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Classic Political Satire on Film

Wagtitle_4 Political satire is a tricky business. Campaigns and government have been so especially nutty of late that hardly anything is too crazy to actually happen. Case-in-point #1: "conservative" talk show host Stephen Colbert makes a sort-of good faith lunge at a presidential candidacy and attracts some serious news coverage and a fair amount of grass roots support before running afoul of the humor-challenged South Carolina Democratic Executive Council. Case-in-point #2: fictional character Borat (created by Sacha Baron Cohen) endorses Barack Obama for President - exact quote "I personal would like the basketball player, Barak Obamas to be Premier" - and the Washington Post, among many others, covers his announcement.

Which is not to say there aren't plenty of excellent films that successfully spoof the political process, some broadly, some insidiously. In Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles, showing tonight and throughout November on AMC, Harvey Korman plays greedy and conniving State Attorney General Hedley (not Hedy!) Lamarr, and Brooks appears as cross-eyed, dim and amorous Governor William J. Le Petomane.

After the jump, three political satires worth checking out:

Bob Roberts (Tim Robbins, 1992). A conservative folk singer (Robbins) sets out to unseat a Pennsylvania Senator (Gore Vidal) with lies, smear tactics and a sympathy-garnering staged assassination attempt. The idea of a right-leaning politician who sings is funny but unsettling, much like ex-Attorney General John Ashcroft's rendition of his original song, "Let the Eagle Soar."

Wag the Dog (Barry Levinson, 1998). When a sex scandal threatens the President's re-election, a White House spin doctor (Robert DeNiro) hires a veteran Hollywood producer (Dustin Hoffman) to distract the American public with a fake war in Albania. The film was released less than a month after the Clinton/Lewinsky firestorm, making it seem eerily prescient. But it's based on a book which explicitly references George H.W. Bush and Desert Storm.

Bulworth (Warren Beatty, 1998). A long-serving Senate Democrat (Beatty) becomes disgusted with his life and with politics in general, so he takes a hit out on himself. Impending death frees him to finally speak his mind, which makes him more viable than he's been for years. It's jarring to see Beatty's old, white Senator rapping and cursing, just as it was to see Bob Dole shill for Viagra a few years back.

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ShrubDaddy never got busted for his mistresses... and never denied what was printed in Kitty Kelley's book.

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