The Denver Post

Hollywood acknowledg­es conservati­ves

- By Sonny Bunch

As someone who spends a fair amount of time reading conservati­ve media and a fair amount of time reading about film, I was struck by an odd coincidenc­e this month.

On Jan. 6, the Weekly Standard and National Review Online published reviews of the new Michael Bay movie about the terrorist attack on America’s diplomatic compounds in Benghazi, “13 Hours.” Around this time, nationally syndicated radio host Hugh Hewitt mentioned that he had seen it; a few days later, he wrote about it for the Washington Examiner.

Noting the synchronic­ity (as well as the fact that these conservati­ve outlets were given screening opportunit­ies and review embargoes well ahead of the mainstream press) and mentally filing it away, I thought no more of it. Until a couple of days later, that is, when an advertisem­ent for the film ran during the NFL playoffs.

It didn’t jump out at me at first — TV spots for “13 Hours” are more or less ubiquitous right now — until the pull quotes started coming up. “A cinematic masterpiec­e” raved ... Weekly Standard senior writer and Fox News contributo­r Steve Hayes? Praise from Hugh Hewitt was also quoted, as were kind words from Fox News’ Megyn Kelly. Most movies have these kind of blurbs, of course, but they’re sourced to movie critics, not conservati­ve pundits.

Needless to say, this was rather unusual. But it is indicative of the lengths that Paramount is going to in order to reach conservati­ve audiences who might be interested in Bay’s new film.

I talked to four people who attended three separate early screenings of “13 Hours.” All of them are involved in the conservati­ve media (and all asked to talk on background so as not to alienate those who invited them to the screenings), and all told more or less the same story: The audiences were very small and almost uniformly right-leaning or employed in the conservati­ve media. Few were regular writers about film.

Two of the attendees also noted that the studio was tapping into the evangelica­l pipeline that has helped make religious features such as “Heaven is for Real,” “War Room” and “God’s Not Dead” hits at the box office.

The ability to turn out conservati­ve filmgoers is one of the reasons that January and February have become go-to months for medium-budget, patriotism-heavy action flicks. Last year, “American Sniper” rode a best-selling memoir and the direction of one of Hollywood’s few outspoken Republican­s to a shockingly big $89 million opening weekend and a $350 million domestic haul.

“Act of Valor” — a 2012 movie marketed as starring active-duty Navy SEALs — also surprised, grossing twice its budget in its opening weekend and pulling in $70 million domestical­ly in total. Peter Berg’s 2013 movie “Lone Survivor” might be the clearest comparison to “13 Hours”; that film grossed $37 million in its first weekend in wide release and $125 million total, domestical­ly.

It makes sense that the studio would want to reach out to this audience: “13 Hours,” which I saw earlier this week at a more traditiona­l press screening, is the sort of movie that should appeal to conservati­ves. A tale of heroism and sacrifice centered on a lingering, controvers­ial terrorist attack that conservati­ves feel President Barack Obama and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton have ducked responsibi­lity for, Bay’s new film taps into some of the most primal feelings self-identified conservati­ves hold — and that liberals generally disdain.

As Jonathan Haidt has noted in his Moral Foundation­s Theory, Republican­s consider “Loyalty/Betrayal” — which “underlies virtues of patriotism and self-sacrifice for the group” — to be a very important value. Democrats, not so much. This goes a long way to explaining why Benghazi remains a salient issue for Republican­s while Democrats have long ago dismissed it: Conservati­ves can’t stomach the idea of brave Americans being left to fight and die because weak-kneed or oblivious bureaucrat­s refused to send in air support.

And it helps explain why the film — which has been constructe­d to place great emphasis on the perceived lack of loyalty from the American government for our men on the ground and the betrayal of Libyan forces in Benghazi — is being marketed so aggressive­ly to this cohort.

After all, this is a film that prominentl­y features a shot of a terrorist machine-gunning a still-fluttering American flag to tatters as his cohort ransacks an ambassador’s residence. A dollar says your average liberal — not to mention your average film critic — is more likely to snicker at an image that over-the-top than be moved by it.

Hollywood can do business as usual. But “13 Hours” suggests the industry is responding to the conservati­ve argument that there’s an audience that has long felt neglected and is ready to pay for tickets when it sees its values reflected on screen.

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 ?? Provided by Paramount Pictures ?? Paramount Pictures prescreene­d “13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi,” starring John Krasinski, to conservati­ve outlets to get movie reviews from pundits.
Provided by Paramount Pictures Paramount Pictures prescreene­d “13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi,” starring John Krasinski, to conservati­ve outlets to get movie reviews from pundits.

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