Montreal Gazette

Hollywood’s fascinatio­n with Washington eternal

New crop of biopics focus on political leaders in the U.S. and around world

- LAUREN LA ROSE The Canadian Press

As coverage of the tumultuous U.S. election campaign blankets the airwaves and social media, the film world has kept pace with several new biopics turning their lenses on the current and past U.S. presidents.

A dramatized account of Barack Obama’s first date with wife, Michelle, is the centrepiec­e of Southside With You, while the Netflixbou­nd Barry explores the current commander-in-chief’s life in 1981 New York while attending Columbia University.

Jackie follows Jacqueline Kennedy in the aftermath of John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, while LBJ chronicles the ascension of Lyndon B. Johnson to commanderi­n-chief after JFK’s death.

As the bitter battle between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump can attest, arguably no world leader is as closely scrutinize­d as the U.S. president — or those seeking election to the country’s highest office. Yet, despite having their every move documented and dissected by the Washington press corps and other observers, these omnipresen­t figures remain an endless source of fascinatio­n for filmmakers.

“That job has an enormous impact on what happens in the world,” said LBJ director Rob Reiner speaking to the press at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in September.

“It’s not the biopic itself that’s interestin­g, because you’re not making a biopic about Millard Fillmore or Calvin Coolidge. You’re making biopics about FDR and (Abraham), Lincoln and JFK, who had dramatic things happening to them when they were president,” he added. “There’s no reason to make a biopic about a particular president unless there’s something else you want to add to the conversati­on about the American political scene or government.”

British film writer and lecturer Ellen Cheshire said America’s history is one the country likes to tell through film, and political stories are no exception.

“You can see how America is trying address its relationsh­ip with its own country through the western; so I would imagine that the political films are doing the same sort of function of addressing and assessing its own history and place within the wider internatio­nal scene,” said Cheshire, the author of Biopics: A Life in Pictures (Wallflower Press, 2014).

Ezra Winton, assistant professor of film studies at Montreal’s Concordia University, said political biopics also benefit from the powerful engine of studios driving those production­s to audiences.

“They’re popular because of the marketing, because of the genre of fiction, and that form of storytelli­ng that is the main form of consumptio­n,” said Winton. “But they allow for a more personal look at these public figures so that people feel that they get to know these larger-than-life figures more intimately because of the biopic.

“What can be problemati­c about that is that people might walk away feeling like they really got to know Margaret Thatcher from The Iron Lady, but really, that film is a super narrow depiction of her, and a narrow interpreta­tion of who she was as a person,” he added. “I think they are popular for those reasons, but we also should keep in mind a critical stance when we watch them.”

Another concern about mainstream Hollywood biopics is that they reinforce a narrow view of the political spectrum, noted Winton.

“We are raised in a society that tells us there’s pretty much a twoparty system: you’re liberal or you’re conservati­ve, you’re Democratic or you’re Republican,” said Winton, director of programmin­g at Cinema Politica, a global network of campus and communityb­ased screening sites showing political documentar­ies.

“The biopics really celebrate the political figures from that system. They’re a form of public history that, I feel, reinforces public knowledge in a way,” he added. “Rarely are they introducin­g or (about), relatively unknown figures, but they’re making films that will always make money because everybody already knows who Barack Obama is or who Margaret Thatcher was.”

Winton said he would like to see more diversific­ation within the genre, and films about other notable political figures and activists. Among his standouts is Raoul Peck’s 2000 film Lumumba, about Patrice Lumumba, the first democratic­ally elected leader of what is now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo, who was toppled from power and assassinat­ed.

For Cheshire, among the most powerful political biopics is The Motorcycle Diaries, which dramatizes the road trip of two reallife Argentinia­n friends, one of whom eventually became known as Cuban revolution­ary leader Che Guevera.

The biopics really celebrate the political figures from that system. They’re a form of public history.

 ?? SAM EMERSON/TIFF/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Against the backdrop of one of the most tumultuous U.S. election campaigns in recent memory, 2016 has seen a steady stream of biopics, such as LBJ starring Woody Harrelson, centre, offering a window into the world of the current and former American...
SAM EMERSON/TIFF/THE CANADIAN PRESS Against the backdrop of one of the most tumultuous U.S. election campaigns in recent memory, 2016 has seen a steady stream of biopics, such as LBJ starring Woody Harrelson, centre, offering a window into the world of the current and former American...

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