Sharp scripting, note-perfect performances, and nimble direction and technical execution
combine to make Wag the Dog one of the wittiest and most mordant political satires
to come along in quite some time. This quickly shot, relatively small-budget (considering
the fact that it features two of the world's top movie actors) film is a cynic's
delight, a trenchant and timely social comedy that frequently recalls the best of
Dr. Strangelove. It takes as its premise the modern-day bastardization of politics,
show business, and the media, which have all merged into one indistinguishable generator
of news events and photo ops. Wag the Dog's unholy alliance begins when the United
States president, 11 days before he's up for re-election, is accused of making improper
advances to a young Firefly girl during her tour the White House. In no time flat,
his opponent hits the airwaves with political ads that trumpet the song, "Thank Heaven
for Little Girls." A fretful presidential assistant, Winifred Ames (Heche), calls
professional political fixer Conrad Brean (De Niro) to a summit deep in the bowels
of the Washington power center, whereupon Mr. Fixit decides that what the situation
requires is the distraction of a good-old-fashioned war effort. Not a real war necessarily,
just the appearance of one. Off to California go the odd couple of the prim and uptight
Ames and the detached and rumpled Brean to enlist the help of top Hollywood producer
Stanley Motss (Hoffman), a vain Tinseltown caricature who's thrilled to have his
talents appreciated at last. Things escalate from there as Motss calls in his arsenal
of image wranglers who include a songwriter played by Willie Nelson to pen a "spontaneous"
We Are the World"-type anthem, the advertising Fad King (Leary), and a whole studio
full of computer-generated video effects that are capable of fabricating a war in
Albania from the reality of a girl holding a Tostitos bag in Burbank. Everyone involved
in this production is in peak form. Hoffman and De Niro both turn in some of their
best work in ages, once again playing off Motss' vanity and need for recognition
against Brean's shadow-skulking self-effacement, all the while each of them appreciating
the other as consummate professionals. Heche holds her own in the presence of such
notable company and Harrelson is utterly hilarious as an eleventh-hour loose cannon.
A plotline that involves a suspicious government agent played by William H. Macy
sputters without much focus but events move along at a rapid enough clip that the
duff moments barely have time to register. The script was adapted from Larry Beinhart's
novel American Hero by Hilary Henkin and David Mamet. As a cautionary tale, Wag the
Dog may find itself somewhat in the position of preaching to the converted, but the
pews will radiate with the sounds of laughter.
4.0 stars
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
Wag the Dog 
Full Length Reviews
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Wag the Dog 
Capsule Reviews
Wag the Dog 
Other Films by Barry Levinson
Disclosure 
Liberty Heights 
Sleepers 
Sphere 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Election 
In & Out 
The Sum of Us 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Barry Levinson at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|