| W. | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Oliver Stone |
| Written by | Stanley Weiser |
| Produced by |
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| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Phedon Papamichael Jr. |
| Edited by |
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| Music by | Paul Cantelon |
Production companies |
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| Distributed by | Lionsgate |
Release dates |
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Running time | 129 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $25.1 million[1] |
| Box office | $29.5 million[1] |
W. is a 2008 Americanbiographicalcomedy-drama film based on the life ofGeorge W. Bush. Directed byOliver Stone and written byStanley Weiser, it starsJosh Brolin as Bush. The supporting cast includesElizabeth Banks,James Cromwell,Ellen Burstyn,Thandiwe Newton,Jeffrey Wright,Scott Glenn, andRichard Dreyfuss. Filming began on May 12, 2008, inLouisiana, and the film was released on October 17, 2008 byLionsgate.[2]
In 1966,George W. Bush endures an initiation by his fellowYale University students as aDelta Kappa Epsilon pledge. During thehazing, Bush successfully recalls the names and nicknames of many of the fraternity members, and states thathis family's political legacy is one in which he has no interest. After Bush is jailed inNew Jersey for rowdiness following a football game, his father,George H. W. Bush states that he will help him, but for the last time. Following his graduation from Yale, Bush takes a job at anoil patch back in Texas, but he quits after a few weeks.
In 1971, "Junior" reveals his real aspirations in a father-son talk: working in professional baseball. Bush is accepted intoHarvard Business School with the help of his father. After a night of heavy drinking, Bush crashes his car intohis family estate and challenges his father to a fistfight. His younger brother,Jeb, stops the fight.
In 1977, Bush announces he will run forCongress to representTexas's 19th district. At a barbecue, Bush meets his future wife,Laura Lane Welch. During a debate, Bush is criticized by hisDemocratic opponent,Kent Hance, who says that Bush is not a real Texan and has spent campaign contributions to throw an alcohol-fueled party for underageTexas Tech University students. Bush fares poorly in the debate and loses the election, but nevertheless receives the highest number of votes for aRepublican candidate in the state's history.
In 1986, Bush becomes aborn-again Christian, gives up alcohol, and mends his relationship with his father. The elder Bush invites him to assist with what becomes his1988 presidential campaign, although Bush himself suspects that he only was asked because Jeb was busy. Bush's political advisor,Karl Rove, tells him that he has the potential to make a name for himself, but that he has not yet done anything with his life. Bush becomes a front office executive of theTexas Rangers baseball team, while his father oversees the victory of theGulf War. Although Allied forces liberateKuwait within 100 hours of their ground invasion, the elder Bush decides not to invadeIraq to deposeSaddam Hussein. After his father loses the1992 presidential election toBill Clinton, Bush blames the loss on his decision not to depose Saddam.
In1994, Bush runs forgovernor of Texas. Despite his parents' objection to him entering the race, he secures a victory in the election, becoming the 46th governor of Texas on January 17, 1995. In2000, he makes asuccessful bid to become president. Following theSeptember 11 attacks in 2001, Bush labelsIran, Iraq, andNorth Korea as the "axis of evil". In 2002, Bush searches for evidence that Saddam was creatingnuclear weapons, and has the army prepared. All of Bush'sWhite House staff supports him except Secretary of StateColin Powell, who states that invading Iraq woulddestabilize the country. Powell is generally overruled byVice PresidentDick Cheney andSecretary of DefenseDonald Rumsfeld, who insist that the war would secure the United States' status as sole global superpower while spreading democracy throughout the Middle East.
In March 2003, theU.S. invades Iraq. The war appears to be a success, and Bush soon gives his "Mission Accomplished" speech on an aircraft carrier. When it becomes clear that there are noweapons of mass destruction within Iraq, Bush learns that the responsibility for finding them had been relegated far down the chain of command. Bush discovers that Saddam gambled his regime and his life on the assumption that Bush was bluffing. Bush is asked in a White House press conference what mistakes he made as President, a question that leaves him flustered and speechless. That night, Bush has a nightmare in which his father accuses him of ruining his family's legacy, which the elder Bush claims was intended for Jeb. Bush dreams of himself playing center field at a baseball game. Bush attempts to catch apop fly, but it disappears.
I want a fair, true portrait of the man. How did Bush go from an alcoholic bum to the most powerful figure in the world? It's like Frank Capra territory on one hand, but I'll also cover the demons in his private life, his bouts with his dad and his conversion to Christianity, which explains a lot of where he is coming from. It includes his belief that God personally chose him to be President of the United States, and his coming into his own with the stunning, preemptive attack on Iraq. It will contain surprises for Bush supporters and his detractors.
W. wasOliver Stone's third film in a trilogy he made about the presidency, set in the time from the 1960s to today: the set began withJFK and continued withNixon. Originally, he was attached to directPinkville, a film about theArmy's investigation of theMy Lai Massacre, but development was canceled due to the2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike and actorBruce Willis pulling out of the film three weeks before shooting was set to start.[4] As a result,United Artists shut the production down. Stone moved on to direct a film about the life of George W. Bush, shopping a script that had been written before the strike byStanley Weiser, who had co-writtenWall Street with Stone. Weiser and Stone read 17 books as part of their research for the script,[9] and worked on the project for a year before venturing to filmPinkville.[8]
Stone has admitted that he and Weiser had to speculate on some dialogue: "You take all the facts and take the spirit of the scene and make it accurate to what you think happened".[4]W. was financed independently for Stone, with Hong Kong, German, and Australian funds: he tried to approach American studios for money, but got turned down.[10]Lions Gate Entertainment distributed the film.[4] Although Stone has criticized Bush for the2003 invasion of Iraq, the director said that he was not looking to make an "anti-Bushpolemic". Stone compared his goal of the film to that ofThe Queen, wanting to trace "seminal events in Bush's life." According to the director, "It's a behind-the-scenes approach, similar toNixon, to give a sense of what it's like to be in his skin. But ifNixon was asymphony, this is more like achamber piece, and not as dark in tone."[8] He described the structure ofW. as a three-act film starting with Bush as a young man "with a missed life", followed by his transformation and "an assertion of will which was amazingly powerful" as he came out from his father's shadow, and finally his invasion of Iraq.[11]
The film, originally titledBush,[8] was re-titledW. to draw distinction between him and his father.[12] Filming began on May 12, 2008, inShreveport, Louisiana,[13] and completed filming on July 11, 2008.[14] On May 13, 2008, theNew York Post published excerpts from an early draft of the script. The column, written byCindy Adams, stated "Pro-Bushies will hate it, antis will love it."[15] The film was released on October 17, 2008, timed just before that year'spresidential election.[2]W.'s producers reportedly ran television spots for the film oppositeRepublican Partypresidential nomineeJohn McCain's ads in the fall of 2008.[4]
OnRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 58% based on 222 reviews, with an average rating of 6.01/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A surprisingly sympathetic portrayal of the 43rd American president,W. is fascinating in spots, but merely rudimentary as a whole."[16] AtMetacritic, the film has an average weighted score of 56 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[17]
In his review,Roger Ebert wrote that it was "fascinating" and praised all the actors, noting that Richard Dreyfuss was "not so much a double as an embodiment" of Dick Cheney.[18] In contrast, Ann Hornaday ofThe Washington Post called the film "a rushed, wildly uneven, tonally jumbled caricature."[19]Film criticJames Berardinelli negatively compared the film withSaturday Night Live skits, saying of the actors that "None of them are as dead-on asTina Fey asSarah Palin."[20]
The Bush administration never officially commented on the film. FormerFlorida GovernorJeb Bush, who is portrayed in the film, called thesibling rivalry portrayed in the film "high-grade, unadulterated hooey" and said that Stone's exploration of the family dynamic could have benefited from actual conversations with theBush family.[21]Slate magazine'sTimothy Noah, however, noted that "most [of] the film's more ludicrous details" are actually directly taken from non-fiction sources, and argued that the film was too kind to Bush in omitting certain reported events, including an allegation that Bush mocked murdererKarla Faye Tucker, a woman executed during his tenure as governor of Texas.[22] In a March 2010 "Screen Test" interview withThe New York Times' Lynne Hirschberg, Josh Brolin claims Bush did in fact watch the film. Brolin said Oliver Stone met withBill Clinton in China and Clinton told Stone he'd lent his copy ofW. to Bush. Reportedly, Bush himself "liked it very much" and "thought there were sad moments."[23]
The film appeared on some critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2008. Joe Neumaier of theNew York Daily News named it the eighth best film of 2008,[24] and Roger Ebert of theChicago Sun-Times named it on his top 20 list (he did not assign rankings).[24]
The film opened No. 4 behindThe Secret Life of Bees,Beverly Hills Chihuahua, andMax Payne, respectively, with $10,505,668 from 2,030 theaters, with a $5,175 average.[25] The film had a budget of $25.1 million and grossed $25.5 million in North America, and $3.4 million internationally.[1]