Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 1, Winter 2008 | Page 16

12 Popular Culture Review military presence in the world resulted in the death of over 200 marines at the hands of suicide bombers in Lebanon. The disaster in Lebanon and subsequent military withdrawal from that nation was followed by an American invasion of Grenada in the Caribbean, ostensibly to protect American medical students from a Marxist dictatorship. American forces quickly prevailed, preventing the construction of an airfield by Cuban laborers and soldiers. President Reagan proclaimed that American valor checked Castro’s expansionism, and the misjudgments of military intervention in Lebanon were lost in the glow of victory in the island nation of Grenada. As William Chafe observes in The U n fin is h e d J o u r n e y , Reagan “appeared to the American public as a hero rebuilding America’s vaunted strength and dominance in the world.”15 These images were crucial in explaining Reagan’s 1984 re-election. The militaristic values and anti-Soviet paranoia extolled by the Reagan administration found cinematic representation in director John Milius’s popular adolescent fantasy R e d D a w n . A talented screenwriter, Milius penned the scripts for such notable films as J e r e m ia h J o hn so n (1972), M agnum F o r ce (1974), and A po c a l y p s e N o w (1979). In fact, he is credited with the infamous Clint Eastwood line, “Go ahead. Make my day.” As a director, Milius made well received films such as D illin g e r (1974); The W ind a n d th e L ion (1975)— featuring his historical hero Theodore Roosevelt—and C o n a n the B a r b a ria n (1982), which introduced Arnold Schwarzenegger to American audiences. The conservative Milius celebrates men who eschew compromise and are willing to fight for their ideas. An avid hunter, he has served on the board of directors for the National Rifle Association, and in his films Milius often equates manhood with hunting and survival in the wilderness, describing his political philosophy as either “zen-fascism” or “zen-anarchism.” R e d D a w n proved a perfect vehicle for Milius to pursue his ideological agenda.16 The implausible plot line of R e d D a w n embraces the domino theory of communist expansionism. The film begins with Soviet and Cuban troops parachuting into the school grounds of a rural high school in Calumet, Colorado. No explanation