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Swing Vote

This election cycle has had its share of movies dedicated to political themes - last week we reviewed the HBO special "Recount," in a month the Oliver Stone film "W" is coming out and last month a movie titled "Swing Vote" was released.

Swing Vote stars Kevin Costner and is a comedy which takes the Florida recount debacle and condenses it all into a fictional one man, one vote decides the entire election scenario. The first half of the movie was extremely entertaining and reminded me of the first movie that I had seen Costner star in, Bull Durham. Although Kevin Costner has been in a number of serious films I've always thought he was a better comedic actor. That comes through clearly as he vies with comedic talents like Kelsey Grammer and Nathan Lane. The movie does best as it presents a rough satire not only of the political system but also of the lost generation of non-voters or independents who seem clueless as to what's happening around them (and I say that having perhaps been in that position more than once myself).

I asked my 11 year old son what he thought the key theme in the movie was and how effectively they handled it. On the third try he got it right - the theme which was lighthearted at first and then pretty darn heavy-handed was "in today's politics people will sell their soul and do anything to win (i.e. the Karl Rove playbook)."

Once the movie took this too seriously of course it became less of a comedy and more of a morality play with serious character transformations occurring all across the board. I think it might have been more interesting if we would have let Costner continue his nearly Forrest Gump like character all the way through. Anyway, it is worth seeing in this political season as it does touch upon a real life theme that seems to be playing out on both campaigns. The other thing I'd mention is that if there was a Swing Vote scenario in this election, it would be more likely to occur here in Ohio.





Copyright 2008, Raving Reviews

Recount

I watched a very interesting DVD this week, picked it up at Blockbuster since I don't have HBO. The show was titled "Recount" and it was about the controversy surrounding the 2008 Presidential Election between Al Gore and George W. Bush. Regardless of what political views you may have had then or what your politics are now, you should find this show is absolutely fascinating. It is a mostly unbiased view (many might disagree) of the history of that incident although it is presented as a drama rather than a documentary.



A detour on the highway of Democracy, you decide?

The program is both a historical record and interesting character study of some of the key players involved (not Bush or Gore, but the actual people who 'fought the battle'). If you haven't seen it go rent it, this provides an excellent reminder of the things can go wrong in an election and keep in mind that none of the core issues regarding election standards have been corrected yet - so this could all happen again. I almost felt a little sorry for how Katherine Harris was portrayed in the show, it was easier to poke fun her at I suppose - I think her story is more complex and has more depth than the show presented (after the 2000 election she went on to become a Congress-woman for Florida's 13th district but then lost the seat in the 2006 election as she was reaching for the US Senate - without the Bush's support), but then again maybe not.

The controversy in 2008 was never really about hanging chads (or as they point out in the show, the plural of 'Chad' is supposed to be 'Chad') or punch-card dimples, it was and is about how voting standards and technology interact and are interpreted in times of crisis. I'd have to rate 'Recount' as one of the top 3 best shows about politics ever produced.


Copyright 2008, Raving Reviews