Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire.—Gustav Mahler

Friday, September 15, 2006

Bush "Snuff" Film Premieres in Toronto

Death of a President depicts imagined assassination of President George W. BushJames Pinkerton of Tech Central Station went all the way up to Toronto for the city's annual film festival this year, and he has brought back an excellent article on one of the most vivid manifestations of Bush hatred seen so far, the film The Death of a President. In an article appropriately and only slightly hyperbolically titled "Snuff Cinema," Pinkerton writes:

Five years after 9-11, it's apparent that we all aren't getting along. And the political left is throwing plenty of mean punches. A case in point is that new Bush snuff movie, "Death of a President." Some might say that "snuff movie" is too strong a term -- but how else to describe a movie that clearly revels in the prospect of George W. Bush's being assassinated? . . .

"Death" is a pseudo-documentary that purports to show what happens to America in the year after President George W. Bush is assassinated on October 19, 2007 (stock market nerds might note that 10/19/07 is the 20th anniversary of the 500-point stock market crash, for whatever symbolism that's worth).

A few points about the movie: First, it has a "big" look. As film-society types would say, "Death" is fluent in cinematic language; it brings one into the action, it's well paced, the music enhances the mood. Interestingly, the film was made for a mere $2 million; if so, such a large movie on such a small budget could only be possible for an offshoot of a big network, such as More4. The parent company, Channel 4, used its own deep resources to acquire archival footage and to help out on the slick special optical effects. So "Death" looks like a theatrical release, not a made-for-TVer.

Pinkerton sees extremely sinister motives at work here:

In the 12th century, King Henry II grew distinctly weary of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas à Becket. "Will no one rid me of this troublesome priest?" Henry asked, and the next thing he knew, four loyal knights did just the ridding Henry was hoping for. Now fast-forward nine centuries: Is it really all that hard to believe that the "Death" filmmakers hope that somebody gets a "bright idea" to rid the world of a troublesome president?

For my full, extensive article on this and its very interesting implications, go to Karnick on Culture.

2 comments:

Tom Van Dyke said...

The sequel is how the world returns to normal after Bush's death. Iraq returns to its Fahrenheit 9/11 state, with smiling children in playgrounds; Iran, no longer on the Axis of Evil, scraps its nuclear plans; and terrorists the world over pound their plastic explosives into falafel.

And everybody loves the Jews.

S. T. Karnick said...

Yeah, . . . that's the ticket! I was just saying the same thing to my wife, . . . Morgan Fairchild!