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‘Bully. Coward. Victim.’ A personal look at Roy Cohn

- Mark Kennedy

The director of a new documentar­y about Roy Cohn is not exactly a neutral party. After all, Cohn played a key role in getting her grandparen­ts executed.

Ivy Meeropol is the granddaugh­ter of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were convicted of spying for the Soviet Union and executed in 1953 in large part due to Cohn’s influence. Objectivit­y is not Meeropol’s goal here but better understand­ing of who this slippery character is, and this film succeeds in that.

Her HBO film “Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn” doesn’t hide its loathing of Cohn, who later was at Sen. Joseph Mccarthy’s ear looking for Communists in the 1950s, defended the mafia in court and helped Donald Trump’s rise. Many of these touchstone moments may be familiar to anyone who watched Matt Tyrnauer’s 2019 documentar­y “Where’s My Roy Cohn?” This time, it’s more personal.

Meeropol interviews playwright Tony Kushner, director John Waters, gossip maven Cindy Adams, actor Nathan Lane, lawyer Alan Dershowitz, journalist­s, politician­s and historians, but gets more intimate than Tyrnauer could ever when she spends time talking about Cohn with her left-leaning family – “He was the personification of evil,” says a cousin.

Cohn is indeed a fascinatin­g figure, a self-hating gay man who targeted gays as security risks and defended Claus von Bulow of murder. He would later appear as a loathsome character in Kushner’s masterpiec­e “Angels in America.” (“You want to be nice or you want to be effective?” he asks)

We learn some quirky things about Cohn, like he didn’t pay his bills, enjoyed serving guests bowls of cocaine and loved summering in the gay mecca of Provinceto­wn, Massachuse­tts, despite – or perhaps because of – the risk of exposure. He seemed to have met his match in a former lover named Richard Dupont, whose anti-cohn stunts were hilariousl­y over-the-top. But Cohn got him sent to prison.

“To call him evil – it’s true. But it doesn’t explain 100 other things about

‘Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn’ Rated:

TV-MA for language and adult themes.

out of 4

Roy Cohn,” says author and journalist Peter Manso in the film. Meeropol does a good job of trying to explain those other things despite her family’s clear bias.

Cohn died in 1986 but there are reverberat­ions of his influence in our politics today, and showing that is one of the film’s strengths. A big chunk is devoted to a young Trump, whom Cohn befriended and helped connect with Manhattan elites. It was Cohn who taught Trump to always resist and never admit that you’re wrong. It was Cohn who introduced Trump to Roger Stone, convicted last year of lying to Congress.

But there are some missteps along the way, especially when the camera spends an inordinate amount of time as Manso randomly goes through Cohn’s old receipts, seemingly for the first time, and blurts out that there must to be money laundering going on.

Meeropol previously chronicled her grandparen­ts’ story in her 2004 documentar­y “Heir to an Execution,” and this new film often drifts away from the Cohn biography to dwell on her family’s heartbreak.

Michael Meeropol, her father, speaks with tenderness as old black-and-white footage plays of him and his brother visiting their parents behind bars. The filmmaker and her dad then visit the prison of Sing-sing, where he last saw them alive. “Memory is important,” he says.

The documentar­y calmly and with dignity documents Cohn’s fall: Disbarred and battling AIDS, he is abandoned by his fancy friends – including Trump and dies in 1986. Interestin­gly, Meeropol gives Cohn the final word. “I know what the truth is,” he says from one of his last interviews.

But, by this point, we of course don’t believe a word he says.

Star rating:

 ?? ROBERT KARP/AP ?? In this Dec. 14, 1978, file photo, Studio 54 owner Steve Rubell, foreground, appears with his attorney Roy Cohn, second left, as he talks to reporters outside the club in New York following a drug and tax evasion raid. Cohn is the subject of the HBO documentar­y “Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn.”
ROBERT KARP/AP In this Dec. 14, 1978, file photo, Studio 54 owner Steve Rubell, foreground, appears with his attorney Roy Cohn, second left, as he talks to reporters outside the club in New York following a drug and tax evasion raid. Cohn is the subject of the HBO documentar­y “Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn.”

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