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Hooray For Hollywood
By Lisa Fabrizio
January 22, 2009

My friend Ken, the innkeeper at my favorite bar is a big movie fan as am I, but while 99% of my favorites were made before 1950, he still forks over big bucks to sit in tiny theaters and have his ears blown out watching what passes for modern entertainment. For this reason, I am forced, year after year to watch annual ego-massaging, snore-fests like last week's Golden Globe Awards as the price for enjoying a few Sunday night drinks.

Although I paid little attention to the TV while discussing the real upcoming Hollywood fantasy production--the Obama Inauguration--I was prodded to watch the Best Picture segments. One of the nominees was Revolutionary Road, a dreary and depressing effort to depict life in 1950's America as well, dreary and depressing; a flick crammed with Hollywood's favorite ingredients: bored housewives, adultery, alcoholism, and abortion. Yawn.

But what really stirred up the barroom conversation was all the attention paid to Frost/Nixon, a film by Ron Howard, of whom an anonymous internet poster riotously said, "Here's a guy whose career peaked at the age of eight." What, I asked Kenny, could this movie--an admitted "fictionalization" of the story behind the interviews themselves which have been and still are available for public consumption --add to the sad saga of a man dragged through the liberal wringer for the past 30 years. His answer? "It's part of history."

Well, should we accept my bartender's erudite explanation and agree that the lives of American presidents should indeed be grist for the Hollywood movie mill? It seems that Tinseltown has already answered that question in the affirmative; at least when it comes to Republicans. A cursory search on movies about Nixon returns over a dozen feature-length films including 1999's Dick, a ditzy comedy and the only one worthy of the third-rate burglary which brought down our 37th president.

Obsession with Richard Nixon, even after three decades, is a pillar of liberal elitism. His head on their trophy wall is a symbol of their greatest triumph; one they have tried to repeat without success through the years, most recently with George W. Bush. In their frenzied minds, they have even connected the two men. An example from crazed film critic, Roger Ebert:

Strange, how a man once so reviled has gained stature in the memory. How we cheered when Richard M. Nixon resigned the presidency! How dramatic it was when David Frost cornered him on TV and presided over the humiliating confession that he had stonewalled for three years. And yet how much more intelligent, thoughtful and, well, presidential, he now seems, compared to the occupant of the office from 2001 to 2009. Nixon was thought to have been destroyed by Watergate and interred by the Frost interviews. But wouldn't you trade him in a second for Bush?

Obviously, Hollywood did not spare the sitting Republican president, making several insulting flicks and even an insipid TV show called That's My Bush! even while he was engaged in defending our nation from grave peril. Now, some might say that the most powerful man in the world is deserving of critical attention, that it is the American way to lampoon our leaders, and maybe they're right.

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