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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Tue Sep 15, 2015, 02:36 AM Sep 2015

Sandra Bullock fixes Bolivian election in new drama

Sandra Bullock fixes Bolivian election in new drama

The fictionalised account of the election is based on a 2005 documentary of the same name about how US Democratic Party strategist James Carville helped Evo Morales' opponent Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada come from behind to beat the frontrunner in the campaign.

POSTED: 13 Sep 2015 10:24

TORONTO, Canada: Sandra Bullock, as an American political strategist, plots the defeat of Evo Morales in Bolivia's 2002 presidential ballot in "Our Brand is Crisis", which premiered at the Toronto film festival on Saturday (Sep 12).

The fictionalised account of the election is based on a 2005 documentary of the same name about how US Democratic Party strategist James Carville helped Morales' opponent Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada come from behind to beat the frontrunner in the campaign.

In real life, Morales picked himself up and returned a few years later to become Bolivia's first indigenous president, for three terms.

. . .

On the surface, "Our Brand is Crisis" is a sharp critique of American no holds barred electoral campaigns and candidates who manipulate the truth in order to win. More broadly it strikes at all deceitful marketing.

More:
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/entertainment/sandra-bullock-fixes/2123252.html

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Sandra Bullock fixes Bolivian election in new drama (Original Post) Judi Lynn Sep 2015 OP
‘Our Brand Is Crisis’ Slings Mud, Gets Muddied Judi Lynn Sep 2015 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
1. ‘Our Brand Is Crisis’ Slings Mud, Gets Muddied
Tue Sep 15, 2015, 02:55 AM
Sep 2015

TIFF 2015 Review | ‘Our Brand Is Crisis’ Slings Mud, Gets Muddied

Sandra Bullock is a marketing mastermind in David Gordon Green's problematic film about American spin-doctors in Bolivia.

Sep 12th, 2015


Wouldn’t it be great if people stopped doing bad things, and if it were always entirely clear what the right thing and what the wrong thing to do are? Those are the juvenile fantasies at play in the crudely idealistic Our Brand is Crisis, a character study of a hyper-competitive political strategist named Calamity Jane (Sandra Bullock) and a dramatized exposé of the international damage Jane’s real-life counterparts cause by winning elections for their politico clients.

“Suggested” by Rachel Boynton’s 2005 documentary of the same name, about the maneuvering of a Bolivian presidential election toward the one-percenters’ candidate, David Gordon Green’s boisterous but hollow election drama offers an ultra-cynical take on political campaigns as a series of mass manipulations. “If voting changed anything, they’d make it illegal,” declares Jane. The film is certainly convincing in its portrait of each election as just another round in years-long rivalries between strategists with memories like elephants and claws like grizzly bears. But there’s nearly no stakes in watching two skilled but reprehensible fighters dragging each other down further into the mud.

After losing her last four elections, Jane is recruited out of unofficial retirement by a pair of political tacticians (Ann Dowd and Anthony Mackie) working for Castillo (Joaquim de Almeida), Bolivia’s candidate of choice for the wealthy, light-skinned elite. (“The gringo sticking it to the Indians,” sums up Jane.) An unpopular former president who unironically uses Nixon’s two-finger wave, Castillo pollsfar behind charismatic indigenous reformer Rivera (Louis Arcella), who’s created a man-of-the-people platform with the help of his own American strategist, Pat Candy (a bald Billy Bob Thornton meant to evoke James Carville). Convinced her guy is a born loser (despite his earlier presidential victory), Jane is happy to pratfall and vomit through her altitude sickness in South America until Pat rekindles their long-running enmity.

The haphazardly structured plot finds Jane and her colleagues (which include Scoot McNairy and Zoe Kazan for some reason) squaring off against Candy. Other than a cliff-side bus race in which Calamity Jane earns her nickname through advice like “Don’t be safe!,” there’s little sustaining the action. Every creep up in the polls for Castillo -- who embraces a message of crisis and catastrophe, hence the title -- is another step toward actual disaster for the Bolivian people, which makes Jane a nearly impossible figure to cheer for -- no matter how loud the rousing music accompanying her scenes.

More:
http://www.craveonline.com/culture/900459-tiff-2015-review-brand-crisis-slings-mud-gets-muddied#pHgmRPdQFWzpYwAo.99

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