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W. may be less frenzied than the usual Oliver Stone sensory bombardment, but in revisiting the early '00s by way of the late '60s, this psycho-historical portrait of George W. Bush has all the queasy appeal of a strychnine-laced acid flashback.
Hideous recreations of the shock-and-awful recent past merge with extravagant lowlights from the formative years and early career of America's most disastrous president (crudely played by Josh Brolin, often in tight close-up). Familiar faces seem to deliquesce before our eyes. It's unavoidably trippy, but does anyone, other than the perpetrators, really need to relive this particular purple haze?
W., which is as much edited as it is directed, working from a script by Stone buddy Stanley Weiser, has a patchwork chronology that takes as its central pattern the run-up to the Iraq War and ensuing search for the missing weapons of mass destruction, while pushing two theses regarding the nature of its eponymous antihero.
The more heavy-handed of these dramatizes Dubya's tormented relationship, alternately worshipful and rebellious, with his disapproving father (James Cromwell). "What do you think you are—a Kennedy?" Poppy thunders when confronted with his wastrel son's latest drunken indiscretion. "You're a Bush!" It's the Oedipal saga that Maureen Dowd, for one, began recounting during the 2000 election, and reached its climax when the son corrected his father's error by deposing Saddam Hussein.
In this scenario, the younger Bush became president to take revenge on the elder. Stone has Dubya watching the 1992 election returns with his family. As defeated Poppy chokes back tears, Dubya trumps even the bilious, class-fueled anti-Clinton rage expressed by mother Barbara (Ellen Burstyn) in ranting about H.W.'s failure to go all the way to Baghdad. This W. is the saga of a tormented, father-obsessed asshole who manages to play out his family drama on a world-historical stage.
The second thesis—implicit in Kevin Phillips's chronicle of the Bush family's ascent, American Dynasty, and developed elsewhere—credits Dubya with a powerful insight into American politics. Having checked his alcoholism with a regimen of fundamentalist Bible study and consequently served as Poppy's liaison to the Christian right, the younger Bush assimilated Christian values rhetoric and successfully organized an evangelical base which would enable him to pulverize John McCain in the 2000 primaries and win re-election in 2004.
Although W. dramatizes neither of these campaigns—generally eschewing the public Bush in favor of his assumed backstage persona—Stone and Weiser go so far as to cast their antihero as the real Lee Atwater, suggesting that it was his canny appreciation for dirty tricks that got Poppy elected in 1988, years before self-identified "fairy" Karl Rove taught him his political catechism. But undermining his own theory, Stone presents Dubya as an idiot savant who believes his own bullshit, warning Poppy that too much thinking screws up the mind and bragging that he's decided to run for president because God told him to.
Although personality regularly trumps political process in the world of Oliver Stone, W. seems most deeply concerned with the run-up to the Iraq war, thus working the same territory as David Hare's play, Stuff Happens. Each given a presidential nickname to wear like a baseball cap, Bush's enablers—Dick "Vice" Cheney (Richard Dreyfuss, having evident fun), Donald "Rummy" Rumsfeld (Scott Glenn), Condi "Girl" Rice (Thandie Newton, looking as though she's going to gag), Karl "Boy Genius" Rove (Toby Jones), and "Brother" George Tenet (Bruce McGill)—confound the cautious and rational Colin "Colin" Powell (Jeffrey Wright) to lead the republic toward disaster.
Not fair (not a problem) and definitely not balanced: The least-nuanced performance in a film full of cartoon characterizations is Brolin's Bush. A simian slob, modeled on Andy Griffith's raucous run-amok in A Face in the Crowd and given to bad-tempered pronouncements while stuffing his face, Brolin uses stupidity as a crucifix. He wards off sympathy as though it were a vampire. In directing Brolin, Stone is disinclined to give the devil his due. Bush's mean-spirited charm is nowhere evident—despite the devotion he inspires in wife Laura. What exactly is this sweet young hottie (Elizabeth Banks) supposed to see in him?
What are we? W. can't decide whether its aspirations are Shakespearean tragedy, political critique, or cathartic black comedy. The emotionally reductive Stone really only had a shot at the latter. At its best, W. suggests Stuff Happens reconfigured for the cast of Saturday Night Live. Running through Bush's greatest bits—choking on a potato chip, confusing Guantánamo with "Guantanamera," calling himself "the decider," complaining that he's always been misunderestimated by Saddam Hussein—W. begs the question posed by its two theses. Like, how did this stunted creature, who considers his greatest mistake to have been trading Sammy Sosa from the Texas Rangers, become our king? (The fault, I'm afraid, lies not in our stars. . . .)
Released early in the 1992 campaign, JFK did its modest part to destabilize the first Bush's Republican nation and contribute to Bill Clinton's Kennedy-identified juggernaut. To the degree that W. is able to make itself present in the hurly-burly of the election's final weeks, it should prove mildly helpful to the Democrats. Cable news won't be able to resist the movie's most outrageous scenes, and such blatant Bush bludgeoning should compel a few Republican pols and right-wing pundits to rise to their maligned leader's defense.
Hey, I enjoyed the movie. It confirmed to me what I knew all along about George W that he is an inarticulate buffoon who rose to the level of his incompetience. I met him during the Republican Convention here in San Diego when Bob Dole was running. Very unimpressed to say the least. Dressed inappropriately, he had a vacant look in the eyes. I assume he was still in his forty-year protracted adolesence. Why the Republican party assumed that a man who had achieved nothing based on his merits and not his family money and reputation could achieve something in the highest office in the land is puzzling and disturbing. Further, how a person can spend four years at Yale and then two at Harvard without the ability to put together an intelligent sentence is also scary. And how a librarian of all people could find a man so obviously unread, stimulating enough to want to marry him.
I'm not sure what the above's point is, but if it's that Hoberman should think before bashing Stone, it's clear that he did. Stone was one of Hoberman's pets in the late 80's. I'm still going to check this movie out, but that's more out of curiosity than of spite for the critic as you seem to posess.
Have I seen the movie yet? No. I've seen the trailer and had the same fears that this review expresses until I realized that they were at Yale together as Freshman and didn't gradutate together because Stone went to Vietnam. If you've ever read or seen anything about Oliver Stone then you should let down your pot pipe for a day and consider the fact that not everyone conditions themselves to the media in the same pre-conditioned way that you do...better yet, you're not the smartest object in the room so step the fuck up off...woops, I guess I'm a moral outrage, but judge art in the context that it deserves and take your Ritalin. Dumbass!
"Stone presents Dubya as an idiot savant who believes his own bullshit, warning Poppy that too much thinking screws up the mind and bragging that he's decided to run for president because God told him to." Sounds just like a certain lipstick wearing, isolationist wingnut from Alaska.
What a sad move, with all the things that are worth bring to the screen, this Oliver Stone, is putting a liberal spin on what the world sees and this some one-sided move puts the US in the worst light possible. What a waist of time and money. There are people in need all over this great country with much more to offer as a good story to cover in or as a good film for all to see that can be up-lifting in so many levels. As I see it even if President Bush walked on water, there a some that would not give him a pleasant egnolegment. What a sad world (US) we are living in with such a pathetic self importunes and self centered that feels he (Oliver Stone) is above it all. With respect to Iraq, Stone may wish to look at the fact that every country out there (at the time) were also saying the same thing, that saddam hossain had the weapons and even many defectors with death over there heads were saying the same thing. Can�t people stop and have a real moment! And not just live in a make believe world. The President has protected all of us for eight years! I wish the Holly Wood free spirit minded crowed could see the real world that my family came from. I don�t care what color a man is, but when some one stands up and said �pass the wealth around�, that is a socialist, and I know I cam from ONE!!! This is the greatest country on earth and I have a small business here after working like only God knows. The work I have and am putting into it to make and earn every dime, something that the elite H/W folks just don�t know in there make believe world. I cam form Cuba as a very young child and if one just thinks about it after 50 years the socialist there are still blaming the US for the nightmare the people have lived and are living there. Please keep in mind that Cuba can trade with all other counties on the plant and in a Holly Wood style mentality they pin there pathetic lies on one country, and some twisted sad minds out there believe it. Very Sad indeed. JA, Atlanta, Ga. U.S.A! P.S. My mother told me that she can remember the very same words from another so called leader, some 50 years ago, as Mr. Obama, and that leader was Fidel Castor prior to taking over the Government.
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