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Classic Alpha Males: Steve McQueen

12 Friday Oct 2018

Posted by Racer X in culture, film, men

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Steve McQueen was one of the great alpha males of a now bygone Hollywood era. When we see today’s pathetic examples of “males”, the feminized soyboys, weeping Willies, and androgynous, man bunned, pussy hat wearing SJWs, we can only wonder if the decline in testosterone driven masculinity has not been some gigantic scheme by the Western globohomo elites to destroy millions of years of male evolution.

Just a few short decades ago a man like Steve McQueen was the epitome of American masculinity: fiercely independent, a true free thinker, someone who would have despised the gigantic, socialist nanny state for which so many of his present day Hollywood cadres so long. He was both a man of action, as well as an artist of the highest rank. It was rare back then, and it is even rarer today.

Anyone who has seen his movies knows that the world he portrayed is a world now largely lost. I say largely lost, because there are still some vestiges of this world, but one must look and search and be unafraid to explore. This was a world where a man was unafraid to take action, whatever the consequences, and as ruthlessly as needed, in defense of himself and the promotion of his own interests.

McQueen in “The Great Escape”. In his private life he was an avid motorcycle racer.

To sum up his approach to life, McQueen once said:

“I live for myself and answer to nobody”.

This should be the code that every man lives by. Few will dare to do so. Those who do will find true happiness in life. This is why the alpha is a truly rare breed.

Sheriff Buford T. Justice, A Great American Hero

17 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by Racer X in culture, film

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Sheriff Buford T. Justice: great American hero.

There are few characters in the history of cinema as memorable as Sheriff Buford T. Justice. Played by the great Jackie Gleason in the equally great Smokey and the Bandit, this great man symbolizes so much of what was once great in America: the relentless pursuit of justice, a clear and incorruptible vision of what needs to be done to protect the Western world from the evils of Communism, “she insulted my authority, and that’s nothing but pure and simple, old fashioned communism”, and a love for the traditions and institutions of the American heritage nation (his consumption of a Diabolo sandwich at a local diner is pure Americana at it unpretentious best).

Such a man would not be depicted in today’s cinema. Or at least, he would be comic character, a caricature of all that is good in law enforcement.

Actually, that is what he was in Smokey and the Bandit, a caricature of law enforcement.

Scratch that. The whole movie was a comedy, so it is all in just good fun. Still, there is something quite awesome about Buford T. Justice. We can only imagine how he would react in the face of today’s societal freak show.  Well, most likely he would have reacted the same way he reacted to the freak show of the late seventies, with utter contempt and vile rebuke. Today he would belong firmly in the Trump and alt-right camp.

Even though he is a comic character, Sheriff Buford T. Justice is one of my favorites. God bless him!

Classic Hollywood Beauties: Loretta Young

29 Saturday Apr 2017

Posted by Racer X in beauty, culture, film

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I recently happened upon a movie which stared this beauty. Loretta Young (1913-2000) was an actress from the Hollywood’s golden age, the age of the silver screen.  This was a time when films were not beholden to massive special effects and computer graphics, but rather to the qualities that make for the best drama: good writing and good acting. There is a naturalism to these older movies which is often lacking in many of today’s film.

Loretta Young was also an example of this naturalism. She was a natural beauty, and her career spanned for many decades, including winning an Academy Award for Best Actress in 1948. She could play a range of roles, from a vampish crimes girl in Midnight Mary to a chaste wife of a bishop in The Bishop’s Wife.

She was also something that is exceedingly rare today in Hollywood: a conservative Catholic, and registered Republican. I doubt in today’s PC Hollywood culture anyone with that background would get far in the film industry.

An older, but still beautiful Young.

It is always good to be reminded of how beauty in the past, with its natural class and restraint, is often superior to the trashiness that passes for beauty today. I doubt you would ever have seen someone like Loretta Young talking about her menstrual cycles on the Washington Mall.

So whom would a man prefer, Loretta Young, or Ashley Judd. The choice is obvious.

The Lovely Judi Bowker in Clash of the Titans

11 Sunday Dec 2016

Posted by Racer X in art, beauty, film, mythology, women

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Judi Bowker as Andromeda in Clash of the Titans

Judi Bowker as Andromeda in Clash of the Titans

The 1981 version of Clash of the Titans is a fun film. Made at a time before CGI, it was not so dependent upon the big screen stunning visuals that are so much a part of today’s cinema, but rather it focused more on the story of Perseus and Andromeda. This ancient Greek myth has always been a favorite story for thousand of years, as it is really a simple fairly tale or love story between a noble hero, Perseus, and a beautiful princess, Andromeda, who is in need of rescue from a sea monster. Although the 1981 film is really a mishmash of various Greek mythological stories, none of which have any relation to each other in traditional mythology, the finished product remains one of the great testimonies to the enduring power of these ancient Classical myths.

Perseus and Andromeda by the 19th Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne Jones

Perseus and Andromeda by the 19th Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne-Jones

The actress who played Andromeda in the movie is the lovely Judi Bowker. Although she made few films, she is fairly well known for this one role, especially for those of us who grew up watching this movie on television, especially in the days before cable. She was the perfect, almost traditional princess in this movie: soft, feminine, vulnerable, and endowed with a gentleness that is attractive to all men. It is interesting to contrast her traditional femininity, so lovely and alluring, with the hardness and barren masculinization of so many contemporary females. Like the myth itself, she seems to belong to an age which has vanished.

Harry Hamlin played Perseus in the 81 film, one of the reasons why a lot of girls enjoyed it as well.

Harry Hamlin played Perseus in the 1981 film, one of the reasons why a lot of girls enjoyed it as well.

Films should be fun. They are entertainment. Too many of today’s movies, even the ones that are attempting to be simple stories, are so infused and saturated with social justice PC bullshit that they are unbearable to watch. I go to a movie to escape from the world, not to be lectured to by snobbish and insufferable Hollywood elites about every latest Leftist fad and cause.

So this movie, like the myth itself, was and remains a great piece of entertainment. It is free from all the nonsense of contemporary cinema, and presents a simple, traditional story, as just that, a simple, traditional story. And the simple, traditional beauty of Judi Bowker only makes the film that much more delightful.

One more photo of her...we can't get enough!

One more photo of her…we can’t get enough!

It is always a great pleasure to see such beauty, whether in film or real life!

Peter O’Toole, R.I.P.

16 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by Racer X in culture, film

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Peter O'Toole, as T.E. Lawrence in Lawrence of Arabia.

Peter O’Toole, as T.E. Lawrence in Lawrence of Arabia.

Unfortunately Peter O’Toole, born in Ireland in 1932, died a few days ago. Although nominated for eight academy awards, he never won one, except for an honorary award in 2003. Still, O’Toole will be remembered as one of the great actors of our time, an icon in his own right. He belongs to a quickly vanishing generation of actors who made great films without all the absurd trappings, bells and whistles of the modern, CGI generated cinema. In short, his movies are usually good, because the plot lines and characters are good.

His greatest achievement, the one for which he will always be most closely associated with, is Lawrence of Arabia. Even as kid, I loved this movie. I have seen it countless time, and each time I see it I am still amazed at how spectacular a movie it is. Again, when I think of all the CGI nonsense that is being produced today, big budget extravagances, and so called epic movies, none of them today can compare to this grand canvass of cinemagraphic beauty. Directed by David Lean (Bridge on the River Kwai, Dr. Zhivago), Lawrence of Arabia is truly one of the great epic movies of all time, and O’Toole’s role as T.E. Lawrence will never be matched by anyone. Although made in 1962, fifty years later I think it is safe to say there will never be another movie about Lawrence. What is so great about this movie is that it is a true epic about a historical figure, and made without any of the special effects we take for granted today. The deserts is real; the camels are real; the vast vista’s and colors are real (I think in particular of the first scene of the desert, with its ominous orange sky, seemingly raging with burning heat, and yet so alluring for the Western man unaccustomed to such things, such as Lawrence). All these things together with the great actors portraying fascinating characters in a compelling, true story of historical significance renders this film unique in the annals of great cinema. It is the perfect expression of the type of romanticism that drove the British Empire in the early twentieth century. O’Toole captured that role perfectly. He even looks like T.E. Lawrence (although O’Toole is quite a bit taller than Lawrence was).

Another great role of O’Toole was as King Henry II in Becket. Again, it seems that only O’Toole could have captured the role as the flighty, scheming, impetuous, immature and yet dangerous king of England, driven to near madness by his lack of control over his old friend, the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, played equally well by Richard Burton.

O'Toole and Richard Burton in Becket.

O’Toole and Richard Burton in Becket.

O’Toole will be missed. Actors of his caliber, with his type of background, having learned his craft in a world free from the infatuation of slick special effects, are few and far between today. Or rather the film industry relies to heavily upon the wizardry of CGI to the detriment of good plots and good acting, which stifles good, basic theater. It is one of the reasons (plus the outrageous prices) I rarely go to the movies any more.

Bridget Bardot: A Classic and Highly Sexual Beauty

15 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Racer X in beauty, culture, eroticism, film, women

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Bridget Bardot was one of first golden sex goddesses of the post war era. Born in 1934, this French model and actress was supreme among beauties of the fifties and sixties. Although never considered a great actress, she nevertheless was well known, admired and even worshiped by a large following. What I find interesting about her, aside from her exquisite beauty, was her nearly insatiable sexual appetites. This woman enjoyed sex, having lovers, and flaunting the sexual conventions of her society. Even in our day, there are few women who are so openly comfortable in their own sexuality as she was with hers.

One of the great joys of my life is encountering such women as Bardot, whether as lovers or not; simply being in the company of other highly sexual women, such as those who embrace and are not afraid of their sexuality, is always rewarding. We still live in a world where certain women for the most part are slut shamed, mostly by other females, for being highly and actively sexual. Bardot seemed to have been immune to such things, even though she lived in a time when such proclivities were highly frowned upon by established and proper society. She even had her own harem: of men. She enjoyed rotating lovers, was married several times, and professed later in life that she was never fit to be a mother (although she did have a child from one marriage); parenthood was not something for which she was psychologically suited. There are many women like this in the world, but they often have to live in a closet of social repression for not conforming to the good girl, monogamous ideal that is demanded of most females.

I have always made it a mission of mine to find such women, and help them discover, explore, and unleash their sexual potential. It is delightful pastime. They may not be the majority of women, or even close to it, but there are enough out there to make life quite exciting. As I have said before, I love finding a girl’s inner whore, and helping her find it too. There are simply so many girls out there who know nothing of their own sexual enjoyment or potential, until they come across the right man.

But as far as Bardot, her first big movie success was with the 1956 French film And God Created Woman (Et Dieu créa la femme) in which she plays a sexual adventurous young woman. Today the film would be considered tame, but its open sexual themes were quite scandalous for its time. Throughout the years Bardot also posed nude for several photoshoots. She eventually retired from the entertainment business in the mid seventies, and has since then stayed retired. Her later life has been devoted to promoting animal rights and criticizing the growing influence of Islam on French society. In all these things she has been a staunch defender of traditional French culture and beauty. The idiotic French courts have several times fined her for her stated views on the dangers of the Islamification of France, citing her promotion of  “racial hatred”. I suppose when the French judges are no longer allowed to drink wine in France because the then majority Muslim population has banned it, they might perhaps reconsider their naive punishment of those who are merely trying to defend their culture from those who are often quite hostile to it.

But whatever the situation these days, in her prime Bardot was a beautiful woman who enjoyed a beautiful and liberating sexuality. She is a great testament to the beauty inherent in French culture. God bless her!

Valentine’s Day Treat: Jessica Chastain

14 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Racer X in art, beauty, film, women

≈ 2 Comments

A new but still classic beauty emerges in Hollywood...

A new but still classic beauty emerges in Hollywood…

Recently this beauty has been getting quite a bit of publicity for her role in Zero Dark Thirty. I have not seen the movie yet so I cannot comment on her qualities as an actress. I can make a few comments on her looks though. She seems to have a classic Hollywood beauty, the type of beauty we used to see in such stars as Grace Kelley or Ingrid Bergman. Her features are sharp, but still feminine enough to be alluring. As a stunning blonde/ginger, she projects a bit of iciness, yet she also comes across as sweet, kind and fun. She almost has a certain wholesome, girl next door quality to her. Also, as someone who is 35 and approaching 36, she shows that women can remain quite attractive beyond the dreaded age of 30. Given her body type and seemingly good health, I imagine she will remain a stunning beauty for some time to come.

A classic look such as something we might see in a 40's or 50's Hollywood starlet.

A classic look such as something we might see in a 40’s or 50’s Hollywood starlet.

We have not seen much of her until now, but I hope we see more of her in the future!

She also has the girl next door look...

She also has the girl next door look…

And she does look quite nice in a pink dress. So happy Valentine’s day, Jessica Chastain!

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