[image: W_l]
*DUBYA* Josh Brolin stands out as the soon-to-be former president in Oliver
Stone's *W.*

 <http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20233285,00.html>
 W. <http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20233285,00.html> Reviewed by Lisa
Schwarzbaum | Oct 15, 2008


As his second term as the 43rd President of the United States concludes in
national financial upheaval, the real George W. Bush is a figure more
confounding and complex than any dramatist is likely to conjure, either in
tragedy or comedy. It takes a showman doing a heckuva job, armed with that
bipartisan quality called chutzpah, to even try. Enter Oliver Stone, stage
leftish.

In *W.*, the un-shy filmmaker (who, in *JFK* and *Nixon*, made big-screen
entertainment out of presidents only *after* they left office) attempts to
do for a sitting Commander-in-Chief what a parade of journalists,
psychoanalysts, pundits, theologians, talk-show hosts, and bloggers have not
yet been able to accomplish: synthesize compassion and criticism, satire and
sympathy, and put the flawed man in the context of personal history and
global consequence. Stone doesn't pull off the experiment either — he's a
blustery, big-gesture movie guy working on a proudly tight shooting
schedule, not a patient, precise biographer aiming at wisdom for the ages.
And I suspect *W.* will look like an even skimpier drama-club production by
Jan. 20, 2009, when the real W. exits the White House, stage right. But
there is a certain irresistible time-capsule interest to Stone's uneven
project. Both in front of and behind the camera, from creators and
characters alike, this movie has got the fascinating, clumsy rhythms of
blind men (they're mostly men) trying to describe an elephant (a Republican
pachyderm), bravely fronted by one intrepid explorer with his eyes wide
open, looking for nuance.

The intrepid one is the outstanding Josh Brolin, who does such a phenomenal
job in the title role that he carries every scene he's in to a place of
subtlety and integrity far beyond what Stone needs to make his
attention-grabbing noise. Brolin is clearly party leader — nailing Bush's
posture and gestures without stooping to easy mannerism, conveying the
contradictions of a polarizing president with real generosity, inflecting
every trademark *heh-heh* with a reason for being that makes the old *
heh-heh* sound new. But with every decision *except* his trust in Brolin,
Stone settles for an easier path, counting on a friendly audience to laugh,
cringe, or despair *ahead* of cue so he doesn't have to commit to his own
attitudes about the man he's ''studying'' with supposed dispassion. His
approach is a weaselly approximation of fair and balanced. The director
fixes on the fumbles and entitlements of an intellectually incurious son
struggling to please a disappointed patrician father as the Freudian
through-line in a Greek tragedy/*SNL* comedy; then he strings together
reenactments of various specific events in the younger Bush's life,
assuming, I guess, that they'll somehow accumulate and coagulate — mixing
with what that friendly audience knows about Bush — into a larger picture of
a screwed-up guy who screwed up.

But those vignettes don't accrue effectively, not least in fantasy sequences
during which Bush (who at one time aspired to be the commissioner of
baseball) imagines himself in his own field of dreams, accepting the
approving roar of an imaginary stadium crowd. (The chuckleheaded script is
by Stanley Weiser, a longtime Stone collaborator who wrote *Wall Street*.)
The moments Stone and Weiser select to sketch Bush's character are more of a
jumble than a natural progression. ''Junior'' endures a fraternity hazing;
he meets his future wife, Laura (Elizabeth Banks, a gentle presence); he
hates and needs the help — the bailout! — of his
father-the-former-president, George H.W. Bush (James Cromwell, at a rare
loss for clarity); he stops drinking and finds spiritual rebirth in
evangelical Christianity. Of course, he also decides to invade Iraq in 2003,
with thumbs up from Dick Cheney (Richard Dreyfuss), Donald Rumsfeld (Scott
Glenn), Condoleezza Rice (Thandie Newton, on the far side of parody), Karl
Rove (Toby Jones), and George Tenet (Bruce McGill), while Colin Powell
(Jeffrey Wright) plays the wildly simplified role of designated
Republican-with-a-conscience. Oh, and Stone also adds the scene where Bush
chokes on a pretzel while watching sports on TV at the White House. Why?
Because it's a cheap laugh.

At least Brolin is never cheap. Representing a man who finds both salvation
in Jesus and relief that one of his intelligence reports is only three pages
long, the actor digs deep.

He's the *A* in *W.*, *heh-heh*. The rest is *C+*.

-- 
spanx' blog:
http://spankyenriquez.blogspot.com/

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gimik" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/gimik?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to