A Dharma Bum

“Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking...” ― Leo Tolstoy

Casablanca La Marseillaise

The patrons celebrate their small victory, some clearly moved to tears. The thing is, nothing in the script actually called for crying. 

See, this was a World War II movie … that was being filmed in the middle of World War goddamned II.

It’s easy to forget that part, now that hundreds of movies (and seemingly thousands of video games) have been based on the war in the decades since it ended. Casablanca was shot in 1941 during the German occupation of France, at a point where many questioned whether or not the United States would ever step in to help, and when nobody knew how the whole thing was going to turn out.
And the scene included actors who, in real life, had a lot at stake. To shoot Casablanca as a believable port town, producers brought together one of the most ethnically diverse casts in film history, and a lot of these extras turned out to be Europeans who had fled to America to escape the Nazis — that is, they were basically real-life refugees. They had left homes, friends and families behind, and at this point really didn’t know if things could ever return to normal. Which makes us wonder if the director didn’t stage the whole war just to get that scene.

(Source: cracked.com, via explosiveconscience)

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    Casablanca La Marseillaise The patrons celebrate their small victory, some clearly moved to tears. The thing is, nothing...
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