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・ Canadian Authors Association
・ Canadian Auto Workers
・ Canadian Automobile Association
・ Canadian Automobile Machine Gun Brigade
・ Canadian Automobile Sport Clubs
・ Canadian Automotive Museum
・ Canadian AutoSlalom Championship
・ Canadian Avalanche Association
・ Canadian Aviation Corps
・ Canadian Aviation Expo
・ Canadian Aviation Heritage Centre
・ Canadian Aviation Regulation Advisory Council
・ Canadian Aviation Regulations
・ Canadian Aviation Safety Inspectors and Investigators Association
・ Canadian Awards for the Electronic & Animated Arts
Canadian Bacon
・ Canadian bacon
・ Canadian Bacon (mountain)
・ Canadian Badlands Passion Play
・ Canadian Ballet Festival
・ Canadian Bandurist Capella
・ Canadian Bank Note Company
・ Canadian Bank of Commerce
・ Canadian Bank of Commerce (Watson, Saskatchewan)
・ Canadian Bankers Association
・ Canadian banknote issuers
・ Canadian Baptist Ministries
・ Canadian Baptist Mission
・ Canadian Baptists of Ontario and Quebec
・ Canadian Baptists of Western Canada


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Canadian Bacon : ウィキペディア英語版
Canadian Bacon

''Canadian Bacon'' is a 1995 comedy film which satirizes Canada–United States relations along the Canada–United States border written, directed, and produced by Michael Moore. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Festival de Cannes: Canadian Bacon )〕 and was the final released film to star John Candy, though it was shot before the earlier-released ''Wagons East!''. It is also Moore's only non-documentary film he made to date.
==Plot==
Thousands of former employees are outraged with military businessman R.J. Hacker (G. D. Spradlin), who had closed down his weapons manufacturing plant, Hacker Dynamics. At a conference held at the former plant, he pins the blame for the shutdown of his business on the current President of the United States (Alan Alda), who has just arrived. The President defends his own belief that the future of the children is more important than war, which has caused major decline in his approval rating. After the conference, he expresses to confidantes General Dick Panzer (Rip Torn) and National Security Advisor Stuart Smiley (Kevin Pollak) his discontent about not having an enemy to engage in war. An attempted negotiation with Russian President Vladimir Kruschkin (Richard E. Council) to start a new cold war with Russia fails, and the President's suggestion of a war on international terrorism is deemed too absurd.
Serendipitously, American sheriff Bud Boomer (John Candy) offensively criticizes Canadian beer while attending a hockey game between the neighboring nations in Niagara Falls, Ontario. The ensuing brawl ends up on the news and catches Stuart's attention; he collects more information about Canada from a CIA agent named Gus (Brad Sullivan), who suggests Canada as their new enemy. Before long, television channels are littered with anti-Canada propaganda, which Boomer believes wholeheartedly. He prepares for war by distributing guns to his fellow sheriffs, including his girlfriend Honey (Rhea Perlman) and their friends Roy Boy (Kevin J. O'Connor) and Kabral Jabar (Bill Nunn). After they apprehend a group of Americans "dressed as Canadians" attempting to destroy a hydroelectric plant, despite Gus' protests, they sneak across the border to litter on Canadian lands, which leads to Honey being arrested by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. In a rescue attempt, Boomer, Roy Boy and Kabral sneak into a Canadian power plant and cause a countrywide blackout. When the President learns of this, he orders Boomer's immediate removal from Canada before it's too late.
Hacker, seeking revenge on the President for shutting down his business, uses a software program ("Hacker Hellstorm") to activate missile silos across the country. The President learns that the signal causing the activation of the silos originated from Canada, and summons Hacker. Hacker offers to sell a program to the President that can cancel out the Hellstorm — for $1 trillion. With only six minutes left, the President is trying to figure out what's going on. Stuart, fed up with the President being too busy to give Hacker the money, realizes that Hacker, getting up to leave, is the one controlling the silos, not Canada, and, after storming up, takes the operating codes from him required to stop the Hellstorm (accidentally killing Hacker in the process). The President orders Stuart's arrest, despite his protests that he is now able to give the codes to the President so they could deactivate the missiles which are aimed at Moscow. As the launch time approaches the President pleads with Canadian Prime Minister Clark MacDonald (Wallace Shawn) over the phone to stop the launch.
Meanwhile, Honey was taken to a mental hospital upon her capture and escaped all the way to the CN Tower. She discovers the central computer for the Hellstorm located at the top and destroys it with a machine gun, aborting the launch sequence. She then reunites with Boomer, who had tracked her to the Tower, and they return to the United States via a speedboat.
An ending montage reveals the characters' fates: Boomer realizes his dream of appearing on ''Cops''; Honey has been named "Humanitarian of the Year" by the National Rifle Association; The President was defeated in the next election by a large landslide and now hosts, Get Up, Cleveland; Stuart served eight months in prison, but was pardoned by the new President; General Panzer committed suicide after learning that "Hogan's Heroes" was fictional; Gus was last spotted heading to Mexico; R.J. Hacker's body has been viewed daily at Republican National Headquarters; Kabral has become a hockey star, winning the Hart Memorial Trophy three years in a row; Roy Boy's whereabouts become unknown; and MacDonald is "still ruling with an iron fist."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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