Oliver Stone Chronicles
Bush’s Checkered Career with Damning Bio-Pic
W.
Rated PG-13 for profanity, sexual
references, smoking, alcohol abuse and disturbing war images.
Running time: 131 minutes
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release: Oct 17, 2008 Wide
Oliver Stone has never been afraid to court
controversy, and this bio-pic is no exception. The iconoclastic director
has made presidential docudramas before (JFK and Nixon), but W. is the
first about one still in office.
This incendiary offering is apt to be appreciated
or reviled along party lines for it paints a most unflattering picture
of George W. Bush as a spoiled-rotten nincompoop who has been a
miserable failure at his every endeavor. For, once it breezes past his
early adult years frittered away as a boozing, womanizing embarrassment
to his family, it settles down to focus on his copious shortcomings,
first, as a businessman, and then as a politician.
Along the way, we’re treated mostly to W’s familiar
fiascos, such as his much-publicized, ill-fated forays into the oil and
baseball businesses. So, the movie doesn’t really make any new
revelations, unless you were unaware that he got a girl pregnant, was
arrested for drunk driving and has been a bitter disappoint to his
father (James Cromwell), former president George Herbert Walker Bush.
The film is at its best only after a Born Again
Junior cleans up his act, marries Laura (Elizabeth Banks), and makes the
fateful decision to enter politics. Once he ascends to the presidency,
we find him surrounded in the White House by a cast of infamous
characters including Karl Rove (Toby Jones), Vice President Cheney
(Richard Dreyfuss), Dr. Condoleezza Rice (Thandie
Newton), Secretary of State Colin Powell (Jeffrey Wright), Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (Scott Glenn) and CIA Director George Tenet
(Bruce McGill).
What makes the story fascinating at this juncture
is that it takes a “fly-on-the-wall” approach to confirm the country’s
worst fears about the shady shenanigans among members of the
administration. For example, we see Rove as the ever-scheming brains
behind the throne while Cheney is exposed as a power-hungry maniac who
felt that the Patriot Act didn’t go far enough. Rice, Powell and Tenet
are presented as weak-kneed sycophants who consciously compromised their
integrity by beating the drums of war, knowing full well that
Iraq
had no weapons of mass destruction.
Still, the worst criticism is reserved for Bush,
who is positioned as a clueless chimpleton-in-chief more than willing to
hand the reigns of government over to his vice president so he could be
free to eat junk food and watch sports on TV. A damning biography
magnifying the worst traits of the president with the lowest approval
rating in history.
Talk about beating a man when he’s down in the
polls!