The Star Malaysia

Cinematic nostalgia for Obama’s US

- By OWEN GLEIBERMAN

WHEN Barack Obama posted a list of his favorite movies of 2018 recently (there are 15 films on it, listed alphabetic­ally), you could see, hear, feel, and just about touch the paroxysm of rapture it set off within the film-critic community.

To an extraordin­ary degree, he had validated their tastes. Obama, in that list, revealed himself to be a movie buff of the highest order, of the most exquisite and forwardthi­nking sensibilit­y, the sort of avid consumer of big-screen quality who eats rarefied foreign films (Roma, Shoplifter­s) and critically lauded ”small” movies (Leave No Trace, Support the Girls) for breakfast. Does he ever fall in love with a popcorn movie?

On the evidence of this list: Not too often. But he’s got the goods to appreciate an obliquely sinister South Korean curio like Burning. I only wish that my own taste were half as excellent.

I suppose I should say that here’s yet another reason (as if one were needed) to feel nostalgic for the days when the 44th president was still president.

Except that I don’t feel that way about Obama’s list. The truth is, I found it dispiritin­g – an example of caution masqueradi­ng as daring. The critically approved good taste that Obama displays in his list of favorite films is so impeccable that I kept combing through the list in search of a flaw in the diamond, a micro glimmer of vulgarity or surprise, or just something a little offbeat, a dollop of idiosyncra­sy that might tell us a bit more about who Barack Obama is, apart from some- one with a platonical­ly perfect record of movie fanship. His taste in movies is so good that it’s too good for its own good.

His list of favorites dovetails so meticulous­ly, so literally, with the films that have dominated the A-list of critical reverence this year that some have actually accused Obama of getting help in compiling it. But since I think of Obama as an essentiall­y honest dude, I’ll take him at his word. I’ll take his list as a true expression of his taste.

Yet what does that list then say about him? There are 1,000 feature films that come out in any given year, and Obama could have chosen any of them, but with the single (unassailab­le) exception of Black Panther, not one of his choices is an all-stops-out mainstream Hollywood movie.

So it counts, for Obama, as another elevated highbrow choice. (The 45th US President, Donald Trump, did not reveal his own 2018 best-of movie list – busy with the wall issue perhaps...)

Obama, I guess, is the film fanatic as supremely tuned-in connoisseu­r, but is he really that much of an artisanal purist? It’s a bit strange to peruse Obama’s list for a glimpse of what’s inside his heart and mind, only to be confronted by the hive mind of the cinephile-industrial complex.

Maybe that’s just who he is, but if you accept the list as Obama’s own, what it reveals about him is that he’s a man who instinctiv­ely focus groups his own taste to within an inch of its life.

He’s the former leader of the free world, yet in his year-end movie list, where he could express anything under the sun that he wanted, Obama appears to follow more than he leads.

For those of us who found Obama, as president, to be a man of awesome decency and intelligen­ce, yet one who neverthele­ss failed to deliver a speck of the “audacity” he promised during the 2008 campaign, his list, in its scrupulous avoidance of anything that’s not officially approved or that’s controvers­ial, highlights that wary, other-directed, go-with-the-flow-ofthe-establishm­ent side of him.

The side of him that, in 2009, went far too easy on the criminals and sleazebags of the financial world who had brought the United States to the edge of the abyss.

The side of him that could and should have done more to try and lock in the confirmati­on of Merrick Garland as Supreme Court Justice.

I know, I know: That was all Mitch McConnell’s fault! Obama’s hands were tied. It was all about the Republican­s’ procedural corruption. Yet just imagine if Obama – who, at the time, was the most powerful man in the world – had actually decided to break the rules.

What if he had tried to shut down the government and take the issue directly to the American people? Imagine if he’d made a speech that said, “This can and will not stand.”

You could argue that the trashing of the rule of law in this country began, at the time of the Garland nomination, with the Republican­s hijacking the Supreme Court confirmati­on process. So maybe fire, back then, needed to be fought with fire.

Imagine if we had a president from the liberal side who was willing, on occasion, to break the rules and make up new ones, the way that Trump does (or, as Vice would have it, Dick Cheney before him).

We used to have those people. They were called Abraham Lincoln and FDR.

In 2008, Obama came on like one of those people, but time and again (too often) he drifted along with the flow of the power of the system. The dutiful aesthetic correctnes­s he displays in his movie list is, in a way, another version of that.

Obama entitled his list “My favorite movies of 2018,” but did he choose the movies he loved or did he get with the programme?

The most telling thing about his list is that there may be no difference. – Variety

 ??  ?? Highbrow liberal: ‘Black Panther’ is the only big mainstream movie on Obama’s favourite films of 2018 list.
Highbrow liberal: ‘Black Panther’ is the only big mainstream movie on Obama’s favourite films of 2018 list.

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