Benedict makes a drama out of a crisis
REXIT. The word may have been mentioned once or twice over the last couple of years. And now finally a drama to tell the tale, in all its controversial glory.
Benedict Cumberbatch stars as Dominic Cummings, the real life leading strategist who ran the Vote Leave campaign.
You may be distracted at first by Benedict’s makeover, complete with receding hairline and comb-over, but once you get past that, this is a funny and
compelling tale about how the Brexit vote was won. Benedict as Dominic is witty, eccentric and extremely clever. As he scrawls thoughts and notes on walls and shocks politicians with his brutal honesty, it is a bit like watching Benedict as Sherlock. A balding Sherlock.
Dominic talks to camera, too, giving viewers the inside scoop on what he’s really thinking. “‘Everyone knows who won. But not everyone knows how,” he teases at the start.
As we’re introduced to various players and politicians, they are given a handy “Leave” or “Remain” label on screen, or in the case of Nigel Farage (played by Paul Ryan): “Very Leave”.
Beginning in Autumn 2015, just months before the vote, we also see Rory Kinnear as Craig Oliver, Dominic’s Remain counterpart, while Richard Goulding is transformed into a blustering Boris Johson.
From award-winning writer James Graham and based on real first-hand accounts from both camps, this is an amusing behind-the-scenes exploration of one of the most controversial referendums in modern British history.
Or as Dominic puts it: “This referendum is a really dumb idea. Referendums are the quite literally the worst way to decide anything.”