WANT TO FEEL GOOD? SEE SECRETARIAT

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BY CAL THOMAS
Excerpt from his article in The Miami Herald

In 1977, things were similarly gloomy. The misery index under President Jimmy Carter reflected the mood of many Americans. The president would come to speak of an America that had seen its best days and he told us we were going to have to cut back on everything, including our vision of a greater America.

Along came a big Broadway musical that year called, “Annie.” It touched the country’s unique chord of optimism and promised in song, “The Sun’ll Come Out Tomorrow.”
[click to play the song]
Most who saw it came away believing that the sun would, in fact, come out again and those things would eventually get better.

Now we are in the midst of another national funk and there is a new cultural rescue boat coming just in time to save us from the flood of our current depression. It is a film called Secretariat and it is far more than entertainment; it is the artistic equivalent of a caffeine jolt, a Red Bull for the spirit.

The story of the 1973 Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing winner, Secretariat is The Blind Side meets Chariots of Fire meets National Velvet. It is Annie on four legs. It is not only a story about a powerful thoroughbred, but also the story of Penny Chenery Tweedy (played magnificently by Diane Lane with a strong supporting cast led by John Malkovich). In the film, Tweedy refuses to take “no” and “can’t do” and “no one has ever done this before” as final answers.

Secretariat is one of those feel good movies Hollywood makes every now and then to remind us it does not have amnesia about real American values and what at least Middle America — sometimes derisively referred to as flyover territory —

If you are in a funk over the current state of political and economic affairs, you will come away feeling better after seeing Secretariat. You will also believe that you can overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles in your own life with the kind of determination and grit displayed by Penny Tweedy. Run, don’t walk to the nearest multiplex. Spread the word. You’ll believe again that anything is possible for Americans and America.

Source: CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE BY CAL THOMAS


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