A nostalgic look at the last year of Obama’s presidency
A word of warning: more than any other film this year, The Final Year may make you cry. If you feel 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 United Nations, 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, on his way to an aircraft, 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. The story of those 12 months will no doubt make a fascinating documentary one day. It may even make you cry.