trickster brother Loki, who seeks to claim the throne of Asgard for himself, sends after him the Destroyer, a ferocious automaton. Thor’s willingness to lay down his life so his friends can kill the Destroyer proves him worthy to regain his powers, defeat the automaton, and return to Asgard to overthrow Loki, who faces his own consequences for betraying the family (namely, being dropped into the vacuum of space, only to turn up alive after the credits, setting up the plot for another great conservative Marvel film, ''The Avengers'').
|$449.3 million
|-
|''The Three Stooges''
|2012
|PG
|In a plot similar to ''The Blues Brothers'', the Three Stooges try to raise money to save their Catholic orphanage. The movie promotes capitalism, as they refuse a handout, and want to work for it. The movie also promotes family as well.
|$44,338,224
|-
|The Autobots and their leader, Optimus Prime, usually do what they believe is right and fight the misanthropic Decepticons. Although the police and military fight both Transformers throughout most of this film, they learn that the Autobots are good in the end and the Autobots also learn that about them. It was followed by four sequels in 2009, 2011, 2014, and 2017, with varying quality and Conservative messages.
|$319,246,193
|-
|''Tremors''
|1990
|PG-13
|Giant sand worms called "Graboids" begin attacking the residents of a small isolated town in the Nevada desert and block the only road out of town. One of the few Hollywood films to portray personal firearm ownership in a positive light as Burt Gummer and his wife Heather fight off one of the Graboids with a variety of firearms, including semi-automatic AR-15s. Burt also creates the explosives that are used to kill the last two Graboids. Ironically, Burt is played by Michael Gross, the same actor who played the super liberal Steven Keaton in Family Ties.
|$16,667,084
|-
|''True Grit''
|1969
|NR
|Western film that deals with trying to bring justice against a murderer, and promotes courage in the face of danger as well as perserverenceperseverance. Was also notable as being one of the few films during that time that still dealt with the concept of a classical hero, whether in westerns or other genres, in an era where Hollywood was being taken over by the radical left and including as a fad anti-heroes, and inspired Russ Dvonch to be a filmmaker.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20090430053837/http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/rdvonch/2009/04/28/heroic-hollywood-american-exceptionalism-and-the-hollywood-hero/</ref>
|$48 million
|-
|1988
|PG
|Pro-family film about fraternal twins who are separated at birth, and once they have reunited with each other they go to find their mother. In addition contains the many morals, including the importance of doing what right over getting what wants. In addition one of this is a rare Hollywood film to actually show the twins moral character as the happier character, as Arnold Schwarzenegger's character is both moral and joyful (he is said to have the ideal human trait, where Danny Devito's character was initially a small-town crook and learns the error of his waysbecoming more happy and moral, and even claiming at the end "It feels great to be a good guy".
|$111,938,388
|-
|A slovenly bachelor babysits his rebellious teenage niece and her younger brother and sister, and they learn the true importance of family. The villain of the movie is a teenager who is only interested in his girlfriend for sexual purposes.
|$66,758,538<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=unclebuck.htm</ref>
|-
|''Under Siege''
|1992
|R
|American Patriot and Ex-Navy SEAL Casey Ryback (Steven Seagal) fights against Saul Alinsky-type liberal and ex-CIA operative Bill Strannix (Tommy Lee Jones) after Strannix's team of terrorists hijack the USS Missouri, being helped by the traitorous First Officer Commander Krill (Gary Busey). The film depicts Ryback's heroism and patriotism in a positive light, while depicting Strannix and Krill's Anti-American treachery in a negative light.
|$83,563,139<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=undersiege.htm</ref>
|-
|''Voiceless''
|1971
|G
|Showing the importance of having character. Charlie is able to accept the consequences Willy Wonka gives each of his actions. He acknowledges his wrongdoing while in the factorykids on tour an Everlasting Gobstopper, and relinquishes which is a potential goldmine, from the sale of his everlasting gobstopper to given that a rival spy, back to Wonka. The had earlier offered each of the kids also compete money in exchange for handing over this new invention. Also, every single kid, except Charlie, misbehaves in such a conservative elimination format (by ensuring way that the most meritorious players survive to play the final round)injures or deforms them in some way. The film also promotes capitalism, with Willy Wonka being such a successful business leader in the world of candy. In addition , this film is surely to annoy liberals, who want to ban chocolate candy and sweets.<ref>http://www.toberight.com/2012/02/liberals-banning-sweets-on-valentines-day/</ref>
The hidden message in this film is one of redemption. It is hidden because it is conveyed through the imagery of the film's final scene. Charlie has made it to the end of his journey. Despite his moral struggleshaving the urge, he finds redemption through his desire and a clean opportunity, to sell Wonka out to correct his mistakerival, Charlie ends up giving the Everlasting Gobstopper back to Wonka. He is given a reward that For this act of integrity, he is rewarded beyond his wildest expectations - he expectations—he is given the keys to ownership of the factory . Incidentally, while he is riding in the Wonkavator , it crashes through the ceiling up into the sky. The allusion to Heaven and salvation is unmistakable.
|$4 million
|-
|2006
|PG-13
|Highlights the bravery of NYC's firemen , paramedics, and police in [[9/11]].
|$70,236,496
|-
|1998
|G
|Based on the Aesop fable "The Ant and the Grasshopper", a young and inventive, if clumsy, ant named Flik plans to recruit a military force of warrior insects to save his colony from being oppressed by evil grasshoppers who have enslaved the film promotes the concept of ants to harvest food for them, lest they may be punished. Flik is a model for individualism as well as a strong work ethic, as well as featured an anti-slavery message. It also features the concept of who believes in bettering oneselfhimself and his colony with his impressive harvesting inventions. Also pro-second amendment and pro-militaryTo some extent, as the main protagonist, Flik, had initially set off to find warrior bugs to fend off the grasshoppers after their latest visit and threat. It also has a condemnation on film pokes fun at the homosexual agenda, in particular transvestitism, as : the character male ladybug Francis, a ladybug, is frequently mistaken for a womanbecause of his species' name, with Francis not only frequently correcting various and he routinely corrects other characters about his actual gender, but also clearly getting angry at the characters mixing up his actual genderthis confusion, at one point even launching into a tirade with several flies before having to be restrained.
|$363.3 million
|-
|1986
|G
|A movie dealing with immigration, the movie is pro-family due to Fieval, the main character, being separated from his family due to a storm, and him and his family going out of their way to find each other. Also has a subtle condemnation of machine politics ([[Tammany Hall]], in this case) and voter fraud due to one of the characters, "Honest" John, the implied mouse mayor of New York City, declaring a then-recently deceased mouse (who was implied to have died before he was old enough to vote) to be able to "vote from now on" before adding the mouse's name to a book (a clear allusion to ghost votervoters), with the mouse not being painted in a particularly good light. Also promotes legal immigration, and a redemption theme due to one of the antagonists, an orange tabby cat named Tiger, ultimately being befriended by Fieval and becoming an ally to the mice.
|$84 million
|-
|2017
|G
|A huge improvement over ''Cars 2'' and is often considered to be the true sequel to the first film. Cars 3 is a great family movie. If it didn't have such liberal producers, Cars 3 would have been a much better film; this suggests liberals can't even get film-making right.
|$108,667,133
|-
|2017
|PG
|Add info pleaseA beautiful animated film about tradition and family. In Santa Cecilia, Mexico, 12-year-old Miguel Rivera secretly dreams of becoming a musician like Ernesto de la Cruz, a popular actor and singer of his great-grandmother Coco's generation, despite music being despised by his family. After entering the Land of the Dead, Miguel encounters Héctor, a down-on-his-luck skeleton who once played music with Ernesto. Héctor offers to help Miguel reach Ernesto; in return, he asks Miguel to take his photo back to the Land of the Living, so that he might visit his now-elderly daughter before she forgets him and he disappears completely.
|$591.4 million
|-
|An anime film adaptation of the Christian book ''A Dog of Flanders'' by Ouida. The film is pro-Christianity.
|¥243,543,645 (Japan)<br />N/A (USA; Direct to Video)
|-
|''Dr. Seuss' The Grinch''
|2018
|PG
|Like the animated special and live action film before it, the film retains the anti-nihilism and redemptive themes in the movie. The anti-materialism message also is further reinforced as Grinch's chance encounter with Cindy Lou Who has him learning that she didn't even intend to ask for presents, but rather to ease her mom's burden due to doing so many things for so many people, which ultimately acted as the catalyst for his redemption. Also has a promotion of family values, since as noted above, Cindy Lou Who expressed concern for her mom barely spending time being a mom and burning the wick at both ends, and a primary part of the Grinch's hatred for the holiday dealt with his time as an orphan, with it being heavily implied that he was alone even in the orphanage. Due to several scenes in the film with Christmas carols being sung, it is also one of the few movies to explicitly note that the point of Christmas was also a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ.
|
|-
|''Dumbo''
|2003
|G
|The film is pro-family, as Marlin, a clownfish, embarks on a quest to save his son Nemo (with assistance from Dory, an absent-minded blue tang) after he was captured by humans, even after Nemo disobeyed him his warning to touch not go near a fishing boat. Also has a subtle condemnation on environmentalism, as the divers captured Nemo thinking Nemo was injured and needed medical assistance.
|$940.3 million
|-
|''G.I. Joe: The Movie''
|1987
|NR
|Animated film version of the conservative cartoon of the same name.
|direct-to-video
|-
|Gekijōban Haikara-san ga Tōru Zenpen - Benio, Hana no 17-sai
|2017
|G
|Benio Hanamura lost her mother when she was very young and has been raised by her father, a high-ranking official in the Japanese army. As a result, she has grown into a tomboy - contrary to traditional Japanese notions of femininity, she studies kendo, drinks sake, dresses in often ridiculous Western fashions instead of the traditional kimono, and isn't as interested in housework as she is in literature. She also rejects the idea of arranged marriages and believes in a woman's right to a career and to marry for love. Benio's best friends are the beautiful Tamaki, who is much more feminine than Benio but equally interested in women's rights, and Ranmaru, a young man who was raised to play female roles in the kabuki theater and as a result has acquired very effeminate mannerisms. One day, Benio has a series of embarrassing encounters with the handsome army lieutenant Shinobu Ijuin, only to receive a shock when her father tells her that Shinobu is to be her husband, due to a pact made between the Hanamura and Ijuin families before Benio's birth. At first Benio tries to fight against her father's wishes, attempting to elope with her friend Ranmaru and eventually deliberately erring in her wifely duties in every way imaginable, hoping the families will cancel the engagement. However, her scheme fails - Shinobu genuinely loves Benio and patiently forgives her for her many blunders, and Benio soon realizes that in spite of herself, she is also falling in love with him. However, a major in the army who holds a grudge against Shinobu then sends the young lieutenant to fight in Manchuria. At the end of the film, Benio stays on in the Ijuin home to care for Shinobu's grandparents and wait for his return. cutting her waist-length hair short and decides to get a job to help out with the family's dire financial situation. A sequel is being released in the summer of 2018
The film is pro-traditional gender roles, as well as pro-military, since both Shinobu and Benio's father are both military men.
|N/A
|-
|''A Goofy Movie''
|2015
|PG
|Similar to the first film, individualism and standing up for what is right are central themes. Dracula fails to force his grandson to be an evil vampire, then realizes that he can only a good role model to his grandson and cannot force him to be something he is not. Another major theme is having good character, as Dracula talks to his human son-in-law Jonathan of his grandson's great character and how he should not reject his love for him because he is different. In the end, the grandson uses his vampiric powers to battle giant bats who attack the Dracula family for including humans in their lineage. Also makes fun of liberal styles, as Dracula is unhappy with the lowering of the standards in the schools.
|$169,700,110
|-
|''Hotel Transylvania 3''
|2018
|PG
|The threequel to the conservative film franchise.
|
|-
|''How to Train Your Dragon''
|2015
|PG
|Please add infoInside Out is a largely Pro-Family movie. The movie sheds light on what children think and feel, while keeping liberal progressive views out of the way. The main character, Riley, is shown to love her parents, and the importance of family values is shown multiple time throughout the movie. The parents have to deal with real life problems such as unemployment and moving to find jobs. The movie portrays the family as a nice, family-oriented, hard-working family trying to succeed in the United States.
|$857.6 million
|-
|2001
|G
|Brilliant but naive young inventor Jimmy Neutron tries to make contact with extra-terrestrial extraterrestrial civilizations. However, his efforts cause all parents in his hometown of Retroville to be abducted by egg-like aliens known as the Yolkians. While the children initially rejoice, they soon learn the harsh realities of living in a nihilistic world as well as the importance of family, so they embark on a celestial mission to rescue their parents. The film condemns paganism to a degree as the Yolkians worship Poultra, a chicken-like monstrosity believed to be an incarnate god to which they seek to sacrifice the parents of Jimmy and his friends.
|$80,936,232
|-
|$205.8 million
|-
|''[[Lady and the Tramp]]''
|1955
|G
|In this beloved Disney classic, which was known as Walt Disney’s Happiest Motion Picture, Lady a cocker spinal meets and falls in love with a male stray mongrel known as the Tramp. While aside from the film being pro-family, the dogs to whatever they can to protect the human baby from the rat, in showing [[chivalry]]. In addition, Lady condemns Tramp for having other girlfriends, after finding out from the pound dogs that his only weakness is that he is a womanizer, thus showing infidelity and promiscuity in a very negative light. In the end, he becomes faithful to her and joins her human family. There also anti-environmentist aspects as well, with the dogs learning to understand their place, that although humans come first they still have a place in their heart, as the beliefs Tramp had on humans being so cruel turned out to be false. Also, the iconic Bella Notte scene where they accidentally kiss by eating the same spaghetti took place and was served by the kind-hearted capitalist restaurant owner Tony. On top of that this is a rarity in Disney Animation to have Christmas depicited in the film and shown in postive positive light.
|$36,359,037<ref>http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=ladyandthetramp.htm</ref>
|-
|1988
|G
|Please add infoIn this film that promotes family values and friendship, the main character (Littlefoot) is a dinosaur that loses his mother. This sparked some controversy, because the killing of a family member is quite violent for a movie with a kid-targeted audience, but this movie redeems itself through the plot. Littlefoot finds friends throughout the movie that show team work, cooperation, hard work, and diligence are the key to living a successful life, even in the dinosaur world.
|$84.4 million
|-
Its story takes partial inspiration from Scripture, particularly the stories of [[Joseph]] and [[Moses]]. On a side note, the film features the power-hungry main antagonist Scar, who kills his own brother, the ruling king Mufasa, to usurp the throne, then manipulates his nephew, Mufasa's young son Simba, into thinking that Simba is responsible for his father's death and forces him into exile. Scar is a model liberal because, once he becomes ruler, he favors [[Communism|Communistic]]/[[Fascism|fascistic]] big government, pushes [[liberal values]], and lets their Pride Lands territory fall to ruin. In addition, when rallying up the Hyenas to aid him in killing Mufasa, he vows that they will never starve under his rule, mirroring what various Communist and other leftist insurgents often vow when trying to get people to aid them in taking over a government. The song "Be Prepared" also shows the Hyenas [[goose step|goose stepping]] past Scar as he looks down from a cliff in a clear reference to Nazism. On a similar note, the Hyenas also act as a subtle condemnation against illegal immigration and the concept of open borders, as once the Hyenas merge with the Pride Lands and take it over upon Scar becoming king, it is heavily implied that they forced the Lionesses to overhunt and that ended up causing the Pride Lands territory to become a wasteland by driving out any remaining animals, with Scar indicating that they should "eat Zazu" if they want food.
At several points in the film, Scar delusionally delusively believes he is still a very good king, even claiming "I'm ten times the king Mufasa was!", which is similar to liberal delusions of their own skills in governing (i.e., Obama's later claim that he would have "won" reelection into a third term if he was able to run again, despite never being legally qualified to run in the first place, not to mention his being legally barred from running for a third term even if he were legally qualified to run in the first place per the [[Twenty-Second Amendment]] to the United States Constitution). He unsuccessfully attempts to orchestrate the assassination of Simba by using hyena minions and even attempts to kill him himself, to ensure that he will be king and remain so forevermore, but he is thwarted by Simba once the cub reaches adulthood. Simba effectively becomes King and restores the Pride Lands after Scar, who tries to save his own skin by blaming his minions for everything he orchestrated himself, has the hyenas turn against and kill him.
There is a slight condemnation towards anarchy in the film as well: during the song "Be Prepared", the hyena Shenzi, upon learning that Scar is planning to kill Mufasa and Simba, entertains the possibility of a kingless society before Scar sternly tells the laughing hyenas that he intends to be the king. Finally, the film condemns hedonism, as the misfit meerkat and warthog comic reliefs Timon and Pumbaa, while depicted as genuinely heroic at times, engage in a philosophy of "Hakuna Matata" ("No Worries" in Swahili), which is shown overall to be negative.
|1989
|G
|A An adaptation of Hans Christian Anderson's fairy tale of the same name, it was about a mermaid strives to become a traditional female human, following the patriarchal system of society. It also promotes the concept of [[assimilation]], as the mermaid: Ariel when becoming human intended to adopt the culture of the humans upon doing so. The film centers around conservative Christian values and contains an anti-feminism theme. Ariel is shown to be the antithesis of a modern feminist. The villain Ursula is shown in a devilish and beastly way (appearing as half-woman, half-octopus), and her claims about men not wanting women who talk and care only for a woman's body language (a common claim by [[feminism|feminists]] against males) is made clear to be lies. In addition, it also contains a pro-traditional marriage theme, and is the last Disney animated feature film to actually treat traditional marriage in a positive light for a good while.
Despite being set under the sea, it also features an anti-[[Environmentalism]] and anti-racism message, as the characters (namely King Triton) who pushed anti-human sentiments turned out to be wrong in their negative views on humans. Although often ignored by liberal reviewers complaints about the movie(some of whom also adhered to the feminist ideology and thus falsely implied that Ariel solely wanted to become human because of Eric, which led directly to promoting the feminist agenda in ''Beauty and the Beast''.<ref name="Woolverton and Belle" />), it was also pro-family, as during her deal with Ursula, Ariel was explicitly hesitant to undergo the deal citing that, regardless of which way the deal goes, she won't see her father and sisters again. King Triton, after destroying Ariel's grotto in a fit of anger, is clearly shown afterwards to be immensely remorseful of his actions after it became apparent that Ariel fled from him as a result, and later tries to save Ariel after learning about Ursula's role in her disappearance and even opts to sacrifice himself to ensure Ariel's (and, implied via dialogue regarding Ursula shortly afterward, her sisters') safety, and Ariel upon witnessing Triton being cursed by Ursula, immediately attempts to avenge him by attacking Ursula.
It also shows a perfect allegory towards liberalism's deceit and cheating to ensure success and its unwillingness to keep its word, as well as the promotion of character integrity and doing things fair and square, as when Ariel seemed to have failed at gaining Eric's love, she makes absolutely no attempt at stopping the marriage until after learning that his "bride", Vanessa (in reality, Ursula in disguise), had in fact brainwashed Prince Eric and that he didn't choose to marry her, with it being implied that Ursula violated her end of the deal when she did that action, and even when she does in fact fail, Ariel makes absolutely no effort to resist Ursula's dragging her away. Likewise, Ursula, besides her blatant interference with the deal by disguising herself as Vanessa and brainwashing Eric, also arranged to have Flotsam and Jetsam overturn Eric and Ariel's boat specifically to ensure that Eric and Ariel couldn't kiss when it looked like Ariel could in fact win her end of the deal fair and square, and after she curses Triton and Ariel attempts to attack Ursula in retaliation, Ursula heavily implies before Eric saved Ariel that she's going to kill the latter despite having promised to not harm Ariel.
The movie's box office success also led directly to a rejuvenation in Disney's animated features called the Disney Renaissance, and the film also had a prequel TV series carrying much of the same themes airing on CBS and later on the Disney Channel from 1992 to 1994, as well as two comic book series by Disney Comics and Marvel that carried many of the same themes, and a sequel and prequel film that, although overall promoting many of the same themes, had questionable production quality.
|$111,543,479
|-
|1940
|G
|Kindhearted craftsman Geppetto wishes for his own son, so a blue fairy (resembling the Blessed Virgin Mary) grants his wish and brings one of his wooden puppets to life, promising that she will make him a real boy if he proves himself brave, truthful, and unselfish. As he tries to fit in with humans, the wooden boy is soon tricked and kidnapped by the evil puppet master Stromboli. Over the course of his journey of self -discovery, Pinocchio's morals, which his creator gave him, are tested, and he must escape being manipulated by the bad boys of the cursed Pleasure Island who have [[Hollywood values]] and, because of their actions, are turned into donkeys (which, coincidentally, is the mascot for the Democratic party). Finally, he altruistically saves Gepppetto from being trapped inside a whale and proves himself worthy to become a real boy.
|$84,254,167
|-
|1982
|G
|Please add infoThis family-friendly film includes Mrs Brisby, who is a widowed mouse. She lives on a farm owned by a man named Fitzgibbons. She and her 4 children, Martin, Theresa, Cynthia and Timmy live in a cinderblock in one of Fitzgibbons' fields. Every year, before Fitzgibbons plows the field to plant his crops, the family moves to their summer home to avoid the tractor. Nearby is another mouse, Dr Ages, who is the family doctor. Brisby visits Ages to get a remedy for Timmy, who has come down with pneumonia, potentially delaying the summer move. Fitzgibbons decides one day to begin plowing the field early. Brisby desperately tries to disable the farmer's tractor and freezes while climbing up the mechanism. Auntie Shrew intervenes and pulls out the tractor's gas line, halting the machine. While Mrs Brisby sobs over her predicament, Auntie tells her to be braver for her family's sake and suggests she visit the Great Owl, the wisest creature in the forest. Brisby is hesitant, since owls eat mice, but she goes. With the help of a new found friend, Jeremy, a crow hoping to meet Miss Right, and whom Mrs Brisby untangled from a pile of string he was trapped in, she meets with the fearsome owl, who merely tells her that she must move her family. Mrs Brisby explains the complication with her son Timmy and the owl tells her he has no solution. As he leaves, he learns her last name and becomes more helpful because her husband, Jonathan, was well known and respected throughout the woods. The Owl tells Mrs Brisby to go to the colony of rats that live in the farmer's rose bush and ask them for help. He specifically tells her to have the rats move her house to "the lee of the stone", the protected side of a large rock in the field that Fitzgibbons avoids when plowing. Mrs Brisby sneaks into the rose bush and finds that the rats have built a very modern colony that makes use of electricity that they pilfer from Fitzgibbons. She also meets Dr Ages there, whom at first tells her the rose bush is off-limits but is astonished that she had met with the Great Owl and lived. They are discovered by the rats' captain of the guard, Justin, who takes them to the rats' Senate room. As they enter, a charismatic rat, Jenner, is railing to the council about the plan of the rats' leader, Nicodemus, who wants to abandon the rose bush and move to a location called Thorn Valley where they'll found a new colony based on their own labors, rather than stealing supplies from the farmer. Jenner is opposed to the idea and even suggest that they wage war against any humans who attempt to drive them out. Justin and Ages make Mrs Brisby's case to the council, who agree to the request because she is Jonathan Brisby's wife. In a sinister private meeting with his associate, Sullivan, Jenner plots to have Nicodemus killed during the operation and make it look accidental. Justin takes Mrs Brisby to meet with Nicodemus. A very old, kind and wise leader, he tells Mrs Brisby the rats' history: they were all lab animals imprisoned in NIMH, the National Institutes of Mental Health. Injected with experimental compounds, the rats developed intelligent brains and were able to escape their cages, along with several mice including Jonathan and Mr Ages. During their escape, all but two of the mice, Johnathan and Mr Ages, were sucked into the ventilation system by strong air gusts. When the party were trapped by a vent grating, Jonathan was small enough to crawl through and open the grate. The rats subsequently owed Jonathan their lives and he continued to work with them while they built their colony. Some months prior to Mrs Brisby's visit to the rose bush, Jonathan had been killed by Fitzgibbons' ornery and fearsome cat, Dragon, whom the rats had been trying to drug. Nicodemus gives Brisby a large red amulet and tells her that it has great supernatural powers when someone shows true courage of the heart. Nicodemus says that the rats will be happy to repay their life debt to Jonathan's family and will move her home. For the operation to succeed, Dragon will have to be drugged. Mrs Brisby, feeling she should participate, volunteers to spike Dragon's feeding dish. The only way into Fitzgibbons' kitchen is through a small hole under a sideboard, a hole too small for any rat. The plan goes well until Mrs Brisby runs back and is trapped by Fitzgibbons' son. Justin leaves her, having to supervise the operation, promising to come back for her. While she's trapped in a bird cage, Brisby overhears Fitzgibbons on the phone with NIMH, who want to come to his farm and capture the rats. Brisby realizes the situation is now more desperate and escapes the bird cage by knocking out its small water cup. At the site of the Brisby home, the rats have constructed an elaborate system of ropes and blocks and tackles to lift the cinderblock. While the block is being swung towards the stone, Jenner cuts the anchoring lines with his sword and the block falls, narrowly missing Nicodemus, however, the heavy gears and rope fall on him, killing him. Jenner declares the operation a failure and suggests they leave when Mrs Brisby arrives. Justin tells her that her family is alive but Nicodemus is dead. She suddenly remembers her urgent news that NIMH will be at the farm tomorrow and tells the rats they must leave tonight. Jenner refuses to believe her and tells the rats that he will take over leadership of the colony. When Mrs Brisby insists she's telling the truth, Jenner strikes her and notices that she's wearing the amulet. Attempting to seize it from her, Justin intervenes and fights with Jenner until he wounds him. Jenner admits that he'd caused the accident that killed Nicodemus, saying that the plan to move the colony would fail. As he moves in to kill Justin, Sullivan kills Jenner with a thrown dagger and succumbs to his own wound, inflicted by Jenner himself when he'd given his own sword to Justin during the fight. Moments later, Mrs Brisby sees that her house has begun to sink into the mud, taking her children with it. A futile attempt to rig a new roping system fails and Brisby herself vainly pulls at the remaining ropes as the house sinks under the surface. Justin rescues her, holding her back. As she looks on in horror, the amulet suddenly bursts from the mud, brightly glowing, and places itself around her neck. Using the power that Nicodemus spoke of, she raises the house from the mud and moves it to the lee side of the stone. Brisby's children are safe and she faints from exhaustion. The next morning, with Timmy on the mend from his pneumonia and the now-abandoned rose bush being inspected by NIMH, Jeremy arrives with mounds of string that he'd been collecting to build a love nest and finds the Brisby home already moved and even camouflaged by the natural vegetation. He asks Brisby for the amulet, however, she'd given it to Justin before they'd left the rose bush. While he laments that he wasn't able to help move the house, a female crow suddenly flies into him. The two become immediately infatuated. While Brisby's daughter wraps her mother's hands which were burned by the amulet, Auntie Shrew arrives for a visit, bringing groans from Martin as Jeremy and his new love fly off. This movie's interesting plot, and its complicated themes that are apparent, are both entertaining for adults and kids alike. Although there are some references to violent themes, it does not paint them in good lighting and shows the harsh consequences. Because of their wide audience appeal, this movie was wildly successfully in movie theaters. The Secret of NIMH is considered to be one the best children's movies of the 20th century.
|$14.7 million
|-
|1937
|G
|The Disney animated classic that started it all. Walt Disney and his staff of talented filmmakers, animators, and musicians overcame many challenges to create one of the greatest cinematic masterpieces of all time: a masterpiece of solid family entertainment and a perfect film recommendation for everyone around the world.In addition, the film It is notable as one of the few Disney films to date to feature an openly [[Christian]] princess: Snow White. In addition, as evidenced by the Evil Queen's overall character, it paints parental abuse, including attempted infanticide, in a very negative light.
|$418,200,000
|-
|2017
|PG
|Anitmated This animated story of the [[The Nativity]] with is told from the perspective of anthropomorphic animals.|$40,852,824
|-
|''Tangled''
|In its own strange way, ''Tangled'' stands as a perfect allegory for the Gospel of Christ. Teenage heroine Rapunzel represents humanity, who has grown comfortable in her prison but can’t ignore the light that shines in the darkness. [[Satan|The devil]] is signified by Mother Gothel, who tries to convince Rapunzel to forget the outside world and stay locked away in her tower. Lastly, [[God]] can be found in Rapunzel's real parents, who without fail, continue to shine their light in the hopes of bringing their lost child back home. A TV series sequel to this movie, ''Tangled: The Series'', debuted in 2017.
|$591,794,936
|-
|''Teen Titans Go! to the Movies''
|2018
|PG
|Although it's goofy just like the 2013 onward cartoon spinoff of the 2003-2006 ''Teen Titans'', it takes a jab at Hollywood values as Robin ends up realizing that he doesn't need a movie in order to be a real superhero. It also promotes friendship values as Cyborg, Raven, Starfire, and Beast Boy stay loyal to him, even after he ditches them and they come back for him once he starts to realize he's been tricked by a movie producer, who turns out to be the film's main villain named Slade.
|$11,600,615
|-
|''Toy Story'' trilogy
|1995, 1999, 2010
|G
|Altogether, the three films celebrate friendship and family unity, even if it focuses more on a figurative family with the boy Andy as a father-figure to his toys that , who come alive in humans' absence and praise him Andy for loving and playing with them as though they were his children.
In the first installment, the world's first computer-animated theatrical feature, pull-string cowboy doll Sheriff Woody grows jealous when science fiction hero action figure Buzz Lightyear, who initially believes he is a real space hero, becomes young Andy's favorite toy among the toy community. Woody's efforts to make himself Andy's favorite toy again cause both him and Buzz to be separated from their owner, but teamwork allows them to find their way back to Andy just before he and his family move to a new house. The film's overall development was especially notable due to then-Disney Animation chairman [[Jeffrey Katzenberg]] initially ordering for ''Toy Story'' to be made significantly more liberal in its values by being more "adult, cynical, [and] edgy". This included depicting Woody and the other toys in a significantly more mean-spirited light, with Woody going so far as to actually attempt to murder Buzz with no remorse whatsoever (instead of accidentally knocking Buzz out of the window, as he does in the final film). This caused Toy Story to be almost cancelled and Pixar itself to be nearly shut down until the company was given a second chance.<ref>httphttps://www.breitbart.com/big-hollywood/2010/07/07/we-love-pixar-how-hollywood-cynicism-almost-ruined-toy-story-and-pixar/</ref>
In ''Toy Story 2'', while Andy is away at summer camp, Woody is stolen by a greedy toy collector and is tempted by the idea of being immortalized in a museum, only to be rescued by his friends and reminded of a toy's true purpose: for a child to play with it. Once again, the film positively portrays teamwork and family unity using a metaphor of unity between toys and their owners.
|$33,349,941
|-
|''[[America: Imagine the World Without Her]]''
|2014
|PG-13
|PG
|This documentary was made in response to [[Al Gore]]'s ''An Inconvenient Truth'', revealing that global warming is a hoax and how Al Gore himself was hypocritical about his insistence at reducing the world's carbon footprint.
|
|-
|''An Open Secret''
|2014
|PG-13
|Whistleblower film that exposes pedophilia in Hollywood
|
|-
|This documentary examines various crimes conducted by then-president Bill Clinton, in particular those that occurred during his time as Governor of Arkansas, including the Mena operation, being a draft dodger who deliberately misled his commanding officer, Whitewater, Arkancide, and his sexual proclivities including at least one instance of rape. It condemns the media for hiding these facts and is widely considered the turning point for the 1994 Republican Revolution.
|N/A
|-
|''[[Death of a Nation: Can We Save America a Second Time?]]''
|2018
|PG-13
|[[Dinesh D'Souza]] exposes the truth about the fascism of [[Benito Mussolini]] and [[Adolf Hitler]], as well as their direct connection to the Democrat Party. It also makes clear the racism that motivated the latter had direct roots to the Progressive movement of the United States and by extension the Democrat Party, and that the conventional wisdom of Fascism was of the right-wing of politics was one of the left's biggest lies and that fascism if anything was of the left. On a similar note, it also makes clear the connection between Mussolini's fascism and Marxism, and also indicates that the issue of slavery was another form of socialism. Also makes clear that the white supremacist founder of the alt-Right [[Richard Spencer]] and the Charlottesville Rally organizer [[Jason Kessler]] had in fact been left-wingers posing as right-wingers. Similarly it also makes clear that Antifa and George Soros, despite claiming they were "anti-Fascist", were in fact fascists (also exposing the latter's role in the confiscation of objects held by his neighbors by the Nazis). As implied by the title, it also compares the turbulent times that was orchestrated by the left after Donald Trump was elected to the events of the Civil War under Lincoln. It also has a positive depiction of the [[White Rose Rebellion]].
|
|-
|''[[Expelled | Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed]]''
|2008
|PG
|Conservative commentator, comedian, economist, and author [[Ben Stein]] investigates the persecution of scientists and others who challenge [[Social Darwinism]] and unravels [[evolution]]ists' scientific and education system [[deceit]]. Liberals scorned it for presenting this issue as political rather than scientific while ignoring the reality that Darwinists do, in fact, use their theories as a weapon against people's freedom of religion. Liberal biased critics hated this movie and panned it, but audiences raved about it.
|$7,690,545
|-
|2016
|PG-13
|[[Dinesh D'Souza]] analyzes Hillary Clinton's dark side and, as indicated by the title, the dark history of the Democrat Party. Donald Trump urged his supporters to see this documentary, and it is believed to have helped him win the 2016 presidential election. Like all of D'Souza's documentaries, this movie was absolutely despised by liberal-biased critics. In fact, the mainstream media hated this documentary so much that it became the worst-reviewed film on 3 different review aggregator websites. That is how crazy liberals go when their arguments are countered with facts, logic, and truth. The craziest part of all is how this documentary won 5 [[Golden Raspberry Awards]] because the leftists in Hollywood wanted revenge for Trump winning the election. D'Souza said he was honoured to be receiving so much hate because it is proof that he got his point across.
|$13,099,931
|-
|2004
|R
|As the title implies, this satiric satirical documentary criticizes Michael Moore's hatred towards all things American. Directed by a [[libertarian]].
|N/A
|-
|
|-
|''They Shall Not Grow Old''|2018||Highlights the bravery and sacrifice of WWI veterans ||-
|''Waiting for Superman''
|2010
|It highlights the failures of the U.S.' public school system.
|$6,410,257
|-
|''Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe''
|2016
|N/A
|Vaccines are shown for what damaging effects they can have on people.
|$1,163,265
|-
|}
|Based on the real life declassified mission of the Horse Men that were deployed to Afghanistan after the September 11 terror attacks. On the one hand, the film is pro-America and depicts the Taliban and Al Qaida in a very negative light. But on the other, one of the stars of the film, Michael Shannon, was extremely anti-American, and a couple of the members of the unit had their ethnicities changed in what seemed to be an attempt at forced [[diversity]].
|
|-
|''The 40-Year-Old Virgin''
|2005
|R
|A bawdy sex comedy about a man who is ridiculed by his peers for his indifference to sex as an adult. His friends, feeling that he isn't "normal", try to encourage him to lose his virginity, starting with pornography, sex toys, and even prostitution. However, their personal attitudes towards women ruin their own relationships, and the man remains steadfast in his abstinence. Later, he meets a woman who connects with him, but is no longer a virgin, as she has a teenage daughter. At one point, her daughter confesses only to him that she is also a virgin and encourages him not to feel bad about it. However, her mother, who has been on multiple dates with him, is still unaware of his virginity. After their proposed deadline by which the two agreed to eventually have sex, he tells her of his virginity and stays reluctant about giving in. There is some drama and confusion between them, but she eventually comes to accept him and the two are happily married at the end before having sex.
|$177.4 million
|-
|''21 Jump Street''
|Anti-cloning film, but also pro-feminism as well.
|$25,874,337
|-
|''Air Force One''
|1997
|R
|On the one hand, the strong and courageous U.S. President James Marshall (Harrison Ford), a military veteran, takes an uncompromising stance against Russian terrorists who hijack his airplane. The major themes include family, authority, respect for the military, and sacrifice for the greater good. On the other hand, however, the script-writer for the film has admitted that he made the film largely to promote then-president [[Bill Clinton]].<ref>https://www.salon.com/july97/entertainment/movieair970725.html<br />"But Bill Clinton is the first president to spawn movies that feature fictional presidents functioning as his stand-ins, movies made by directors fighting to define, and redefine, his image.....Air Force One" is a fantasy of what it might take for President Clinton to become all things to all people. The movie's Clinton stand-in, President James Marshall (Harrison Ford, appropriately displaying the facial mobility of Mount Rushmore), is a leader who defies his timid advisors in his efforts to set policies against injustice and tyranny and is willing to take on Congress to enforce those policies. But this is a fantasy designed to silence Clinton's conservative critics, so not only is Jim Marshall a dedicated family man, but he's a Vietnam War hero to boot. There's a combo you can't beat, a guy who knows how to kill a Commie and keep his pecker in his pocket."</ref> In addition, it also shoe-horned a cameo appearance from Bill Clinton himself at the latter's request.<ref>http://vikingphoenix.com/news/archives/1997/hdot9702.htm</ref>
|$172,956,409
|-
|''Aladdin''
|1992
|G
|Based on the classic Arabian folk tale ''Aladdin and the Magic Lamp'', a poor but charitable thief is sent by Jafar, a sinister vizier to a sultan, to search for a mysterious oil lamp rumored to contain unbelievably powerful magic. Upon finding this, he accidentally releases the comical genie inside, who grants his wish to become a prince so he can legally court Jasmine, the sultan's daughter. On the one hand, the film is set within what is implied to be a Muslim state, and Aladdin does resort to lying to try and marry Jasmine. A slight feminist bent is present because Jasmine refuses to marry, ignoring the law requiring it (although not nearly to the same extent as with Belle and ''Beauty and the Beast''.). In addition, some lyrics to the opening song were notably cut due to fears of offending the Muslim populace, implying the film is politically correct in nature. The Sultan is shown to be a massive bumbler and overgrown child, which may hint at an anti-parenthood agenda. But on the other hand, the film does ultimately push character integrity because Aladdin ultimately decides against lying and tells Jasmine the truth about himself. Disregarding the film's politically correct treatment of Islam, it ultimately showcases some more negative elements of Islamic culture via a vendor nearly chopping Jasmine's hand off when she "steals" some food to feed a starving child, as well as depicting Prince Achmed in a very negative light via his cruelty to Aladdin and children attempting to stop him. The prince is implied to be a poor example of a husband, so it is subtly implied that Jasmine refused to marry because all the princes she encountered had in fact been as bad as Achmed. She then falls for Aladdin because he saves her life and shows kindness to her. In addition, it is made clear that while Aladdin does steal and initially had an infamous reputation for his thefts, it's solely in order to survive on the streets, with it being heavily implied that he was an orphan, and he also selflessly gives his stolen food to starving children after initially planning to eat it. There is a lesser condemnation against the occult as the only explicit magic-user besides Aladdin's Genie is Jafar, the main villain who dreams of becoming the world's most powerful dark sorcerer.
|$504.1 million
|-
|''Alpha and Omega''
|2010
|PG
|An animated film about wolves that has a message about standing up for what you believe in, especially since one wolf leader with a dictatorial agenda. It also promotes friendship and family values. However, its stances on multiculturalism and environmentalism seem to be rather mixed to positive.
|$25,107,267
|-
|''Antz''
|Despite its unrealistic depictions of demons, it's a pretty gun-centric pro-Second Amendment film.
|$11,502,976
|-
|''Atlantis: The Lost Empire''
|2001
|PG
|Released during the [[Michael Eisner]] era of [[Disney]]. On the one hand, the main villain is a military commander who would endanger the lost city of Atlantis just to be rich, and it is implied that he would commit treason by selling the power source to the Kaiser during World War I for the same motivation. The theft of the crystal to become rich could be seen as a condemnation of capitalism. That being said, however, capitalism has also been promoted in a more positive light in the form of Preston B. Whitmore, an eccentric but ultimately good-hearted billionaire who funded the expedition in the first place, and in addition, most of the principal cast was shown to have dreams of getting a better lot in society, with it being heavily implied in the ending that they ultimately succeeded in achieving those dreams after selflessly trying to save Atlantis, which acts as an implicit promotion of both capitalism and the American Dream.
|$84,056,472
|-
|''Back to the Future''
|Musically gifted but slacking highschooler Marty McFly is invited by his energetic, quirky scientist friend Dr. Emmett "Doc" Brown to witness the birth of his greatest invention: a time-traveling DeLorean automobile. After Doc Brown is shot and killed by Libyan terrorists, whom he tricked to gain plutonium fuel needed to make his car travel through time, Marty escapes in the DeLorean and travels 30 years into the past, where he meets his parents as teenagers and accidentally becomes his mother Lorraine's new love interest. He then meets with the young Doc Brown, who volunteers to help him return to 1985 and warns him that he will cease to exist if he does not ensure that his parents fall in love at their high school prom. Marty ultimately succeeds in reuniting his future parents by encouraging his teenage father George to stand up to bully Biff Tannen in Lorraine's honor. In the process, he saves Doc Brown by sending him a note warning of the terrorist attack. Overall, the movie contains some conservative messages such as the triumph of chivalry, the evils of terrorism, and the negative effects of deviancy and drug/alcohol addiction. At the same time, it promotes premarital sexual activity and disregard for chastity. Included two sequels in 1989 and 1990.
|$210,609,762
|-
|Bambi
|1942
|G
|Animated adaptation of the German children's book of the same name. Environmental and anti-hunting messages are pushed (although it should be noted that the main antagonist, "Man", is technically closer to a poacher than a true hunter due to his killing a nursing doe and also trying to kill Bambi, a fawn, both of which are strictly prohibited by hunters), but it is also pro-family due to Bambi's mother giving her life to save her son, and the Great Forest Prince, who is heavily implied to be Bambi's father, went out of his way to protect Bambi from the hunter three times, even rescuing his son from a forest fire. It also was anti-homosexual agenda and way ahead of its time in refuting claims of [[animal homosexuality]], as the character Flower, a skunk, is depicted in childhood as a very effeminate male, yet when he became an adult, he evidently was aroused by a female skunk and ultimately became a father as well.
|$102,247,150
|-
|''Batman: The Dark Knight Returns Part 1'' and ''2''
|September 25, 2012 (Part 1)<br />January 29, 2013 (Part 2)<br />October 8, 2013 (Deluxe Edition)
|PG-13
|An animated two-part adaptation of Frank Millar's comic book Elseworld story of the same name where Batman is forced to resume his duties after crime reached record highs in Gotham. The movie is anti-Crime, and also depicts homosexuality and sexual deviancy in a very negative light, including making a connection between homosexuality and Nazis via a transgendered Nazi criminal, and the Joker is portrayed in a similar manner to Paul Lynde. It also mocks to a certain degree anti-war politicians, as the mayor (a likely democrat) attempts to negotiate with the Mutant leader in jail to get him to call off the Mutants' war on Gotham only to have his throat torn out, with his vice-mayor repeating the same concessions. On the same note, it also showcases the negatives of pseudo-sciences as a psychologist was depicted as being a quack who ended up making Two-Face's insanity even worse despite repairing his face, and was ultimately responsible for letting the Joker escape Arkham Asylum due to the latter faking being cured. That all being said, however, it does feature some anti-Reagan messaging, and also condemns the military due to Joker trying to instigate a nuclear war between America and the Soviets, and America striking first as a result, and it was also revealed that a military general had provided the mutant gang with enough military arms to start a small war.
|$5,589,376 (Part 1)<br />$4,059,217 (Part 2)<br />$9,648,593 (Total)
|-
|''Beauty and the Beast''
|1991
|G
|A young woman overcomes a shallow society and finds true love. Although by comparison a powerful and immensely popular antidote to [[feminism]] to the [[liberal]] movies churned out by [[Disney]] since, as well as overall promoting redemption (as seen with the Beast's transformation), and also promoting some family values (such as Belle being loyal to her father), there were a few hints at feminist propaganda at the beginning of the film, such as Belle being different from the villagers because she can read, which is implied to not be supported by the villagers at all (feminist propaganda often falsely claims that women couldn't get an education until the 1960s), as well as Belle being unwilling to hold the role of housewife for Gaston or raising children, and later her blaming the titular Beast for her fleeing the castle despite most of the events leading up to and after that event being largely her fault (specifically, her deliberate disobedience towards Beast and the servants by going into the West Wing as soon as she found out where it was located) and the story framing that as being a good thing she did. On a related note, a scene that had Belle baking a cake for her father when he got home ended up cut at the order of Linda Woolverton, with her reason specifically being because "a liberated woman [like Belle] wouldn't know how to bake," essentially implying that baking would have been the activity of non-liberated women, a typical statement by feminists.<refname="Woolverton and Belle">https://www.mouseplanet.com/8500/Linda_Woolverton_and_Belle</ref><ref>https://www.yahoo.com/news/belle-beauty-beast-became-disneys-155053182.html</ref> In addition, the opening song and the reprise has Belle having a similar "smarter-than-thou" personality that is all too common among liberals, having her refer to the villagers derogatorily as "little people" in the beginning of the opening song, repeatedly stressing the "provincial" elements of the village when expressing her desire to leave the village, complaining about Gaston due to considering him "boorish and brainless" shortly after his failed proposal, and also dismissing the villagers as "they" when mentioning her goals ("I want so much more than what ''they've'' got planned"). On that note, due to Beast being unwilling to even defend himself, let alone the castle servants, when the mob arrived to kill him until Belle had arrived at the last second, which had been the result of Belle's attempts at civilizing Beast, it gives the implication that the ideal male in the film is not allowed to get angry or act violently even in self-defense unless a woman was physically present. Then-Disney Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg also mentioned that he wanted "a feminist twist" on the original fairy tale by creating a heroine who is "a departure from typical Disney female characters",<ref>http://articles.mcall.com/1991-11-22/features/2825583_1_beast-s-castle-fairy-tale-madame-gabrielle</ref> which had partly been done in response to negative criticisms towards Ariel in the previous movie by liberal critics,<ref name="Woolverton and Belle" /> and the feminist writer [[Linda Woolverton]] made clear that she made Belle a feminist and based her on the women's liberation movement from the 1970s in order to avoid creating another insipid princess.<ref name="Beauty and Maleficent">{{Cite web|url = http://time.com/2798136/maleficent-beauty-beast-writer/|title = The Same Woman Wrote Maleficent and Beauty and the Beast—Here’s How They’re Linked|date = May 30, 2014|accessdate = January 16, 2014|website = Time|publisher = |last = Rothman|first = Lily}}</ref><ref>http://www.ew.com/article/2016/05/26/linda-woolverton-alice-belle-disney-heroines?xid=entertainment-weekly_socialflow_twitter</ref><ref>https://www.bustle.com/articles/163686-the-one-thing-beauty-and-the-beast-fans-probably-dont-know-about-the-creation-of-belle</ref><ref>http://www.mouseplanet.com/8500/Linda_Woolverton_and_Belle</ref><ref>http://articles.latimes.com/1992-01-19/entertainment/ca-544_1_disney-film</ref> On that note, this made it the first ''Disney'' animated adaptation of a fairy tale to radically alter the story specifically to promote a left-wing socio-political agenda onto the audience regardless of whether such was actually appropriate for the audience or an actual good message (as prior Disney films generally made alterations specifically to tone down anything that was otherwise inappropriate for the age group for the audience). Gaston is a conservative and hardworking hunter who is considered by the villagers to be their town hero, but is shown to be the main villain of the movie (it should also be noted that in the original screenplay for the film, Gaston was intended to be a Marquess [French nobleman], meaning the decision to make him a conservative and hardworking hunter was made after a rewrite). In addition, although not to the same degree as other Disney films that came after it, the film also has a slight anti-Christian bent, as the villagers (strongly implied by various verses in the opening song and the mob song, as well as a failed wedding, to be practicing and devout Christians) were later briefly seen supporting a plan that went against God's teachings, as well as overall depicted as being idiots, while Belle, the character framed as an intellectual and a moral figure, is not even seen or even implied to believe in God at all. In addition, Belle's love for Beast (where it is implied that she was largely unaware of the Beast being formerly a human prince) could be seen as promoting bestiality. Also, it is the first Disney movie to neither show nor hint at the two love interests getting married, and in fact, the only "wedding" in the film was the one Belle ruined, creating negative implications about marriage as a result, as well as starting a string of movies that don't paint marriage in a positive light. Similarly, the only three females in the film who are implicitly supportive of marriage and Christianity are demeaned, depicted as dumb blondes with the script and credits explicitly referring to them derogatorily as "the bimbettes." There was also a slight anti-hunting and anti-second amendment sentiment in the film, due to the main villain, as aforementioned, explicitly being labelled as a hunter, as well as Gaston's villainous nature being first highlighted in his debut scene where he shot a duck out of the sky. There According to Don Hahn, there were also several overtones of a pro-homosexual agenda within the film, including choice lyrics of the mob song late into the film, largely because of the executive producer, Howard Ashman, being homosexual and dying from AIDS at the time the film was madeand wanting to push the idea of being "ostracized" for his suffering from AIDS. <ref>https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/03/beauty-and-the-beast-gay-lefou-howard-ashman</ref><ref>https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/16583/don-Hahn-interview-beauty-and-the-beast-howard-Ashman-the-lion-king-south-park-and-frankenweenie</ref> Similarly, during the battle in the castle, there was a brief instance of transgenderism that was treated as a joke where the wardrobe proceeded to dress one of the male villagers in a Hawaiian outfit. One of the protagonistic characters, Lumiere, is briefly seen making out with a featherduster and was implied that the two weren't married, with some hints at Lumiere being an unrepentant womanizer (with the implication being further increased in the Special Edition-exclusive song "Human Again" where Lumiere mentioned he had a "mademoiselle in each arm", would be "courting again, chic and sporting again", and Mrs. Potts interjecting "Which should cause several husbands alarm." with Lumiere laughing at this, heavily implying that Lumiere was an adulterer to married women). In addition, Maurice is depicted as slightly addled and eccentric, as well as being naïve (such as thinking Gaston was a good match for Belle despite the story making clear he wasn't), and while he does try to go out of his way to save Belle in the midway point of the film, he ultimately needs saving twice and is unable to save Belle at all, which makes it debatable as to just how pro-family the narrative actually was. In addition, some elements of the film were later reused in the [[Essay:Worst Liberal Movies#Social|definitely liberal]] ''Maleficent'' movie.<ref name="Beauty and Maleficent" />
|$218,967,620
|-
|2017
|PG
|On the one hand, the 2017 film version of ''Beauty and the Beast'' is the latest in the film trend of needlessly and shamelessly remaking animated films or children's stories for the sake of earning quick revenue in the dying Hollywood studio system. Liberals also seized the opportunity with the remake to exploit diversity within the ''Beauty and the Beast'' universe. The final result of the diversity inclusion is that it feels self-congratulatory in the sense of putting it in for the sake of having it, rather than having it be just a part of the story and the film. One notable example is the filmmakers' decision to make LeFou, Gaston's diminutive and bumbling sidekick, a homosexual who is conflicted with his feelings for Gaston (although it should be noted that in the actual script, it never specifies that LeFou was homosexual.<ref>https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/entertainthis/2017/03/03/josh-gad-lefou-beauty-and-the-beast/98679284/</ref>). At the end of the film, LeFou is shown taking a romantic interest in a musketeer who is now a transgender woman after being transformed into one during Gaston's siege of the Beast's castle (who, unlike the original film, actually enjoys it). Not only is it an atrocious artistic decision of the filmmakers to needlessly incorporate diversity simply for the sake of it, but the 2017 film version of ''Beauty and the Beast'' also serves as an example that liberals can legitimately shoehorn the [[homosexual agenda]] into Disney films. Adding salt to the wound, the filmmakers also further changed history to suit their feminist agenda, similar to previous Disney films like ''Mulan'' (1998), ''Pocahontas'' (1995) and ''The Princess and the Frog'' (2009) (most infamously, the villagers are shown to be explicitly intolerant of Belle learning how to read and teaching girls to do the same, smashing her washing machine in the process, despite the fact that the namesake for the village in this film, Mdm. Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve, the original author for the fairy tale, was herself a woman). The 2017 film version of ''Beauty and the Beast'' is now even more of a feminist propaganda film than the 1991 animated film version ever was. There were also hints at an anti-war message due to Gaston being turned into a war veteran, in addition to the implied anti-hunting messages from the original film via his profession (which if anything was expanded on by their hinting at Gaston being evil in the Gaston song when he, in reference to LeFou's question about whether shooting his prey from behind was "fair", states he didn't care if it was, even though killing prey when they least expect it is the entire point behind hunting, which was based on a deleted lyric from one of the earlier drafts of what would become the 1991 film.).
All of that, along with the other shortcomings of the film, reinforces the statement that most of Hollywood is currently out of ideas for motion pictures. It also re-establishes the fact that Disney would, at times, forsake genuine family entertainment in favor of blatant liberal propaganda.
|
|A drama film about Nat Turner, an enslaved man who led a slave rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia. The film focuses on Turner's life as a slave but also a Christian. There are many scenes where he preaches to his fellow slaves in different plantations, even conduct Baptist services, at the same time, he exposes to the crimes related to slavery, which eventually force him to rebel. The film likewise was also deliberately named after D.W. Griffith's film of the same name in a form of irony due to it pushing the opposite message. However, there is a line at the end of the movie downplaying the deaths of the white slave owners compared to the black slaves, something done by the Hollywood elites and unfortunate because all people are equally valuable.
|
|-
|''Bohemian Rhapsody''
|2018
|PG-13
|A biopic of [[Freddie Mercury]], the lead singer of the band Queen. While it does show elements of the practice of homosexuality and hedonism, at the same time, the film largely condemned the practice since it was made clear that Mercury's embracing of these things was what ultimately ruined Queen and his personal relationships, and is what ultimately killed him via AIDS. In addition, Paul Prenter, the only other major character to embrace homosexuality in the movie, was depicted in a very negative light, as he was one of the reasons Mercury went down a bad path, with it being made clear later on that Paul largely was using Mercury for his own gratification, blamed others for his bad ideas, and even hid vital information from Mercury deliberately such as the Live Aid concert plans as well as Mary Austin calling him. It also had a promotion of redemption, as Mercury, inspired largely by his former girlfriend/wife, Mary Austin nearing the end of the film, attempts to reconnect with his band and family and make amends in the time he had left before dying from AIDS. That all being said, however, it's debatable whether the film intended to paint his homosexual escapades in a negative light, as several members of the production company, including Freddie Mercury's actor Rami Malek, indicated that it was a "regrettable" decision as a result of not having enough time to give a "more balanced" view of (ie, promoting) his bisexual lifestyle.
|
|-
|Political comedy depicts the Democrat candidate (Will Ferrell) as an obnoxious, drunken womanizer and satire of [[John Edwards]], although the Republican candidate (Zach Galifianakis) is portrayed just as negatively as a corrupt capitalist.
|$33,165,738
|-
|''Casablanca''
|1942
|NR
|A film based on the play "Everybody Comes to Rick's". On the one hand, the film depicts the Nazis in a negative light, as well as Vichy France being depicted in a negative light, and it does promote the idea of self-sacrifice and doing what's right even at expense to oneself via Rick. On the other hand, incidental dialogue implied that Rick had aided and supported the cause of the Communists during the Spanish Civil War (it should be noted that such dialogue was exclusive to the film and not present in the original play<ref>http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~ina22/splaylib/Screenplay-Everybody_Comes_to_Rick's.pdf</ref>), and Lazlo being an "international leader" of a resistance movement against the Nazis hints at him being a Soviet plant. In addition, one of the screenwriters for the film, Howard Koch, was a notorious communist who was later blacklisted from Hollywood via the House of Un-American Activities Committee.
|$3.7 million
|-
|''Chicken Run''
|The tagline claims that our hero is an angel, but he doesn't display any Christian values. However, there is an anti-drug scene were Eric Draven (the hero) makes a drug addict mother realize that her daughter needs her & gets her off drugs. On top of that the film's villains are nihilist anarchists. The film is notable for being Brandon Lee's last film, as an accident on the set killed him during production.
|$50,693,129
|-
|''The Death of Stalin''
|2017
|Unknown
|The movie accurately shows the horrific events of the Soviet Union under Stalin and shortly thereafter, as well as the innately cowardly nature of the Soviet Politburo (see [[Atheism and cowardice]] as well as [[Atheism and Mass Murder]]). On the other hand, the film largely treats the events in a more comedic manner, thus making it unclear as to whether the film actually condemns the USSR or praises it.
|Unknown
|-
|''Ed Wood''
|Although including a scene that seemed more catered to the anti-War ideology featuring a door gunner slaughtering civilians during the Vietnam War with obvious glee, the boot camp sequence was nonetheless shown in a realistic and to some extent inspiring light, with Vietnam Veterans also frequently stating that the Gunnery Sergeant's advice saved them during Vietnam, and also features a female Vietcong soldier who is not shown in a positive light at all.
|$46.4 million (North America)
|-
|''Gattaca''
|1997
|PG-13
|A condemnation of human genetic engineering, and a wonderful triumph of individualism in an extremely totalitarian regime. Unfortunately the movie ends with a materialistic message: "They say every atom in our bodies was once a part of a star. So, maybe I'm not leaving, maybe I'm going home" (A phrase said when the protagonist finally managed to go to space).
|$12,339,633
|-
|''Ghost''
|1982
|R
|Unlike the two films before it (which has mass murder Michael Myers) this film's villain is a pagan who plans on sacrificing children via witchcraft to bring back the original celebration of Halloween. However he does this by selling masks to them which many critics pointed out may have been an anti-capitalism message.<ref>httphttps://www.nytimes.com/1982/10/22/movies/haloween-iii-plotting-a-joke.html</ref> The film's "hero" is also an adulterer.
|$14,400,000
|-
|Western fairy tale characters Hansel and Gretel are now adults and have their own private bounty hunting organization in hunting witches. Portrays witchcraft in a negative manner, and guns in good light. But the gore, graphic violence and brief nudity is rather unnecessary.
|$55,703,475
|-
|''Hellboy''
|2004
|PG-13
|A live action film adaptation of the Mike Mignola graphic novel of the same name. It is ultimately pro-Christian principles, as the climax had the character John Myers supplying Hellboy (who at that point became Anung un Rama) with a crucifix and reminding him of his upbringing, which ultimately had him rejecting Rasputin's plan of unleashing Hell on the world, and the character Bruttenholm is explicitly depicted as a Christian and portrayed positively for it. It is also anti-Nazi as well. However, whether it's anti-occult is debatable, and the director was the Marxist Guillermo del Toro.
|$99.3 million
|-
|''High Noon''
|1999
|PG
|This animation espouses anti-war themes and also brief but strong anti-hunting sentiments. Firearms in general are shown in a negative light, with the phrase "guns kill" being repeated a total of three times(which was considered a "positive message" by the ultra-liberal media watchdog group [[Common Sense Media]]). The titular giant is referred to as a "big gun that walks." From a conservative viewpoint, he is a poor metaphor for a real gun; unlike a law-abiding citizen who is a gun owner, the giant has no choice in his actions because he is a war machine programmed with the inability to use his weapons for good, but only to use them thoughtlessly and senselessly. The story involves him learning to hide his weapons and "not be a gun". The conclusion is that, in order to protect the public from an incoming missile, he must fly into it and kill himself rather than use his guns against it. As it is explained, "It's bad to kill, but it isn't bad to die." In addition, despite being set during the Cold War, it largely downplays the Soviet menace that was occurring during that time, as the main antagonist, Kent Mansley, is a government agent (implied to be part of the NSA) investigating the titular Iron Giant who at one point while launching a tirade against Hogarth Hughes alludes to the possibility that the Communists may have been responsible for the Giant's creation as a means to destroy America and that they must destroy it before "it destroys us" and is treated negatively for it. Also features some foul language.
That all being said, however, despite the definite anti-gun and anti-hunting themes, the film does portray the military in a fairly positive light, as General Rogarth was shown to be even-headed and only willing to use military force if confronted with evidence requiring for it, also making clear that he was not happy about bringing out an implied large military force for what was apparently a hoax, and while the military does try to attack the Iron Giant late into the film, it was only because they had been manipulated into doing so by Kent Mansley by the latter lying about the giant killing Hogarth Hughes, and only when confronted with evidence that Hogarth had in fact been alive did the military stand down. In addition, when Hogarth left to investigate the evidence of a "martian" taking out an antenna, he proceeded to salute a photograph of his father, who was implied to have died during World War II. Also has a positive portrayal of the American icon Superman in it. There's also an anti-materialist message in it as well as an implicitly Christian message, as Hogarth talks to the Giant about how humans and other forms of life possess souls that live on even after their mortal bodies die. In addition the film also promotes individualism, promoting the idea of the individual choosing how to live their life, which may also support the American Dream as well, as Dean the film's tritagonist is a capitalistic artist.
|$5,732,614
|-
|2015
|PG-13
|Jurassic Park is now functioning and open for business and the new boss is a woman, an obvious feminist message. Also the military is downgraded as they plan to weaponize dinosaurs. Despite all this feminists weren't impressed and labeled it sexist<ref>http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/06/10/jurassic-world-a-big-dumb-sexist-mess.html</ref> and even liberal critics called the weaponizing dinosaurs plot asinine.<ref>http://thoughtcatalog.com/olos-nah/2015/06/ill-just-say-what-everyone-is-thinking-jurassic-world-is-terrible/</ref>In addition, there was at least one implicit anti-feminist message in the film, as after the boss's secretary was brutally killed by dinosaurs, Owen indicated that she ultimately deserved her death due to her not acting like a mother.
|$652,270,625
|-
|1989
|G
|The coming-of age story of a young half-witch who only inherited the ability to fly, and she makes the best of it. The film does show the value of hard work and is pro-capitalism (Kiki owns her own delivery business), as well as strong pro-family sentiments, mainly in the form of the baker Osono and her quiet husband, who are excited for the birth of their child, but at the same time depicts it does depict feminism and witchcraft in a positive light.
|$18 million
|-
|2005
|R
|A story set in the Crusades period about a young knight who embarks on a journey to realize his destiny. The Director's Cut version of ''Kingdom of Heaven'' is a prime example of how a Director's Cut can significantly improve the entire film. While the theatrical version featured terrible screenwriting and directing (as a result of studio interference), the Director's Cut drastically changes the entire film, significantly fleshes out, ties together, and grounds the story and brings the characters, their motivations, the different themes at play and the world to life. While the theatrical version was seen more or less as pure liberal media, the Director's Cut presents a story about humanity, belief, faith, and God. It also makes a statement about how people of different religious faiths can live together in peace and harmony and also be respectful to of different religious beliefs. In addition, it promotes honor, duty, and the importance of doing the right thing, and it also portrays the noble Knights Hospitallers in a positive light. That being said, the film still portrays the Knights Templars in a negative light.
|$47,398,413
|-
|1993
|PG-13
|Robin Williams plays Daniel Hillard; a father who cross -dresses as a nanny with the help of his gay brother (Hollywood trying to shoehorn the [[homosexual agenda]] one might say.) to be with his children. However, on ''Louder with Crowder'' it was one of the films (#1 actually) on TOP 5: Triggering Movies That Couldn’t Be Made Today, due to rampant gender confusion that's been happening recently.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWfSjyGNRPE</ref>. Also on a conservative note; it is a clear pro-family film, that is pro-fatherhood. There is also some condemnation to smoking as it shown to be [[taboo]], with Daniel refusing to promote it to children, and Miranda, getting upset when she thought Mrs. Doubtfire smokes.
|$219,195,243
|-
|$47,403,685
|-
|''The Muppet Christmas Carol''
|1992
|G
|A live action adaptation of Charles Dickens' seminal work ''A Christmas Carol'' with various Muppets playing the role of various characters in the story (and Gonzo as Charles Dickens himself) as well as Michael Caine as Ebeneezer Scrooge. Promotes many of the same themes of redemption and the spirit of Christmas as the original story. Also has a rather humorous promotion of the American dream, as in a scene exclusive to the movie, the headmaster of Scrooge's boarding school, portrayed by Sam the Eagle, suggests he go into the work force and tells him that it's the "American way", causing Gonzo to break character to inform Sam of the true setting of the story, causing Sam to correct himself by saying it is "the British way". That said, however, the ending song does have slightly Marxist overtones.
|$27.2 million
|-
|''P.C.U.''
|1994
|PG-13
|College students fight back against a campus where the administration promotes official [[diversity]] awareness weekends and radical [[feminism]], [[veganveganism]]ism, and [[political correctness]] run amok, but a conservative group on campus is also portrayed just as negatively as the P.C. groups.
|$4,350,774
|-
|2006
|NR (TV Documentary)
|Although the film largely pans George W. Bush's efforts during the War on Terror, it does depict the Taliban, al-Qaida, and Osama bin Ladin in a negative light, and there was a scene that appropriately places blame on then-President Bill Clinton for why 9/11 happened when he refused to give the order to kill Osama bin Ladin (a claim that was later vindicated by the CIA). Unfortunately, Clinton-aligned Democrats forced ABC via [[Robert Iger|Bob Iger]] to cut the footage in question via staged negative responses, and a planned DVD release for the Documentary itself was later shelved at the order of Iger during the 2008 election, neither being released to DVD by Disney itself and its associates, nor even having its rights sold to another company altogether, for reasons that were heavily suspected by various people, including the man who made the documentary in the first place, to be done at the order of Hillary Clinton in order to ensure she succeeded in her attempt at winning the Democrat primary and President of the United States during the 2008 election.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20120523041134/httphttps://www.breitbart.com/big-hollywood/2012/05/18/cia-vindicates-path-911-clinton-claim</ref>
|NR (TV Documentary)
|-
|Debatable as to whether the film is pro-parenthood or not. On the one hand, it does showcase May's mother status with Manaphy in a positive light. But on the other hand, it also is implied by the titular Pokémon Ranger Jack Walker to be a negative due to interfering with the mission, and in the climax, May ends up not doing a thing to attempt to save or even aid in saving Manaphy from Captain Phantom when the latter abducts it despite it being within her ability, which hints at parenthood being a negative.
|N/A (America; Direct-to-Video)
|-
|''Pocahontas II: Journey to a New World''
|1998
|G
|A sequel to the Worst Liberal Movie ''Pocahontas'' released during the infamous Eisner-era direct to video sequel line. It still has some elements to feminism as well as some degree of Historical Revisionism (due to showing William Shakespeare present in the opening song despite being dead by the time of the setting of the film). That being said, however, the British as well as the former colonists are depicted in a significantly more positive light compared to the original film, and the ending also has an implicit promotion of marriage. Likewise, it also notably ends with John Rolfe marrying Pocahontas like their real life selves.
|N/A (Direct-to-Video)
|-
|''Pulp Fiction''
|2001
|PG
|Although it has dirty humor and was made Loosely based on a 1990 fairytale picture book by William Steig, the liberal company first feature-length computer animation by DreamWorks SKGstars Shrek, and a socially challenged ogre who becomes an unlikely hero when he forms an alliance with a pesky, talking donkey to rescue a princess at the character behest of the evil Lord Farquaad of Duloc, who hates fairytale-type beings and has forced a host of them to live in Shrek's swamp. Not long after they rescue Princess Fiona is depicted , Donkey learns that she was cursed as a child to transform into an ogre herself by night and that only marriage can break the curse. Shrek does not hear this message clearly at times first and thinks Fiona is calling him an "ugly beast" before he realizes she actually despises her own ogre form and stops her marriage to be Farquaad, preventing him from becoming a feminist tyrannical king and continuing to oppress fairytale beings. Although DreamWorks is liberal, the dialogue occasionally resorts to adult humor (such as her utilizing Shrek and Donkey cracking jokes at Farquaad's expense that implied that he had small gonads when explaining what he's like), and Fiona sometimes behaves like a feminist (as when she effortlessly uses martial arts on the against Robin Hood and his Merry Men and taking them out effortlessly), it is implied that most of the characters are Christians as the gingerbread man says "God Bless Us Everyone". Also, Donkey sings (a reference to the character Tiny Tim in ''A Christmas Carol''). The gospel song "I'm a believerBeliever"at the end of the feature, and the scene where Shrek and Fiona are silently upset about being separated has the version of "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen. It also portrays Robin Hood (who is a secondary antagonist, but he is at least implied in the lyrics to be based on the infamous revisionist version by [[Joseph Ritson]] that was made in solidarity to the [[Jacobin]]s during the French Revolution), as an antagonist. It also features some condemnation on materialism, as the main villain, Lord Farquaad, (intended to be a parody of based on Liberal [[Disney]] CEO [[Michael Eisner]]<ref>http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2001-04-06/features/0104060008_1_lord-farquaad-dreamworks-jeffrey-Katzenberg</ref>(which adds to the whole film's existence as a reverent parody of Disney fairytale animation conventions) , is likewise a lampoon of materialism because he only desires Fiona's marriage so he can officially become the king King of Duloc. It also has a brief anti-Hollywood values messageFinally, as shortly after Farquaad met meets his end at the jaws of the Donkey's dragonlove interest, Donkey said jokes about [[Hollywood values]]: "Celebrity marriages, they never last, do they?" in a joking tone.
|$484.4 million
|-
|2007
|PG-13
|Portrays the liberal [[Environmental Protection Agency|EPA]] as a villainous and devious agency, and portrays the Government in general as intrusive and corrupt, and also features a key element of the story where Homer attempts to redeem himself of his more unpleasant nature, and Flanders' attempts at helping the Simpson family, in particular Bart, are treated positively. On the other hand, it also promotes [[environmentalism]] in the beginning, and also had Arnold Schwartzenegger as the president of the United States despite his legally not being eligible for the presidency due to being Austrian. There is also a brief sight gag where two homosexual policemen proceeded to make out in an alley by the motel the Simpson family was hiding at, with Marge narrowly escaping being spotted by them. In addition, the early part of the film has Homer twice making statements that implied a more atheistic outlook relating to Christianity: The first just as the Simpsons arrive at Church while running late where Homer mouths off "Relax, those pious morons are too busy talking to their phony-baloney God."; the second when Abraham Simpson ends up getting a divinely inspired vision about Springfield's potential future, where Homer, consulting the bible in a panic, yells "I can't! This book has no answers!" Overall, it's as debatable in terms of its Conservativism as the TV show it acted as a movie for.
|$183,135,014
|-
|1986
|PG-13
|A white student cheats the [[affirmative action]] system, by pretending to be black in order to get the scholarship he needs for to pay for Harvard. Towards the end, it is revealed he took the scholarship away from someone who needed it as well (and is really black) because she has a son and is divorced at such a young age. The movie portyals portrays the police as racist, and blames racism on many things, and seems to support the need for affirmative action. But on a conservative note, the film teaches the importance of hard work, and is also politically incorrect.
|$27,820,000
|-
|1995
|R
|Disgraced fire fighter firefighter now becomes a laughingstock fire marshal uncovers a terrorist plot, at a Hockey game, plans to redeem himself and protect his children and the Vice President from said terrorists. However, they're not Islamic, which may have been because the film was trying to be politically correct.
|$20,350,171
|-
|2010
|R
|Main character becomes a super hero superhero after a vision from God. He also frequently turns to prayer and a Christian television show for guidance. Even though his wife leaves him for a drug dealer, he remains loyal to her for the whole movie. Although contains foul language, violence, and brief nudity scenes.
|$327,716
|-
|Had a plot which was based on the first capture of a [[German]] [[Enigma machine]] in [[World War Two]]. Despite the film being patriotic to America, the facts are wrong as the Enigma machine was captured by the [[British]] in 1941 prior to the Americans entering the war.
|$77,122,415
|-
|''U.N. Me''
|2009
|
|Although it utilizes several of the same methods as [[Michael Moore]]'s schlockumentaries, it nonetheless does expose the very corrupt nature of the [[United Nations]].
|
|-
|''Van Helsing''
|1983
|R
|Charles Bronson plays Leo Kessler, a cop trying to catch a serial killer rapist, while the bureaucrats do everything to defend him. The film feels like a poor man's Dirty Harry and many critics pointed out that Charles Bronson seemed to be playing a clone of his former character Paul Kersey from the ''[[Death Wish ]]'' franchise.
|$7,175,592
|-
|2013
|R
|Although the previous ''Die Hard'' movies were largely politically neutral, this film portrays the CIA in a positive light, and both the main and surprise villains are unrepentant, anti-American former Soviet communists Communists who intended to access Cold War-era weapons grade uranium and sell them on the black market. Plus, the film is pro-family due to John McClain trying to reconnect with his son Jack. Despite this, it was largely a box office failure, and it has fairly weak story elements.
|$304.7 million
|-
|1985
|PG
|The film has some subtle Christian messages, as the Horned King, the main antagonist who tries to gain the Black Cauldron to rule the world, is depicted in a very satanic Satanic light, and the character Gurgi ultimately sacrifices himself in order to stop the Horned King, eventually being revived shortly thereafter. Also shows a promotion of the concept of being humble, as Taran still considers himself a pig herder even with his role in saving the world. However, the film was a massive box office bomb, with a large part of the reason for it being underperforming being due to both the dark elements of the film, especially for a Disney-made film, and due to a huge amount of footage (at least ten minutes worth) being cut from the film by then-Chairman of Disney Animation [[Jeffrey Katzenberg]].
|$21.3 million
|-
|1993
|R
|The villain is an environmentalist who believes that the earth was made for the dinosaurs, so he tries to wipe out the human race and allow dinosaurs to reclaim the Earth as their own. However , the film is considered a copy of ''[[Jurassic Park]]''.
|$1,753,979
|-
|Former Republican California governor [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] stars as former Delta Force leader John Matrix as he rescues his daughter from Communist insurgents (and the freelance soldier working for them, a former colleague of Matrix's who was fired from Delta Force for brutality) who plan to bring Communism back to their now liberated country. Despite this celebration of family, the action is goofy and cheesy, making it an unintentional comedy.
|$35,100,000
|-
|''Ernest Goes to Camp''
|1987
|PG
|Ernest P. Worrell (played by the late Republican actor Jim Varney) is a camp counselor put in charge of a group of Juvenile convicts from a corrective institute. Ernest manages to change the boys' ways by showing unconditional love, despite their reputations. In this, the film shows the conservative values of loving your enemy, with Ernest being the only one in camp who is nice to the boys. However, like most movies in the Ernest series, the humor is very campy and juvenile, and its clearly a kids movie.
|$23,500,000
|-
|''The Fallen Ones''
|2009
|PG-13
|This live -action adaptation of the conservative cartoon from the 1980s is nevertheless a disappointment largely due to the acting, directing, screenplay, nonsensical action, and mediocre visual effects. The film followed by an equally forgettable sequel in 2013. This lead led to the franchise being rebooted in 2020.
|$150,201,498
|-
|1997
|G
|Loosely based on the Greco-Roman myth of the demigod strongman Hercules, this Disney animation has some Christian messages like honoring one's father and the triumph of good over evil. In addition, contrary to how he is depicted in regular mythology, Zeus's characterization in the film was closer to that of the Biblical God. Unlike the original myth, in which Hercules was born as a result of Zeus's infamous womanizing actions with mortal women and Hera hated him due to this, Hercules in this film is the actual offspring between Zeus and Hera, putting family values first. Plus, he is raised a mortal this time because the main villain, Hades, has his minions abduct the then-infant Hercules and feed him a potion that drains him of virtually all of his godly potential in order to assassinate him and prevent him from striking down Hades in the future. Another reason why family is a major theme is that Hercules' disappearance greatly devastates both Zeus and Hera, and Zeus, upon learning that Hercules was alive, is greatly overjoyed to learn of his son's survival and admits he is his father. Lastly,, the main villain, Hades, while humorous, is nonetheless depicted in a satanic light, and was reported to be based on former Disney animation chairman and staunch liberal [[Jeffrey Katzenberg]]. <ref>http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19970622&slug=2545749</ref> However, it underperformed in theaters and with critics.
|$252.7 million
|-
|1997, 2002, 2012
|PG
|Installments 3 and 5 in these sequels to the Christmas classic ''Home Alone'' do not involve the original cast, while the fourth only features part of the original cast. They each have a similar story and themes to the original, with the third featuring communist Communist North Korea and terrorism in a negative light since the antagonists are internationally wanted hitmen tied to North Korea. However, they were nowhere near as popular as the first two because they are considered lesser versions of the originals.
|$30,882,515, N/A straight to DVD, Made for TV Film
|-
|''How the Grinch Stole Christmas''
|2000
|PG
|A live-action remake of the animated TV adaptation of the [[Dr. Seuss]] book of the same name. Overall, the film promoted many of the same themes as in the special and book, and also expanded on the implied redemptive themes of the special by revealing that the Grinch's hatred of Christmas dealt with being bullied, and ultimately overcoming that past and learning to enjoy Christmas. That all being said, however, the film suffered from production problems where studio heads forced in some raunchy, age-inappropriate jokes into the storyline, in spite of both director Ron Howard and Jim Carrey's insistence that they keep the film family friendly (and in the case of the latter, was careful to keep any ad-libbed humor family friendly) that ultimately harmed the quality of the film. This, alongside the Worst Liberal Movie Live Action Adaptation of another [[Dr. Seuss]] story, ''The Cat in the Hat'', doubling down on many of the aforementioned raunchy elements and pushing more left-wing material, eventually resulted in the Seuss estate placing a ban on Live Action adaptations of various ''Dr. Seuss'' stories.
|-
|''It Takes Two''
|1994-2016
|G
|The films deal with various conservative themes such as reconciliation, anti-racism, family values, friendships being important, and the like. That being said, however, the films' actual quality and their being direct to video sequels tend to leave much to be desired regarding the plotlines.
|N/A (Direct to Video)
|-
|2001
|G
|Lady and Tramp’s son, runs away to join the Junkyard dogs (a clear allegory for criminals), where he Angel, who encourages him to return home after realizing he has a family. Also the film takes place within the Independence Day holiday, making it what might be the only Disney film to acknowledge and celebrate this patriotic holiday. However this film like most Disney sequels went straight to video.
|N/A (Direct to Video film)
|-
|2008
|G
|Deals The last of the Direct to Video sequels before an embargo was placed upon them largely due to the negative reception to the sequels. The overall plot, acting as a prequel to the original film, deals with letting go of the past and moving forward, and also honoring your parents, as Ariel's reason for bringing back music to Atlantica was because she realized her deceased mother, Queen Athena, would never have wanted music to be banned. Also has some condemnation towards totalitarianism as King Triton, due to his grief of his wife's untimely death, proceeded to enforce big government style control over the kingdom, which was not depicted in a positive light at all. That said, however, the film also conflicted with several plot details regarding the later film (namely, Ariel desiring to become human and frequently disobeying her father to pursue that dreambeing left out entirely, and Ariel's sisters' birth orderbeing swapped around from what was implied in the Daughters of King Triton musical number), and overall downplays the anti-misanthropy messages the original film had.
|N/A (Direct to Video film)
|-
|2000
|G
|Although it to some extent retreads the plotline of the conservative film ''The Little Mermaid'' and was part of the infamous direct-to-video sequel line of the [[Michael Eisner]] era, it has a similar pro-family message and depicts the villain in a truly horrific light (such as trying to murder the main protagonist, a child, twice, once while she was a baby which acted as the primary reason why her parents, Ariel and Eric from the first film, went to great lengths to prevent her from learning about her heritage or even allowing her into the sea, and the other time when she was 12). It condemns parental neglect, too, because the main villain in question, Morgana, is largely motivated by being neglected by her mother over her elder sister, the previous main villain Ursula, which was most showcased in the special edition re-release via the added in song "Gonna Get my My Wish."
|N/A (Direct to Video film)
|-
|1978
|PG
|This early attempt to bring J. R. R. Tolkien conservative text to the silver screen still stands up for friendship, bravery, honor, sacrifice etc., but the animation (and pretty much everything else) has aged very poorly. Was remade into a live action trilogy in 2001-2003.
|$30,471,420
|-
|2001
|PG
|Similar to ''Ferris Bueller's Day Off'', the film showcases the public school system in a more negative light, due to one of the teachers letting one of the bullies, Dobbs, get away with stealing lunch money and later the same teacher punishing Max Keeble with a significantly and unreasonably large essay about rules for being tardied despite it being obvious that the only reason he was late was because one of the bullies, Troy McGinty, forced him into a swirly (due to his being dripping wet when he entered), as well as the principal of the school, Elliot Jindrake, who also acts as one of the main antagonists, explicitly hating children and only putting up with the school so he could get promoted to superintendent, as well as explicitly embezzling the school's budget, and also proceeding to punish Max for turning up late for an auditorium event even when, similar to the swirly incident mentioned above, it was very obvious that he only ended up late because McGinty proceeded to, in a similar manner to a cooking show, humiliate him by throwing him into a mud pool, putting saw dust on him, and then forcing him into a dumpster (due to his being littered with trash when he walked in). It also has a bit of an anti-socialist message due to the Evil Ice Cream Man being implied at one point to be a socialist (due to his insulting fellow antagonist Dobbs as a "capitalist tool.") and, as indicated by his nom de guerre, was not depicted in a positive light. Also has an allegory for the liberal elements of modern -day journalism as well, due to two of the characters who worked for the school yearbook proceeding to make events out to be even worse than they actually are (such as titling the first day as "Sheep Arrive for Slaughter"), not to mention usually uses the opportunity to actually photograph events of bullying rather than actually making any attempt to prevent it. Despite that, however, it largely was criticized for being bland and unoriginal, at least among adults, including some critics citing it as being too similar to ''Ferris Bueller's Day Off''.
|$18.6 million
|-
|''The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor''
|2008
|PG-13
|Still has the same pro-family message, along with a [[Mao Zedong|Mao]]-like rogue army as the side villains. That being said, however, it was a box office bomb that caused the movie franchise to be cancelled despite leaving a hint at a sequel at the end, and there was also evidence of it being poorly made.
|$102,491,776
|-
|''[[The Patriot]]''
|1980
|UR
|This early attempt to bring the third book of the conservative book saga ''The Lord of the Rings'' was plagued by low budget animation due to being a made -for -TV film.
|
|-
|This independent drama takes place in one room and explores the love triangle among an amiable banker, his deceptive fiancée, and his conflicted best friend. It teaches against alcoholism and adultery, showing the destructive nature of liberal values. However, ''The Room'' has been critically panned for its acting, screenplay, dialogue, production values, score, direction, cinematography, and handful of unrelated and unresolved subplots. Regardless of its low domestic gross from its initial theatrical run, it has done much better in recent re-screenings, becoming a cult classic of sorts.
|$1800
|-
|''Shrek the Third''
|2007
|PG
|The movie has a condemnation against totalitarian dictatorships and Hollywood values in the form of Prince Charming, who after recruiting various villains into aiding him in taking over Far Far Away, he had the kingdom become dystopic and forced the kingdom to watch a "play" he made as a subtle method of executing Shrek. In addition, it's also pro-family, as Shrek sought out Arthur, Fiona's cousin, to take the throne after her father died of an ailment and gives some heart-felt advice regarding taking up the responsibility, and Shrek ultimately resolves to be a father to his to-be-born kids after learning that Fiona was pregnant despite having misgivings regarding being a father due to his own experiences with his father (who nearly attempted to eat him). It also has condemnation of notions of revenge and has a redemption theme, as many of the villains ultimately gave up on being villains after Arthur convinced them not to be consumed by desires for revenge and seek their original goals. Despite this, however, the film had some very questionable production methods, and the plotline was fairly weak.
|$799 million
|-
|''The Santa Clause 2''
|Basketball star Michael Jordan uses the help of the Looney Tunes to beat back alien invaders from outer space who wish to take away their freedoms. Though the film hints at an anti-illegal immigration message, it suffers from messy animation and a lack of depth, and it is often cited as feeling more like a commercial than a film.
|$90,443,603
|-
|''Stealth''
|2005
|PG-13
|The film is pro-military and pro-American, with the North Koreans being portrayed in a negative manner. Also shows government corruption in a negative light in the form of a Washington lobbyist and the treacherous CO of the protagonists. Also has hints at a pro-War on Terror message as well. That being said, however, the movie was a critical and financial bomb, reputed to be among the worst box office losses at the time.
|$76 million
|-
|''Superman Returns''
|May 28, 1993
|PG
|Loosely based on the classic video game series from Nintendo, two fraternal plumbers from Brooklyn, New York must rescue the younger's girlfriend from a parallel dimension ruled by humans descended directly from dinosaurs. The film may support the Second Amendment when an old lady, before mugging the brothers, explicitly states they need to have a weapon to survive on the streets of Dinohattan (a parody of Manhattan depicted as a lawless hellhole). Furthermore, the movie seems to condemn communisticCommunistic/fascistic big government in the form of King Koopa (a human-looking dictator loosely based on Bowser, the turtle-dragon hybrid who serves as the main villain of most Super Mario games). The aforementioned lawlessness of Dinohattan is heavily implied to be caused by King Koopa's using liberal values and big government (à la Scar from ''The Lion King'') to grossly mismanage the location to such an extent that he and his minions ran out of resources after taking over Dinohattan via a coup and "reformed" it into a people's republic with false elections. To some extent, the movie condemns evolution and social Darwinism: although the backstory does involve dinosaurs evolving into humanoid creatures since they were sent to a separate dimension from that of humans, only the villains focus on this aspect and thus want to eliminate true humans.
All that aside, the film was largely panned and recouped less than half its budget at the box office, and it is considered one of the more infamous examples of the inherent difficulties of adapting a video game into a film. Effectively, ''Super Mario Bros.'' scared Nintendo into never allowing the West to make another film based on any one of its game franchises or letting Disney have any direct role in any of its franchises besides distributing games based on them, instead granting Universal Studios the rights to build a Nintendo theme park at Universal Studios Orlando; and it ruined the directorial careers of Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel. Making the film took its toll on the actors, too, particularly Bob Hoskins (Mario), who stated in an interview years later that it was "…the worst thing I ever did", noting that he was stabbed four times, electrocuted, injured in one finger, and almost drowned during production. Likewise, in an autobiography, John Leguizamo (who played Luigi, Mario's younger brother) dedicates an entire chapter to the horrors of working on ''Super Mario Bros.'' and comments that he and Hoskins drank heavily during breaks to deal with the traumatic experience. Among the handful of editing errors is a specific shot that shows one of Koopa's guards slipping on slime that wasn't even present originally when the Mario Bros. revolted. This was the result of a deleted scene where Koopa, both due to his germophobic nature and as a further demonstration of the de-evolution chamber's properties, executes a technician by de-evolving him into primordial ooze for sneezing in his presence, explaining where the slime came from.
|Trouble making boys at a boarding school must wise up and fight as their school is taken over by terrorists. However, the script is weak and borrows elements of ''Die Hard'' and ''Red Dawn''.
|$15,073,942
|-
|''Under Siege 2: Dark Territory''
|1995
|R
|Casey Ryback, while on a train with his niece, Sarah, gets caught in the middle of another hijacking as the train is taken over by ex-military American mercenaries led by Marcus Penn. Their employer, Travis Dane, is a former weapons designer who uses the train as a mobile base to hack into his creation, the WMD satellite Grazer One, and use it to destroy Washington DC. Dane and Penn are revealed to have an extensive network of contacts with America's worst enemies, who pay them lots of money for their terrorist activities and Dane is especially amoral and depraved. He is willing to destroy a chemical weapons plant in Guanzhou, China, killing thousands, just to demonstrate the power of his weapon. He then uses it to destroy an entire passenger airplane just to kill a customer's ex-wife for extra money.
 
The film overall depicts Ryback's heroism in a positive light and the villains' treachery and depravity in a negative light like the first movie. It also has a pro-family theme demonstrated by Casey's relationship with Sarah as well as Casey's regret for not making amends with his brother before his brother's death. However, it's very derivative of the first film, and also has an anti-WMD message with Grazer One and Tom Breaker's line "Sane people do not build weapons like this."
|$104,324,083
|-
|''The Wild''
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