Wag The Dog review

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After the allegations that Bill Clinton showed his biological weapon to White House employee Monica Lewinsky, Barry Levinson's Wag The Dog has received much more Stateside publicity than it probably deserves. The film's war-covers-up-sex-scandal storyline, along with Hoffman's practical impersonation of legendary producer Robert Evans (Chinatown, Marathon Man), are just a little too close to reality.

Shot in pseudo-documentary style, this film is fast-paced, smart, incredibly clever and occasionally very funny. It's based on a simple idea: that political spin can inspire fervent American patriotism; that using this blinding love of the USA (and the right media propaganda) can make the public believe anything. So when the President is accused of becoming too personal with a young girl, the faceless spin-doctors wheel out implausible slices of cunning: fly important generals up to Boeing; wake the Albanian desk at the CIA, then deny that there is an Albanian situation; and deny sending B-3 Stealth Bombers to Europe. It's all a believable lie.

Smart but not as smart as it thinks it is. Nevertheless, it's still entertaining, funny and clever, and worth catching for some great performances from De Niro and Hoffman, plus some wonderful what-if-this-is-really-true moments.

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