Josh Brolin as G.W. Bush
Elizabeth Banks as Laura
Ellen Burstyn as Barbara
James Cromwell as George Sr.
Richard Dreyfuss as Dick Cheney
Scott Glenn as Rumsfeld
Toby Jones as Karl Rove
Stacy Keach as Rev. Hudd
Jeffrey Wright as Powell
Thandie Newton as Rice
Directed by
Oliver Stone
Written by
Stanley Weiser
Drama, History
Rated PG-13 for language, sexual
references, alcohol abuse, smoking and brief disturbing images of warfare
131 minutes
Oliver Stone's "W.," a
biography of President Bush, is fascinating. No other word for it. I became
absorbed in its story of a poor little rich kid's alcoholic youth and torturous
adulthood. This is the tragedy of a victim of the Peter Principle. Wounded by
his father's disapproval and preference for his brother Jeb, the movie argues, George
W. Bush rose and rose until he was finally powerful enough to stain his
family's legacy.
Unlike Stone's "JFK"
and "Nixon," this film contains no revisionist history. Everything in
it, including the scenes behind closed doors, is now pretty much familiar from
tell-all books by former Bush aides, and reporting by such reporters as Bob
Woodward. Though Stone and his writer, Stanley Weiser, could obviously not know
exactly who said what and when, there's not a line of dialogue that sounds like
malicious fiction. It's all pretty much as published accounts have prepared us
for.
The focus is always on Bush (Josh
Brolin): His personality, his addiction, his insecurities, his unwavering faith
in a mission from God, his yearning to prove himself, his inability to deal
with those who advised him. Not surprisingly, in this film, most of the crucial
decisions of his presidency were shaped and placed in his hands by the
Machiavellian strategist Dick Cheney (Richard Dreyfuss) and the master
politician Karl Rove (Toby Jones). Donald Rumsfeld (Scott Glenn) runs an
exasperated third.
But what made them tick? And what
about Colin Powell (Jeffrey Wright) and Condoleezza Rice (Thandie Newton)? You
won't find out here. The film sees Bush's insiders from the outside. In his
presence, they tend to defer, to use tact as a shield from his ego and
defensiveness. But Cheney's soft-spoken, absolutely confident opinions are
generally taken as truth. And Bush accepts Rove as the man to teach him what to
say and how to say it. He needs them and doesn't cross them.
In the world according to
"W.," Bush always fell short in the eyes of his patrician father
(James Cromwell) and outspoken mother (Ellen Burstyn). He resented his parents'
greater admiration for his younger brother Jeb. The film lacks scenes showing
W. as a child, however -- probably wisely. It opens at a drunken fraternity
initiation, and "Junior" is pretty much drunk until he finds Jesus at
the age of 40. He runs through women, jobs and cars at an alarming speed, and
receives one angry lecture after another from his dad.
While running for Congress for
the first time, he meets pretty Laura (Elizabeth Banks) at a party, and love
blossoms. She was a Gene McCarthy volunteer. Did she turn conservative? I
imagine so, but the movie doesn't show them discussing politics. She is
patient, steadfast, loving, supportive and a prime candidate for Alanon, the
12-step program for spouses of alcoholics. After Bush quits cold turkey, the
movie shows him nevertheless often with a beer at his hand, unaware of the
ironic AA curse for someone you dislike: "One little drink won't kill
you." [In an interview conducted after this review was posted online,
Oliver Stone told me that Bush was not drinking real beer in the later scenes,
but the non-alcoholic O'Doul's.]
Dried out, Bush is finally able
to hold down jobs. The movie is far from a chronological record, organizing
episodes to observe the development of his personality, not his career. Even
several spellbinding scenes about the runup to the Iraq war are not so much
critical of his decisions as about how cluelessly, and yet with such vehemence,
he stuck with them through thick and thin. At a top-level meeting where he is
finally informed that there are no WMDs in Iraq and apparently never were, he
is furious for not being informed of this earlier. Several people in the room
tried to inform him, but were silenced. Colin Powell spends a lot of time
softly urging caution and holding his tongue. There is no indication that he
will eventually resign.
The movie's Bush is exasperating
to work with. At his Texas ranch, he takes the inner circle on a march through
the blazing sun, misses a turn and assures them it's only a half-mile back.
Cheney, after three heart attacks, and Rice, wearing inappropriate shoes,
straggle along unhappily. His parents are apparently even more disturbed by his
decision to run for governor of Texas than by his drinking. Cheney is lectured
at a private lunch to remember who is president. He quietly forgets.
Many of the actors somewhat
resemble the people they play. The best is Dreyfuss as Cheney, who is not so
much a double as an embodiment. The film's portrait of George Senior is
sympathetic; it shows him giving Junior the cuff links that were "the only
real thing" his own father, Sen. Prescott Bush, ever gave him. The name
and the oedipal complex were passed down the family tree.
One might feel sorry for George W. at the end of
this film, were it not for his legacy of a fraudulent war and a collapsed
economy. The film portrays him as incompetent to be president, and shaped by
the puppet masters Cheney and Rove to their own ends. If there is a saving
grace, it may be that Bush will never fully realize how badly he did. How can
he blame himself? He was only following God's will.
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