On With The Show
Wag the Dog makes good by making war.
by Susan Ellis
ag the Dog asks the question: How gullible is the American public?
And it answers it: extremely so. Then the film goes about trying
to prove its thesis. The arguments it provides have the stability
of a soap bubble (it seems that one simple phone call could end
the ruse), but Wag the Dog plants a seed that maybe, just maybe,
anything is possible.
It begins with a super-secret meeting in the White House less
than two weeks before the presidential election. The topic of
the meeting is how to deflect attention away from the incumbents
improper behavior with a teenage girl. To diffuse the situation,
political problem-solver Conrad Brean (Robert De Niro) is brought
in. His solution is to give the public another concern, one that
will push the girl far, far back in their minds at least until
election day.
So who says war is good for nothing? Brean decides a skirmish
with Albania is just the thing. But not a real war just the
appearance of a war. To meet that end, Brean, joined by presidential
aide Winifred Ames (Anne Heche), flies to L.A. to recruit movie
producer Stanley Motss (Dustin Hoffman). Motss agrees to produce
the war and calls in his troops, Fad King (Denis Leary) for merchandising
and Johnny Green (Willie Nelson) to write an anthem.
At first the scam works amazingly well, and the molested teenager
is relegated to the style section of the newspaper. But various
hitches arise in the form of the switching loyalties of the CIA
and a war hero who is actually a psychopath.
Wag the Dog comes at a ripe time when politicians worry that
every time Winona Ryder smokes a cigarette onscreen, thousands
of her fans will soon become addicted, or that the more impressionable
will want to cap somebody just because Samuel L. Jackson looked
cool doing it in Jackie Brown. What Wag the Dog does is give Hollywood
the influence its been credited with for years, and then it really
goes to town.
Levinson does a good job at keeping the pace crisp and building
up the situation. The screenplay cowritten by David Mamet and
Hilary Henkin (from a book by Larry Beinhart) is sharp and filled
with one-liners and sarcastic sight gags. At one point, when Brean
is asked, Why Albania? he answers, Why not? At another, a
young actress (Kirsten Dunst) is asked to play an Albania peasant
for news footage. In her arms, she carries a bag of corn chips
that will later be digitally changed into a kitten. When she asks
about putting the shoot on her resume, Brean tells her that she
never can. When she protests, he explains that, if she does, shell
be killed.
And while De Niro puts in his usually fine performance as the
Machiavellian Brean, Wag the Dog is Hoffmans movie. This is one
of the best parts hes had in years. He gets to play a character
with true character. Fluffy-haired and fake-tanned, Motss is a
producer not satisfied with the small bit of acknowledgement he
receives during his movies credits. He constantly laments the
Oscars lack of a category for his kind. The only thing he has
is his stories. This is nothing is Motss catchphrase, and he
launches into a tale of disaster involving one of his past films.
As the movie progresses, he says it more and more until the
final payoff when he gets to say it after he, Brean, and Ames
suffer through a plane crash.
So what if Wag the Dog suggests were all chumps? Its well worth
the manipulation.
In The Boxer, director Jim Sheridan and actor Daniel Day-Lewis
team up once again, as they did for In the Name of the Father,
for a film about war-torn Ireland.
Day-Lewis plays Danny Flynn, a former IRA soldier who is released
from prison after 14 years. He returns to his old neighborhood
in Ulster to a mix of emotions. His IRA comrades respect that
he never turned on them while away, but theyre suspicious of
his refusal to have anything to do with his old life. In addition,
theres Maggie (Emily Watson), Dannys girlfriend at the time
of his incarceration, who has since done her duty by her IRA-leader
father and married another prisoner.
The moment Danny arrives, he begins training as a boxer at the
old gym where he once showed promise as a fighter. His actions
spark both hope and disgust in the town as he and his coach recreate
their boxing club and sponsor nonsectarian fights. While these
bouts prove to be an outlet for some, including Maggies young
son, there are those who cant stand the mingling of the two sides,
and soon violence erupts.
The Boxer is a tense film that presents Irelands troubles and
shows that there are no easy solutions, that emotions run too
deep to be taken care of by a simple boxing match. Written by
Sheridan and Terry George, the film lays out a complicated tangle,
where the people of Ulster are given an outlet away from the political
fray through more violence in the ring.
Though The Boxer successfully draws an intriguingly sad picture
of the struggle, it is missing something in regards to its two
main characters. Danny is the strong, silent type, so silent,
in fact, that several minutes lapse before he speaks a full sentence.
Danny reveals himself at an almost aggravatingly slow pace. When
its all said and done, there is still more to him that has to
be understood. He tells Maggie that hes loved her all those years
away and she tells him the same, but the audience yearns to know
more about their past together, about what draws them together.
And its this that takes the sting out of The Boxers punch. n
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