Los Angeles Times

‘Final Year’ of Obama

- — Gary Goldstein

The involving, deftly assembled documentar­y “The Final Year,” which takes a whirlwind look at the last 12 months of President Obama’s tenure, is likely to prove quite the wistful experience for the movie’s intended leftleanin­g audience — or Obama skeptics open to peering in the rearview mirror.

This you-are-there journey, directed by Greg Barker, was largely shot under the prevailing assumption that the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al race was a likely lock for Hilary Clinton. That is, until that fateful November night that upended expectatio­ns, as well as the trajectory of the last part of Barker’s film.

The election’s startling results give the movie more resonance and emotional heft than it might have otherwise. A brief closing interview with Obama provides some stirring — and haunting — grace notes.

Until that point, however, Barker focuses mainly on the work of then-Secretary of State John Kerry, U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power and Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser and speechwrit­er, as they and Obama hop the globe in a ticking-clock effort to secure America’s positions on such issues as the Iran nuclear deal, peace in Syria, climate change, terrorism and immigratio­n.

Although the film clearly supports the Obama administra­tion and its foreign policy decisions, Barker doesn’t shy away from mentions of several of the former president’s perceived missteps.

Obama’s landmark speech in Hiroshima, his unpreceden­ted trip to Laos, his final appearance at the U.N. General Assembly and a visit to Greece — 44’s final foreign stop as president — are memorably covered as well.

The documentar­y also takes us inside the West Wing, internatio­nal conference rooms, private jets and, perhaps most pivotally, a gathering of iconic women, including Gloria Steinem and Madeleine Albright, as they, along with Power, watch the presidenti­al election returns in creeping disbelief.

And could there be a more appropriat­e song to play over the movie’s end credits than “The Times They Are A-Changin”?

“The Final Year.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes. Playing: The Landmark, West L.A.; full review published Nov. 8, 2017.

 ?? Pete Souza White House ?? PRESIDENT Barack Obama greets U.S. troops after his speech in Afghanista­n.
Pete Souza White House PRESIDENT Barack Obama greets U.S. troops after his speech in Afghanista­n.

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