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Inflation

Inflation (1942)

January. 01,1942
|
6.4
|
NR
| Drama War

The Devil works with Adolf Hitler to cause inflation in the United States.

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Reviews

Beystiman
1942/01/01

It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.

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Mathilde the Guild
1942/01/02

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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Deanna
1942/01/03

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

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Staci Frederick
1942/01/04

Blistering performances.

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utgard14
1942/01/05

WW2 short from MGM about the Devil (Edward Arnold) conspiring with Hitler to wreck the U.S. economy. He plans to do this by making Americans buy things on credit, ignore rationing laws, and cash in their war bonds. That Devil sure is a stinker! The point of this short was to make American at home think about how they could help the war effort by keeping the economy strong.I love patriotic WW2 shorts like these. It avoids being too preachy and delivers its message in a clear and entertaining way. Edward Arnold is terrific. Just the year before he was fighting Satan in The Devil and Daniel Webster, now here he is playing him and doing a wickedly delightful job. It's a great short that anybody who enjoys WW2-era material should love. Also features Esther Williams in one of her earliest roles.

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Laura Todd
1942/01/06

I'm not usually up at 05:30 but this morning [27aug2011] I am and "Inflation" came on. Took me a while to find where it is documented but once I began looking I wasn't ready to give up. Due to the star and subject matter I was sure that someone would have entered something and, sure enough, I finally found it. I started opening titles in the filmography but it just wasn't there. I was about to give up when I read the biography. Its not high art by any means but Edward Arnold is a favorite actor of mine and I'm so glad I had the chance to see this short. I thoroughly enjoyed it, a very well done short on a very timely subject. No spoilers, just a recommendation.

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bdywrkr
1942/01/07

In 1933, a propaganda film touting the virtues of inflation, going off the gold standard, and market forces was played in theaters across America. Nine years later, inflation was a tool of the Devil himself, a dark and destructive plot to destroy our country. Amusing how those folks could talk out of both sides of their mouths. Look at these two films back to back, and then consider whether either one's conclusions make sense.P.S.: Canning your own peaches and raising/slaughtering your own meat was/is not hoarding. There were people, Rose Wilder Lane (Laura Wilder's daughter) among them, who never used ration cards/stamps. They took responsibility for themselves AND were able to share with neighbors in need. Just sayin'...

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OldAle1
1942/01/08

"Inflation" was Cy Endfield's first film. It's a 16-minute anti-German propaganda short made for MGM with Edward Arnold as Satan, sitting behind his large CEO's desk and chatting amiably on the phone with Herr Hitler (a framed and signed photo of whom he has displayed) about his plans for destroying the U.S. economy through encouraging people to illegally buy or horded as much unnecessary stuff as they can in defiance of wartime government restrictions. Footage of FDR confirms what all of those complaining about our current government's "socialism" should know: we were a lot closer to it in the 40s than we've ever been since. Price caps? Quotas? Higher taxes, especially on the rich? Short propaganda films like these? Yup, all part of daily life in 1942.There's lots of fun stuff under the surface here. Arnold's v-haircut, his cackling maniacal laughter, and the faky lightning-bolt effects that we see periodically behind him might remind one of Ed Wood films; he's got a sexy secretary (mistress? does the Devil have a mistress?) and indeed the film is full of sex: a sexy housewife (Esther Williams, in her first film role) wants nice dresses and a fur and her hubby seems willing to do anything to get them for her; there's a scene of several attractive young ladies rushing to buy nylons as the prices get hiked. The whole film is over-the-top and feverish, as propaganda films were meant to be, but it's a lot of fun and shows some real wit.

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