I won't get involved in a dispute about what's "politically incorrect", except to point out that there are NO "wetbacks" depicted in THE FBI STORY. The Hispanics in the film are all shown in the segment set in South America. None are shown within the borders of the good ol' US of A. Hence, the film's Hispanics are, by definition, NOT "wetbacks". In fact, it's Stewart and the FBI agents who are the illegals in THEIR countries -- and, furthermore, engaged in unlawful activity (espionage, violation of neutrality) there to boot.
(No blacks are shown in the movie either, except the waiter whom James Stewart bosses around at the fish restaurant -- not even in the segment on the Ku Klux Klan, very busy in the 20s lynching as many black people as these ignoramuses could lay their hands on, though you wouldn't know it from the film -- and even in the shot of those hooded bozos breaking into a house and destroying the Torah and other religious objects apparently set out for a Seder, Stewart, narrating, speaks only of their "defiling ancient devotions" -- God forbid he should utter the word "Jew".)
Anyway, as to the thread -- I lived in NYC when this film was shot and remember the Bronx and Yankee Stadium at this very period, since I went to grade school about three blocks from there for two years, including 1959. I like that segment too for its personal nostalgia, but I also think it's one of the better segments of the movie, not one of the worst -- at least it's all done on location, not in the studio. If anything should have been edited out, it was those endlessly recurring family crises where Chip and his wife go on and on about religion (God, the family Bible, their son having time to start a prayer before he died), or the kids, or her eternal (and, of course, incorrect) angst about the Bureau, and all the rest of it. A little is fine, but over and over and over again, in its heavy-handed way, it's just too much -- and really, really boring. Stick to the cases, even the phony stuff (like Hoover personally arresting Alvin Karpis, which he did not). That's what makes this movie so entertaining.
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