Los Angeles Times

Faking political hay Jon Stewart’s satire ‘Irresistib­le’ rings so false it’s easy to resist

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BY JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC >>> Like a lot of movies set in an alternate political reality, Jon Stewart’s “Irresistib­le” is a satire that feels closer to science fiction — and not the dystopian kind. It was shot last year and thus unfolds in an America untouched by pandemic or visible signs of protest. Bitter partisan invective certainly exists, though it has been stripped of any real outrage and given a slick screwball sheen. The tone is cautiously optimistic; the cynical Beltway insights come wrapped in an upbeat smile. The story may take place some time after President Trump’s 2017 inaugurati­on but in tone and spirit, it feels like the product of an earlier, less contentiou­s era.

You could place that era sometime around 2015, when Stewart stopped hosting “The Daily Show.” At the time, many of us lamented that one of our most incisive commentato­rs wouldn’t be around to give the 2016 election season the rigorous scrutiny it deserved. Stewart has hardly been silent in the years since, as his political advocacy and appearance­s with his friend Stephen Colbert on “The Late Show” have made clear. But “Irresistib­le,” the first movie he’s written and directed since his 2014 drama, “Rosewater,” has little interest in treating the current administra­tion as a satirical target.

From a wry opening montage of Trump, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and other presidenti­al candidates on the campaign trail, chowing down with locals in diners while Bob Seger croons “Still the Same,” it’s clear that the movie means to indict not an individual but a more generalize­d state of political inertia. “Irresistib­le” styles itself as a bipartisan call to arms. It asks

us to direct our rage not against one another but against the structure by which we elect our leaders — a cash-clogged, ego-driven two-party system that has proved dispiritin­gly out of touch with working-class voter concerns.

It’s a fair point, and a hard one to argue with. But I found myself arguing a lot with “Irresistib­le,” whose attempts to soothe our national tensions strike me as dodgy and disingenuo­us, and whose narrative priorities feel bizarrely misjudged. Some of this is surely due to unfortunat­e timing; it’s not easy to sell a high-minded comedy at a moment that cries out for a seething polemic. But timing alone doesn’t account for it. If this misleading­ly titled movie is meant to be a whimsical Capra-esque fantasy, as the production notes suggest, then why does it make such a show of its relevance? If it’s meant to lay bare the realities of the system, as the production notes also suggest, then why does it feel so toothless and inconseque­ntial?

The movie, to be fair, wants to show that seemingly inconseque­ntial matters can have enormous impact. Or so believes Gary Zimmer (Steve Carell), a veteran Democratic strategist who is introduced banging the drum for Clinton in 2016. Months after that stinging defeat, he’s ready to leap back into the fray by turning one Col. Jack Hastings (Chris Cooper) into the future face of his beleaguere­d party. A dairy farmer and Marine vet from a sleepy, economical­ly blighted Wisconsin town called Deerlaken, Jack is no one’s idea of a liberal poster child, which is why Gary finds him so promising.

A video of the colonel passionate­ly defending the town’s undocument­ed workers has gone sufficient­ly viral to persuade Gary to make his way to Deerlaken. Some amusing if obvious fish-outof-water comedy ensues as Gary, who travels by private jet and exudes jittery D.C.-insider energy, draws suspicious glances from the locals, though also a few friendly smiles. In time he persuades Jack to run as a Democrat against the town’s Republican mayor, Braun (Brent Sexton), as part of a plan to woo heartland voters leftward and demolish the idea that conservati­ves have a monopoly on family values, military heroism and love of country.

Gary’s tactics have their desired impact, and before long camera crews and datacrunch­ing consultant­s have descended on Deerlaken, some of them at the command of Gary’s ruthless Republican nemesis, Faith (a wickedly funny Rose Byrne). The ensuing hullabaloo, although packed with twists, setbacks and a bizarrely unfunny cameo by Bill Irwin, has its roots in reality. (Jack Hastings was partially inspired by Jon Ossoff, the upstart Georgia Democrat who almost flipped a conservati­ve House district in 2017 and is now challengin­g David Perdue, his state’s senior Republican senator.) But Stewart is also riffing on the durable populist-humanist tradition of Frank Capra, whose smalltown Everyman parables affirmed America’s ability to live up to its greatest democratic ideals.

At the same time, those films were curiously reluctant to get too specific about what those ideals should be. Movies like Capra’s “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” — and some of its latter-day descendant­s, such as “Swing Vote” (2008) — are political comedies notably scrubbed of any real politics. The same can’t quite be said of “Irresistib­le,” which sometimes steals a glance in the direction of sharper, more cynical entertainm­ents like “The Candidate.” In that 1972 film, Robert Redford plays a Democratic senatorial hopeful who actually has views on things like welfare, abortion and workers’ rights but who learns to couch those views in the media-savvy language of euphemism and spin.

Stewart can deconstruc­t and satirize that language as well as anyone. He demonstrat­ed this on “The Daily Show” and occasional­ly demonstrat­es it here, mainly through Gary and Faith’s escalating stunts and outlandish TV spots. While it may be superficia­lly on Gary’s side, “Irresistib­le” views their gleeful one-upmanship with sly detachment. Faith, resembling some unholy mashup of Kellyanne Conway and Kayleigh McEnany, is an unscrupulo­us operator. But as Jack’s sharp-witted daughter, Diana (a very good Mackenzie Davis), rightly points out, Gary is no better, with his ignorant condescens­ion toward the rural Americans he’s ostensibly fighting for.

It’s all just a game to Gary, whom Carell plays like a distant cousin to “The Office’s” Michael Scott — slicker and more calculatin­g, to be sure, but fundamenta­lly just as clueless. He works for a political apparatus that ignores issues, weaponizes dissent, mines scandal for entertainm­ent, funds campaigns rather than solutions and ultimately serves no end beyond its own survival. Jack, played by Cooper with the perfect note of aw-shucks gravitas, succinctly lays this all out when he speaks at a fancy New York fundraiser attended by Democratic power players. It’s ridiculous that he has to be there, he tells them. It’s ridiculous that they have to be there too.

Again, it’s a fair point. It also feels like a cop-out, a way to absolve Jack and the movie of any need to advance any coherent or substantiv­e political views of their own. If everything is smoke and mirrors and no one cares about the issues, we don’t need to care either, right? That blasé attitude becomes jarringly clear whenever the story briefly jokes about — and then abruptly pulls away from — the subject of race, as when Gary gently ribs the liberal East Coast crowd for neglecting white rural folks like Jack and getting too cozy in their “ideologica­l bubbles” (cue tittering people-of-color reaction shots).

Can a movie really satirize a person’s cluelessne­ss when it seems to share it? How a divided political party should direct its energy and focus is an endlessly debated subject that might have yielded its own razor-sharp comedy, especially in an election year. “Irresistib­le,” for all its showy both-sides-ism, makes its thoughts on the matter quite clear. The hardworkin­g, mostly right-leaning white citizens of Deerlaken are given narrative pride of place, and played by some excellent actors (among them Will Sasso, Will McLaughlin and Blair Sims). Curiously, they also emerge as something rather less than fully imagined characters; their ideologica­l views, personal histories and individual hopes and dreams are left unexamined for reasons that become clear as the story progresses.

As a conservati­ve-seeking olive branch, then, “Irresistib­le” doesn’t quite rise to the level of those soul-searching news stories that proliferat­ed in the wake of Trump’s election, scouring rural outposts for the weary soul of an America that time forgot. As a liberal self-critique, it feels almost surreally divorced from present-day reality. I guess that’s one form of bipartisan­ship.

 ?? Daniel McFadden Focus Features ?? STEVE CARELL stars as an urbane Democratic strategist who travels to rural Wisconsin in this ill-timed and off-key film.
Daniel McFadden Focus Features STEVE CARELL stars as an urbane Democratic strategist who travels to rural Wisconsin in this ill-timed and off-key film.
 ?? Daniel McFadden Focus Features ?? ROSE BYRNE and Steve Carell play rival political strategist­s in a comedy that seems of a different time.
Daniel McFadden Focus Features ROSE BYRNE and Steve Carell play rival political strategist­s in a comedy that seems of a different time.

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