The Welland Tribune

New film mirrors media in Trump era

Director Rob Reiner says authoritar­ianism rising in all countries

- BRUCE DEMARA

When director Rob Reiner made “Shock and Awe,” a cautionary tale about the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq and the importance of a free press in holding politician­s accountabl­e, he had no idea that it would take on a whole new resonance in the era of President Donald Trump.

The film details the true story of a team of journalist­s with Knight-Ridder Newspapers who bucked the media tide by trying to expose the efforts of thenpresid­ent George W. Bush to justify the invasion with manufactur­ed intelligen­ce. The venerable New York Times eventually apologized to its readers for swallowing the Bush administra­tion’s claim of “weapons of mass destructio­n” in seeking to topple dictator Saddam Hussein.

“But the headwinds that these guys faced back in the run-up to the war in Iraq, I believe, is nothing compared to headwinds that American journalist­s are facing now because they’re being called ‘enemies of the people’ and ‘fake news .’ All this authoritar­ian play book stuff that’s being done, it’s very scary right now,” Reiner said in a recent interview.

“Right now, it’s more and more difficult for honest journalist­s to get to the truth. I mean, 60 per cent of American journalist­s are working very, very hard to get to the truth. The problem they have is that for the first time in American history, we have a president who lies every minute of his life, just everything that comes out his mouth is a lie and he’s backed up by essentiall­y state-run media and they just parrot everything he says.

“And he (Trump) is also backed up by Republican­s that control Congress and the whole concept of checks and balances has been thrown out the window. So you’ve got journalist­s working overtime … to get the truth out and 40 per cent of Americans are cemented in this alternativ­e, cultlike reality.”

As someone who narrowly escaped being drafted to fight in Vietnam, Reiner said he wanted to do a movie back in 2003.

“I was interested in doing a film about how we got into Iraq right at the time we started invading. I just didn’t think that twice in my lifetime, we were going to be going to war based on lies. I just thought, ‘How is this happening again?’ I knew all (the Bush administra­tion’s) rationales and I knew they were all ridiculous,” Reiner recalled.

Reiner tried a couple of different approaches, he said — including a Dr. Strangelov­e-type of satire — but couldn’t get a script that worked. Years later, he saw a documentar­y by Bill Moyers, a respected journalist and former press secretary to late president Lyndon Johnson, about efforts by Knight-Ridder Washington bureau editor John Walcott and his team to unmask the truth.

“I didn’t know about these guys. They basically got it right and they were saying all the things I had been saying all these years,” Reiner said.

The only complicati­on during filming of “Shock and Awe” came when Alec Baldwin, who had been parodying Trump on Saturday Night Live, withdrew at the last minute after being cast to play Walcott.

“My wife, Michele, who’s one of the producers, said, ‘Well, why don’t you play the part?’ And I thought, ‘oh my God, I don’t know, I don’t like acting and directing, it’s kind of a split focus.’ And then I thought, ‘What the hell, I’m available and I’ll work cheap.’”

Reiner also had kind but cautionary words for Canadians after Trump publicly lambasted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “very dishonest and weak.”

“First of all, I want to apologize to Canada for our president. He doesn’t represent the vast majority of the people in this country. Unfortunat­ely, when you have a strangleho­ld on 40 per cent, that’s enough to keep you in power. Hitler never had more than 37 per cent,” Reiner said. “We’re in a bad place right now and I hope that this wave of authoritar­ianism that’s happening all over Western-style democracie­s doesn’t start infecting Canada. Don’t think authoritar­ianism is not going to try to invade your country. It’s on the rise all over.”

 ?? VERTICAL ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Rob Reiner directed the newspaper drama "Shock and Awe," in which he plays editor John Walcott.
VERTICAL ENTERTAINM­ENT Rob Reiner directed the newspaper drama "Shock and Awe," in which he plays editor John Walcott.

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