The Cold War is Over by Peter Hitchens To Russia, With Love My Soviet Years The Comforting,
Imaginary Menace
Not exact matches
There is a sense of discovery in scene after scene of «The Phantom
Menace,» as he tries out new effects and ideas, and seamlessly integrates real characters and digital ones, real landscapes and
imaginary places.
Exposing the global commoditization of fear, Grimonprez blends archival footage of early 60's Folgers coffee ads, hysterical Red
Menace newsreels, and Alfred Hitchcock's TV intros, with an
imaginary murder plot involving Hitchcock and his doppelganger, to paint a vivid portrait of American media run amuck during the Cold War.
It needs a «crisis» to take advantage of, a hobgoblin to
menace the people, so that they will beg for protection from the
imaginary threat.