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Movie review for W 
 
This is Oliver Stone's(Director of Platoon) biographic on the life of the 43rd 
President George W. Bush Jr. chronicling his days from Yale through to his 
presidency, and the Iraq and Afghan wars.

The lead role is played superbly by Josh Brolin(No country for old men), having 
the Texas accent, and Bush's mannerisms down to a fine art, playing the younger 
Bush during his time at Yale, and the Grey-haired Bush during his time right up 
to the conflict in Iraq.

Vice-President Dick Cheney is played superbly by an unrecognisable Richard 
Dreyfuss(Mr. Holland's Opus) with a very uncanny resemblance, even the 
mannerisms of grinding his teeth, Condoleeza Rice is played by an 
unrecognisable Thandie Newton(The pursuit of Happyness, The Chronicles of 
Riddick), Colin Powell is played impressively by Jeffrey Wright(Shaft, Quantum 
of Solace), Donald Rumsfeld is played by the veteran Scott Glenn(The patriarch 
in Brothers and sisters), Paul Wolfowitz is played by Dennis Boutsikaris(The 
Last Don), Karl Rove is played by the diminutive and brilliant Toby Jones(Harry 
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets) .

We chronicle various aspects of the former President's life, from drilling jobs 
in Texas, running his own oil company, running a major league team, all seem 
overshadowed by the deep disappointment Bush Jr. regards in himself, as opposed 
to his younger brother, who he sees as his father's favourite Governor of 
Florida Jeb Bush, as seen by his father George W. Bush Sr. played wonderfully 
by James Cromwell (L.A. Confidential).  At times the elder Bush is long 
suffering towards his son, and other times, does not communicate with him 
directly, apparently only through notes, as he did when George W. Bush became 
Governor of Texas.

The conflicts amongst the key participants in the Oval office before the 
justification of the War in Iraq, notably the friction between Donald Rumsfeld, 
Vice-President Dick Chenney, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz and 
Commander of the Armed Forces Colin Powell, regarding the search for weapons of 
mass destruction, and following U.N. protocol is well acted.  The arrogance of 
Bush and his dismissal of the U.N. in this regard is believable given press 
conferences at that time.

Overall this portrayal of George W. Bush Jr. aims to keep a balanced 
perspective, from his battle with alcohol, and trying to make his own way in 
the world, without everybody else thinking everything in his life has been 
handed to him on a silver platter, to his liaison with Laura Bush played by the 
lovely Elizabeth Banks(Meet Dave), to the much maligned war, where as he puts 
it, "I am just trying to make the world a better place".
 
 Mr D Stevens is a reviewer at http://armchairbuff.blogspot.com/  Movie reviews 
 Keywords: Movie Reviews, film reviews, film review, movies, films, Movie 
Review, W, Josh Brolin, James Crowell, Jeffrey Wright, Richard Dreyfuss, 
Thandie Newton, Scott Glenn, Toby Jones, Dennis Boutsikaris, Elizabeth Banks, 
biopic, biography, War in Iraq, Afghan War, Iraq War, Weapons of Mass 
destruction, politics, drama, real-life 
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