Steve Kates wrote:
"The readers of picture magazines and the movie-fans long for the
picturesque. The operatic pageants of the Fascists and the Nazis and the
parading of the girl-battalions of the Red army are after their heart.
It is more fun to listen to the radio speeches of a dictator than to
study economic treatises. The entrepreneurs and technologists who pave
the way for economic improvement work in seclusion; their work is not
suitable to be visualised on the screen."
Which raises the question of how can one make the invisible hand
picturesque. Hmmmm.
How about a movie entitled "The Butcher Who Became Invisible." As the
butcher finds that she cannot function, does her business also fade
with her? Or is she replaced by one who is almost equally capable? Or
perhaps by one who seizes the opportunity to profit by introducing a
technological advance.
Have you seen the U.S. show "Modern Marvels?"
Pat Gunning