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Phat Head
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Warren Beatty is legendary
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for possessing both a politician's promiscuity and a politician's wariness of
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genuine commitment. People are lured into developing projects with him for
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years at a time until--unable to decide whether to go ahead or not--he stops
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returning their phone calls. When Beatty does commit, his insecurities present
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formidable obstacles. It's said that one director was driven nearly to homicide
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after being forced to spend six hours lighting each shot (and, allegedly, to
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employ a technician whose sole job it was to hold a cardboard triangle next to
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a light so that the star's jowls would be covered by a shadow).
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Professional wishy-washiness has had unhappy consequences for Beatty himself,
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most recently in Love Affair (1994), the best-forgotten remake of An
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Affair to Remember --a listless vanity production with the impact of
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something viewed through the wrong end of a telescope. Beatty's politics might
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be those of a hipster, but his aesthetics since Shampoo (1975) have been
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those of a fuddy-duddy.
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I recount Beatty's history in this gossipy way to suggest
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why his latest movie, Bulworth , has been praised as such a radical
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departure for its star-director and why, in some ways, it is. A screwball
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political satire about a senator (played by Beatty) who loses his senses and
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begins to babble the truth on the stump, the film has a kamikaze comic spirit
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that's spectacularly disarming, particularly coming from its hitherto
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overcautious auteur--not to mention a major studio owned by right-of-Attila
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Rupert Murdoch. Puffy features on Beatty in various (non-Murdoch) magazines and
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newspapers have suggested that Fox, which was contractually obligated to make
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and release Bulworth , has tried to bury the picture, thus ensuring its
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status as a cause célèbre among pundits who'd love to stick it to
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Rupert, even if that means enriching his company. ( Right on, Warren! Give it
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to the Man! ) And while Wag the Dog and Primary Colors have
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taken disrespect for American politicians to levels undreamed of since the
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nose-thumbing days of the counterculture, political satire is still a rare
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enough bird in this country for a sighting to be cause for joy.
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I don't
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want to rain too hard on Bulworth 's parade--only drizzle a little. The
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film is fun, but it's also thin, repetitive, and intoxicated with its own
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outrageousness, and it's as familiar in its leftist-paranoid way as an Oliver
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Stone picture. Beatty doesn't spend much time setting up the premise--or making
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it psychologically plausible--and the opening plays like choppy notes for what
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follows: Sen. Bulworth, a California Democrat up for re-election, is weary of
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the mealy-mouthed speeches and fund raising. Sleepless and depressed and in a
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loveless marriage, he takes out a contract on his own life.
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Being aware of his imminent assassination makes Bulworth
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politically reckless. Before an African-American congregation in South Central
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Los Angeles, he discards his feel-good paean to the new millennium and tells
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his stunned audience that he hasn't returned to their neighborhood since the
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riots because the photo op has passed and that no Democrat will ever pay
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attention to them because they don't give any money to campaigns. Charged up by
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the rhythms of the crowd, his newfound candor, and the sight of a dishy,
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dreadlocked young woman (Halle Berry), Bulworth embarks on a hallucinatory
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odyssey that includes a stop at Kentucky Fried Chicken; a fund-raiser at a
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mogul's mansion, at which he lectures the appalled "big Jews" on their greed
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and the lousiness of their movies; and a visit to the bowels of the inner city,
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where he placates gun-toting black juveniles by buying them ice cream and
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standing up to the white cops who stop to harass them. Along the way, he dons
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hip-hop garb and employs rabidly populist raps to say the sort of things that
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... well, you just don't say if you want people (and PACs) to give you
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money to run for office. This being a satire, Bulworth's campaign is
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reborn--and suddenly he's not so eager to be shot.
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The years of Clinton double talk have primed us all for
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Bulworth , but Beatty is peddling his own less flagrant brand of bull. He
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has used this template in the past. The actor is enamored with martyrdom--with
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the fantasy of reclaiming his potency, seducing the unseducible, and getting
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blown away at the height of his prowess by an intolerant society. Variations
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can be found in Bonnie and Clyde (1967), The Parallax View
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(1974), Reds (1981), and Bugsy (1991), but the real precursor to
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Bulworth is Heaven Can
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Wait (1978), in which the soul of a
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young buck enters the body of a square old white guy, who wins over skeptics
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and then is cruelly cut down. This time, the square old white guy becomes the
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White Negro and a champion for the homies, who stare at him in amazement and
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nod their heads as if to say: "Yes, this man is a brother. This man gets it."
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The fantasy comes within an inch of seeming pathetic, but Beatty (who co-wrote
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the script with Jeremy Pikser) is savvy enough to give Bulworth a coked-up
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campaign manager (the brilliant Oliver Platt) whose jittery attempts at black
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slang throw the senator's more soulful conversion into relief. Bulworth might
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be white, but at heart he's supposed to be a real nigger . The movie's
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satirical vision never extends to its hero.
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Beatty
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pounds us over and over with his one joke and with slapsticky cuts to
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Bulworth's would-be assassin, until the movie arrives at a bad, pretentiously
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mystical ending. What's striking, though, is how superbly he maintains the
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movie's comic momentum even when he runs out of ideas. The normally tentative
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filmmaker clearly draws strength from his character's go-for-broke mindset. His
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camera becomes increasingly energized, and Bulworth's gung-ho tastelessness
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takes on an exhilarating life of its own. "Everybody's gotta fuck everybody
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until we're all the same color!" he rants. Beatty might be making up for
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Reds , where, out of fear of alienating his Reagan-era audience, he kept
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John Reed's Communist ideology under wraps.
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Watching Bulworth , you can see what
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turns Beatty on about campaigning. You get a glimpse of the star who taught
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Gary Hart to talk politics out of one side of his mouth and pick up babes out
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of the other. (Beatty was to politicians what Keith Richards was to rock
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stars--those who tried to imitate him ended up OD'ing.) Beatty's glee in
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seducing us with language overrides the movie's shaky construction and
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embarrassing hero worship. If you didn't know better--and I hope you do!--you'd
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be tempted to give him your vote.
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