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The Koch Brothers for the Dumb and Dumber set — Hollywood’s idea of incisive political satire.
Hollywood doesn’t do politics — at least not politics as it is practiced in the real world. That muddled and muddy system of alternating compromise and confrontation, posturing and horse-trading, simply wouldn’t show up on the silver screen — and, even if it did, presumably nobody would care to watch it. So instead the movies invent their own political reality: an imaginary world in which larger-than-life figures engage in vast conspiracies, monumental betrayals, outrageous scandals, and unbelievable conversions. These last are often based on the even more unbelievable dream of a world without politics, in which our public men — I suspect the thing wouldn’t work even as well as it does, which is not well at all, if you substituted women — act only from principle and with regard to nothing but the common weal. Such impossible goodness thus becomes the excuse for the impossible badness that precedes it in the well-worn character arc of the movie politician, which is repeated yet again in Jay Roach’s supposed satire, The Campaign.
Mr. Roach’s Game Change, the TV movie about John McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate in 2008, showed the extent to which his imagination is limited to media commonplaces about the political world that is otherwise beyond his ken. In Game Change it was the already well-established media trope of Mrs. Palin’s supposed stupidity, which Game Change helped to establish even more firmly. In The Campaign it is the supposed wickedness of the Koch brothers, as well as the iniquity, devoutly affirmed by every lefty, of the Citizens United decision of the Supreme Court which has supposedly conferred on billionaires in general and the Kochs in particular enormous and illegitimate powers to influence elections. The name of the brothers here, as played by John Lithgow and Dan Aykroyd, is transformed from Koch (pronounced Coke) to Motch, and their evil plan is to “insource” Chinese workers — or at least Chinese working conditions and wages — to the bucolic North Carolina congressional district represented by their creature, Cam Brady (Will Ferrell).
Yeah, that sounds like something the Koch brothers must be working on. Their trouble in the movie, however, is that Cam, a Democrat, has what used to be called, back in Bill Clinton’s day, a “zipper problem,” so the Motches transfer their allegiance to a hand-picked Republican, the strange man-child Marty Huggins (Zach Galifianakis), who seems intended to be a sort of redneck version of Corky St. Clair, Christopher Guest’s provincial thespian in Waiting for Guffman, who doesn’t know he’s gay. That’s good for a few laughs, as is Cam’s manic philandering and blatant hypocrisies. He’s even more stupid than Julianne Moore’s (or Tina Fey’s) Sarah Palin, but Marty is rendered almost as idiotic himself by the exigencies of campaigning. The movie thus becomes yet another variation on the “Dumb and Dumber” cross-talk act wrapped up at last by yet another bogus conversion scenario in which it is the Motch brothers who are left with the pie in their face.
The film begins with an epigraph from Ross Perot: “There are rules in war; there are rules in mud-wrestling. There are no rules in politics.” But this is not true. The media just love the idea that it might be, but they very well know that it isn’t, since they themselves are in the business of enforcing the rules with their constant monitoring of politicians for potential scandal. Almost any of the things Cam Brady does, for instance, from getting caught drunk-driving to punching a baby to screwing his opponent’s wife and putting out a sex tape of the encounter would be under media rules more than enough to be an automatic disqualification for electoral office in the real world. It is only in the movies’ political fantasy world that Cam goes on and on committing ever more impolitic outrages against the media’s code of behavior. He is said in the beginning to have done what the real-life Democratic Congressman Anthony Weiner did, but he doesn’t suffer Mr. Weiner’s political fate for it, nor yet that of Eliot Spitzer whose fate-worse-than-death has been to join the pack of media hyenas himself.
And yet the media insist that the movie is true to life! A.O. Scott of the New York Times writes that
there may be comfort in the thought that the American people would never elect clowns like these to any office. But then a glance at some of the clowns we do elect, perhaps especially to our national legislature, might lead you in the opposite direction. Really, the movie could not possibly go far enough unless the screenwriters (Chris Henchy and Shawn Harwell) had abandoned all invention and transcribed the script directly from C-SPAN. And so The Campaign wobbles between the vaguely topical and the completely preposterous.
Mr. Scott is usually a thoughtful critic, but here he is clearly on auto-pilot. Lip service to the media view of political “clowns” — perhaps on the assumption that if there are no real life Cam Bradys in Congress it is only because they haven’t been discovered yet — is de rigueur. Variety’s critic writes that “Roach proceeds to illustrate just how flagrant things can get, and yet the humor works because everything connects back to the real world.” Of course, it’s not “the real world” but the media world — the world in which all congressmen are corrupt morons and billionaires routinely conspire to bring Chinese wage levels and environmental standards to the U.S. — for which people are more and more frequently prone to mistake it. That they should continue to make that mistake is as much in the movies’ interest as it is in the media’s.
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Appleby| 8.17.12 @ 7:21AM
This is just another movie to give men a chance to espouse Toddler Liberation as defined by P.J. O'Rourke: "The overwhelming desire to take off your clothes, yell Poo Poo in church, and stick everything you can find in your mouth."
Tom Kyba| 8.17.12 @ 12:41PM
You nailed it!
spike59| 8.17.12 @ 3:50PM
that explains Liberalism as well
Alan Obama Fan Brooks | 8.17.12 @ 7:56PM
Bowman,
of course Hollywood politics aren't real! The public watches films to escape. DUH!
Only intellectuals want films to be real.
Do you want operas to be real? Sheesh.
Alan Obama Fan Brooks | 8.17.12 @ 7:58PM
"Of course, it's not 'the real world' but the media world "
Write about something else, then.
ArtyS| 8.17.12 @ 8:58AM
Ah, the Citizens United Case - The Supreme's final decision before going insane. Very fitting that it would inspire another cinematic triumph from Hollywood.
Bill8472| 8.17.12 @ 9:11AM
In Hollywood, in their political movies, it is the refusal to compromise that makes the hero a hero.
In the real world, it is the ability to compromise without sacrificing one's basic principles that makes a real political hero.
This because we have largely been trained and educated to believe that a person who is willing to compromise is morally impaired, when in fact the ability to compromise effectively is a valued trait for politicians and many other people.
Dave Williams| 8.17.12 @ 12:51PM
Hmmm, depends on the context. Some issues simply will NOT admit to compromise: there is, it the issue be examined carefully and honestly, virtually NO middle ground between a state economy and a private one, between going to war and not going to war, between permitting or forbidding abortion, etc. For decades, the Republicans have tried the path of compromise, and all they've done is look ridiculous as American culture and society swirl towards the drain. ENOUGH!!! Leftist ideas are BAD ideas, demonstrated world-wide and over and over, and I will support ONLY politicians who DON'T compromise with them, but WANT TO SEE THOSE IDEAS KILLED (politically, of course). "Bipartisanship" has too long been code for "Republicans surrendering their principles." Give me the much-maligned "partisan bickering" every time!
Appleby| 8.17.12 @ 2:50PM
One of my religion profs at Bible college used to remind us, "If you say the sun rises in the East, and I say it rises in the West, the truth does not lie somewhere in between."
There are things that are simply true, and other things that are simply false. (For example, gravity operates, for all practical purposes ALL THE TIME.)
Minuteman78| 8.17.12 @ 11:50AM
What's the plot of the sequel? That an anti-American Muslim Marxist sociopath teams up with a brain-dead, gaffe-prone liar to run a formerly prosperous country into the ground? Oh wait...just like the Black Trans-Am, that's been done...
Petronius| 8.17.12 @ 1:13PM
It's a good thing so many people can't afford movie tickets this year. Just look at all the 20 somethings on down who didn't know the Titanic really sank until Brian Williams said so. Trouble is, they also believe everything else he says that is not True.
borninsocal| 8.17.12 @ 2:38PM
Mr Bowman,
"Screwing", a bit crude for a supposedly serious article don't you think?
CopyKatnj| 8.17.12 @ 4:19PM
I admit that I read the first two paragraphs and stopped immediately after reading Will Ferrell was in the movie. Thus far, I have not been able to tolerate this actor in any entertainment venue. If Will Ferrell is in it, it is stupid and not funny. John Lithgow and Dan Aykroyd are on their way to my "avoid these guys" because they are no longer funny list.
cuban pete| 8.17.12 @ 5:02PM
Ferrell and Yoko Ono are two people who have no discernable talent but have managed to acquire great fame and fortune. Jaw dropping.
delahaya| 8.19.12 @ 2:35PM
The Koch brothers have given maybe a third as much money to political causes as Soros has. They have, however, given many times more money to true charity than Soros has.