Edward Wrote: "Children and Young Persons (Harmful Publications) Act 1955 (the Wikipedia on this is quite good: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children_and_Young_Persons_(Harmful_Publications)_Act_1955). This made it an offence to publish or distribute comic books that depicted violence or horrific acts in a way that made them likely to appeal to children."
How did this act square with comics like 'The Bash Street Kids' and 'Dennis the Menace' in The Beano? I encountered these and others when I was nine years old when my grandfather took me to Britain for the summer in 1967. They depicted kids having fun being cruel, malevolent, and violent in ways that wouldn't fly here in the US. (Note: This is not Hank Ketcham's Dennis the Menace)
.... c/f the way bedwetters like Michael Medved thought Quentin Tarrantino was gonig to destroy civilisation, being, along with Oliver Stone, responsible for all the murders in America, and yet had nary a word to say about htel ikes of Tom & Jerry or Home Alone.
If Medved had been active in 1947, he would have been right up there with Adolphe Menjou, Sam Wood, Robert Taylor, John Wayne, Robert Montgomery, Hedda Hopper and Walt Disney in leading the Hollywood witch hunt.
One of the few props I will give to Reagan was, he did try to serve over seas, but his eye sight was so poor he was basically 4F! He did give up a big salary to serve, I have no doubt if he had done like Wayne, he would have been a much bigger star, since there was so little competition. There is no excuse for what Reagan did to his fellow actors during the 50s, he must have known he did wrong, since he did help many get jobs in the 60s. Still, a bigger gesture would have been a Presidential proclamation, or pardon!He could have served alongside his buddy Reagan at Fort Roach, making training films, which is where quite a few of the proud Hollywood warriors did their time in uniform. But yes, there are those -- including his widow -- who theorized that a big part of Wayne's ultra-hawkish postwar persona stemmed from his personal embarassment over his lack of war service.