Regina Leader-Post

THE GOOD OLD DAYS

Documentar­y goes inside final year of Obama presidency before Trump era

- CHRIS KNIGHT

A word of warning: more than any other film this year, The

Final Year may make you cry. If you feel an almost daily despair at the prospect of a racist, sexist, inarticula­te liar holding the highest office in the world, you will despair even more mightily at the memory of a time when none of that was true.

Greg Barker’s documentar­y follows former U.S. president Barack Obama through his last 12 months in office, mostly

through the eyes of some of his closest staff: national security advisers Susan Rice and Ben Rhodes; UN ambassador Samantha Power; and secretary of state John Kerry, whose great takeaway quote in this film, spoken to Russian officials at the UN, is: “Everyone is entitled to their own opinions, but you are not entitled to your own facts.”

The Obama administra­tion was flawed. That’s a given: they all are. But we see these people jetting around the world, doing their damnedest to leave the planet in a better state than they found it, whether through climate-change agreements, rapprochem­ent with Iran and Cuba, brokering a Syrian ceasefire, or something as simple and poignant as organizing the first visit by a sitting U.S. president to Hiroshima.

Barker conducts a few interviews, but the film is strongest when it just leans in to observe. Power attends a swearing-in ceremony for new citizens, speaking through tears about coming to America from Ireland at the age of nine. Rhodes mentions to a colleague in passing: “The last thing that this world needs is more walls.” The film introduces the White House press secretary, a guy with the almost adorably antiquaria­n name of Josh Earnest.

And as the final year dwindles to the final days, a new president prepares to take office. His first year concludes on Jan. 20. cknight@postmedia.com

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