It was announced last Friday that Warner Bros. will release David Gordon Green, George Clooney and Grant Heslov‘s Our Brand Is Crisis, a political dramedy with Sandra Bullock, Scoot McNairy and Billy Bob Thornton, on 10.30. To me this indicates a possible debut at one of the early September film festivals (Venice, Telluride, Toronto) as a movie with this kind of dry political material (pic is about American political consultants helping out a presidential candidate during a Bolivian election) is probably too hip for Joe Popcorn and needs aheadofthecurve journo buzz to raise awareness.


Sandra Bullock as “Calamity” Jane Bodine in David Gordon Green’s Our Brand Is Crisis.

On 7.14 I listed Our Brand Is Crisis as one of my Telluride wishies. If it plays Telluride Clooney, Bullock, Heslov, Green and Thornton could attend. One would presume this, I mean.

On 6.21 I reported that Crisis was about to be research-screened on Tuesday, 6.23, at the Arclight Sherman Oaks. It was previously screened for a test audience in Pasadena’s Old Town on Monday, 4.27.

The Warner Bros./Participant film, produced by Clooney and Heslov, is an adaptation of Rachel Boynton’s 2005 documentary of the same name. The doc focused on the experience of Greenberg Carville Shrum (GCS) in the 2002 Bolivian presidential election. Green began shooting in New Orleans on 9.29.14 and presumably wrapped before year’s end.

A little over eight years ago, or on 4.24.07, I wrote the following after hearing that Clooney wanted to adapt Boynton’s doc into a feature comedy: “The people who loved Wild Hogs will stay away in droves, but if it’s done right Clooney’s adaptation could be a great metaphor piece about Americans trying to export its own culture and values — i.e., American political values by way of spin, focus groups, compassionate lying and image-massaging — into other cultures and making things much worse in the process.

Our Brand Is Crisis is about a political consulting firm called Greenberg Carville Shrum (CGS) being hired to help the 2002 presidential campaign of Bolivian presidential candidate Gonzalo ‘Goni’ Sanchez de Lozada of the MNR Party. He was a cigar-smoking rich guy with his hand out, but he was at least smart enough to use the (very expensive) services of CCS. Goni paid the fee and the gang flew down to Bolivia (among them consultant Tad Devine, Jeremy Rosner and James Carville) to do what they could.

“Goni was elected, but then the country’s economy worsened and the people took to the streets and he was finally forced to resign.

“Boynton’s doc is about days of GCS Bolivian brainstorming sessions, focus groups, carefully staged TV appearances and whatnot. Some guy on an Amazon response forum called it The War Room, Part II: The Bolivian Years.”