Youth in Revolt
January 15
January 22
Drool
The Girl on the Train
Amy Rice and Alicia Sams' By The People: The Election of Barack Obama will finally debut on HBO on Tuesday, 11.3 -- precisely 365 days after the '08 Presidential election came to an end. I reviewed the film in early August after catching a showing at the Sunshine Cinemas, and there wasn't any way to be kind or charitable. It's a political chick flick with no edge -- butter wouldn't melt in its mouth. And it's way too easy in its depiction of Hillary Clinton 's campaign.

I began by calling it "a fairly bloodless portrait of one of the most fascinating, breathtaking, sometimes ugly, occasionally transcendent, up-and-down racial-tinderbox elections in our nation's history. It's up-close and somewhat intimate and sorta kinda dull at times. Not novacaine dull but glide-along, yeah-yeah dull.
"You'd never know what a heart-pumping ride Obama's two-year campaign for the White House was by watching this nicely assembled but excessively mild-mannered film.
"Rice and Sams were given extraordinary close-up access to candidate Obama and his innermost circle (David Plouffe, David Axelrod, Robert Gibbs, etc.) as well as Michelle, Sasha and Malia. The co-directors caught some good stuff along the way (Obama tear-streaking when speaking about his recently-deceased grandmother, a ten year-old campaign worker patiently dealing with a contentious voter over the phone, etc.) but it almost seems as if Rice and Sams agreed to let Axelrod and Gibbs co-edit the film with an aim to de-balling and up-spinning the final version as much as possible.
"This seems especially apparent given the overly-diplomatic and toothless portrait of Hillary Clinton's campaign. Her current position as President Obama's Secretary of State obviously means it would have been very politically awkward for a documentary to bring up her frequently ugly, race-baiting campaign tactics and so -- I don't mean to sound over-cynical and pat-minded but how else am I to process this? -- Rice and Sams have given her a near-total pass.
"There's no mention of Hilary's incessantly playing rhetorical race cards, talking about how working white people support her, etc. There's no footage or even a mention of Bill Clinton, and therefore no mention of his post-South Carolina primary remark that Obama's victory in that state was somehow comparable to Jesse Jackson 's win there in the mid '80s. There's no mention of Hillary's cynical campaign speech about how Obama "will bring us together and the heavens will part" speech, which she delivered, as I recall, during the Ohio-and-Texas primary campaign. There's no mention of Hillary's made-up Bosnia story about dodging bullets when she visited that country in the mid '90s. There's no mention of Samantha Power's "Hillary is a monster" comment. There's no mention of Hillary's bizarre refusal to concede when she should have (i.e., after Obama had his electoral-vote triumph sewn up) and how she had to be stern-talked into doing so by Congressional and Senatorial colleagues.
"It's even more bizarre that the racial resistance factor among white voters -- surely the central hurdle of Obama's campaign -- is only faintly acknowledged. We're shown a clip of a couple of younger Bubbas stating that Obama's ancestry is a problem, but that's just about it in terms of Rice and Sams catching the backwater attitudes that were brought up by reporters and the political talk-show crowd nearly every damn day during the primaries and the general election,
"The Reverend Wright issue is raised (how could it not be?) along with Obama's historic Philadelphia speech about racial relations. But there's no mention of Michelle taking heat for saying that the positive response to her husband's campaign was cause for her feeling proud of the U.S for the first time in a long time. There's no mention of that idiotic terrorist fist bump flap. No YouTube clip of that West Virginia cracker lady on the back of that motorcycle expressing cultural shock at the sound of Obama's name. There's no mention whatsover of the fear of the Bradley Effect, a now-discounted concern that white voters might change their minds about voting for a black candidate in the privacy of the voting booth due to latent racism. And Obama's decision to finally cut all ties with Reverend Wright is completely ignored also.
"And there's very little mention of the general campaign against John McCain and Sarah Palin. It accounts for maybe ten minutes out of the film, which runs somewhere close to two hours. (I should have timed it but didn't.) No right-wing stirring of the racial pot, no mention of McCain's 'The One' ad (and no clip of David Gergen explaining that the racial coding of that ad was clear to anyone who grew up in the South), no expressions of bone-dumb ignorance ('He's...I think he's an Arab') and/or racial hatred at McCain and Palin rallies ('Kill him!').
"There's some good B-roll footage of Obama playing basketball with friends, but the best photo-op basketball moment of the entire campaign -- i.e., the moment when Obama made a near-perfect shot from outside the penalty circle in front of an audience of troops in Iraq -- is missing. It leads you to suspect/presume that Rice and Sams didn't cover last summer's Middle East/European tour, and to ask why.
"In sum, For The People emphasizes emotionality and intimacy at the expense of the fierce melodrama and primal intensity that were fundamental aspects of the story. I could be mean and call it a puff piece and....you know something? It's not being mean to say that because it more or less is that. I'm not saying that Rice and Sams were in fact emotionally entwined with the Obama campaign, but the doc makes it seem as if they were. And that's a no-no. You have to step back and disengage and be merciless, if necessary.
"There are several little things in the film that are pleasing or revealing in this or that minor way. But the fact is that most of the film is not focused on Obama himself as much as his campaign staff, and much of this footage feels like B roll. The narrative emphasis in the doc is akin to the kind of backstory you might pass along to your grandmother as you show her your family photo album and explain this and that. It's too kindly and considerate and smoothed over..
"It's been pointed out by a friend of Rice and Sams that 'the filmmakers made the film they wanted to make...it's called By The People. And they captured the emotion of the campaign.' On this last point I respectfully disagree."
Posted by Jeffrey Wells on October 30, 2009 at 8:38 AM
comment #1
Alan Cerny
says ...
I'm a fan of Obama, but the election was so compelling because of all the crazy shit that went on, not in spite of it. "When legend becomes fact, print the legend." I'd add to that "unless the facts are just flat out more interesting."
Posted by Alan Cerny
at October 30, 2009 9:43 AM
comment #2
buster keaton
says ...
I don't always agree with you, Jeff, but this time you hit the nail on its head -- this documentary is a yawn-inducing two hours of fluffernutter that might as well have been directed and edited by David Axlerod and Robert Gibbs.
This is NOT a compelling political documentary in the vein of The War Room. Indeed, it's more like The Bore Room.
What a disappointment. I'll bet that within the hundreds of hours of intimate, backstage footage that producer Ed Norton and his two directors Rice and Sams shot there must be several great, edgy documentaries just waiting to be released. Unfortunately, this one was made by Kool-Aid drinkers, not free-thinkers.
Last year's campaign was thrilling, full of conflict and intense drama. Watching this documentary was like listening to that British blowhard and bigtime Obama suckup Richard Wolffe on MSNBC -- it's predictable, bland, and lacks any objectivity whatsoever. I'm not an Obama basher (or booster, for that matter) but this is as weak and hagiographic as it gets. Too bad.
Posted by buster keaton
at October 30, 2009 10:13 AM
comment #3
Aris P
says ...
I can't wait for "By The People: The Election of (Fill in the blank)" three years from now. Where's MY nobel peace prize... What a joke this guy is.
Posted by Aris P
at October 30, 2009 10:18 AM
comment #4
Travis Crabtree
says ...
I can't believe someone hasn't climbed all over Jeffrey's frame for not doing a SPOILER ALERT before mentioning that Obama won.
Posted by Travis Crabtree
at October 30, 2009 10:35 AM
comment #5
Mighty Kornholio
says ...
this movie's way better
The Fall of the Republic: The Presidency of Barack H. Obama
http://tinyurl.com/yl8wc8z
Posted by Mighty Kornholio
at October 30, 2009 11:44 AM
comment #6
Colin
says ...
Everybody takes issue with DZ for his links but Kornholio here has been plugging that same fucking link for 2 weeks on almost every post.
If you're going to ban someone ban him.
Posted by Colin
at October 30, 2009 12:01 PM
comment #7
nightheat
says ...
I would be considered one of those young voters that was inspired to get involved in politics for the first time... a year later seeing the process up close, count me among the most jaded of the jaded.
Barack Obama... a total weakling phony. But maybe, the millions of naive sycophants out there that still believe will enjoy it.
Posted by nightheat
at October 30, 2009 1:13 PM
comment #8
M. Hulot
says ...
Kornholio,
Since you continue to posr to that paranoid, conspiracy-laden video, I feel compelled to respond.
You're an ignoramus, for sure. And probably a global-warming denying truther, birther, and all around cro-magnon-like, mouth-breathing, lowbrow teabagger, as well. And I bet those are your best qualities.
Surely, someone with a name cribbed from Beavis & Butthead must be one mature, rationally thinking adult.
Nightbeat,
You clearly no very little about politics to toss Obama under the bus after 10 months. He still has more than 75% remaining of this term. There's plenty of time left to prove all you knee-jerkers wrong.
Posted by M. Hulot
at October 30, 2009 1:37 PM
comment #9
Mighty Kornholio
says ...
lol
It's o.k. Hulot
just curl up into thefetal position and Al Gore and Obama will take care of the boogey man for you.
what an idiot! lmao
Posted by Mighty Kornholio
at October 30, 2009 9:26 PM
comment #10
M. Hulot
says ...
What's truly funny is that you post a video made by right wing conspiracy nutjobs and then have the balls to call me an idiot.
That's hysterical!
You're a child.
Posted by M. Hulot
at October 30, 2009 10:55 PM
comment #11
petunio
says ...
It's a crappy time to live, with right wing lunatics thinking Barack is the next Stalin and democratic comformists talking about how "historic" the whole thing is.
No one else thinks he's just an average president?, so far everything he's done is quite average... nothing too historical and sadly nothing too socialist.
Posted by petunio
at October 31, 2009 11:02 AM
comment #12
Colin
says ...
"What's truly funny is that you post a video made by right wing conspiracy nutjobs and then have the balls to call me an idiot." - Hulot
Well at least you admit your link is shite.
Posted by Colin
at November 1, 2009 1:01 PM
comment #13
Colin
says ...
That should say Kornholio, not Hulot, sorry.
Posted by Colin
at November 1, 2009 1:12 PM
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