Most Americans thought that the failed August 1991 coup in the Soviet Union was cool. They watched the play-by-play on CNN and it was Miller Time--the U.S. had finally won. It was better than the hockey team's triumph at Lake Placid in 1980. Because this time there was permanence. Or at least it seemed that way.
But not in Hollywood. U.S. films keep making America save the world from conflict-crazed Russians over and over and over again.
Granted, it's less disturbing when things blow up on the big screen than when they do at the negotiation table. In fact, things blow up only on the screen nowadays, while negotiations for the most part are constructive, agreeable and friendly. Even tough issues like NATO enlargement haven't been able to upset the essentially good-natured relationship between Russia and the West.
So if the Russians are our friends, why is Hollywood still thumping them? America's film industry just came up with "The Peacemaker," the third film this year wherein valiant Yanks face off against Russian evildoers. Nothing much has changed from the heated confrontations of the Cold War era, with anti-Soviet classics like "Doctor Strangelove," "Walk East on Beacon" and "I Was a Communist for the FBI." The enemy then was the communists. Now it's the Mafia--the communist Mafia.
In "The Saint," the first 1997 anti-Russian production, a communist Mafioso named Tretiak wants to become president and divert Mother Russia from the liberal course she has taken. His son, also a Mafioso and a drug addict to boot, chases the Americans all over Moscow to prevent them from protecting Russian democracy.
In "Air Force One," another nationalist psycho hijacks an American president, played by Harrison Ford, in order to exchange him for a Russian would-be despot who days before had overthrown a democratic regime.
This fall's blockbuster, "The Peacemaker," serves up Mafioso Gen. Alexei Kotorov, looking to make beeg bahks by smuggling nuclear warheads to Iran. The fate of the world (read: midtown Manhattan) hangs in the balance.
One one hand, it's good, forcing huge stretches of geography upon unsuspecting Americans--places with unwieldy names like Azerbaijan, Mahachkala, Srebrenica. "Air Force One" opened with Americans taking out a Russian leader in Kazakhstan. OK, the Kazakhs were perturbed that we demonized their country with a megalomaniacal fascist baddie. But the fact that it was Kazakhstan that Hollywood was demonizing is a start.