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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/dec2002/jour-d09.shtml

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WSWS : Arts Review : Film Reviews

Bush documentary: an "intimate" portrait of an empty vessel

Journeys with George, directed by Aaron Lubarsky and Alexandra Pelosi

By David Walsh
9 December 2002

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In 2000 Alexandra Pelosi, the daughter of Democratic Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi of
California, was a member of the press corps covering George W. Bush’s campaign for
president. Pelosi, then a field producer for NBC News, took her video camera along.
Journeys with George is the resulting documentary film.

Pelosi’s work, shown last month on HBO, is shallow and unserious. An irritating and 
mock-
diaristic tone is established in the opening moments, as the co-director (along with 
Aaron
Lubarsky)—in a voice-over—calls her work a “home movie of my yearlong road trip with
this man in his race to become leader of the free world.”

The 2000 presidential election campaign, which culminated in the crisis over the 
Florida
vote and the anti-democratic ruling by the Supreme Court to install Bush in the White
House, was an event of major significance, even if many of the participants, including 
the
Republican candidate, were only dimly aware of its implications. To grasp this 
significance
one would have to possess some knowledge of history, including recent US history, and
sensitivity to the great tensions building up within the American political system.

A serious work could have been made from the experience Pelosi underwent, but only if a
filmmaker were capable of standing back from the day-to-day flow of events and 
asserting
an independent and critical viewpoint. Pelosi has obviously been immunized against 
carrying
out any such activity. She goes entirely “with the flow,” wallowing in and celebrating 
the
trivia of the campaign trail.

Nothing is too banal to escape her attention, particularly her personal relations with 
Bush
and her fellow press corps members. Such a method, whatever Pelosi may think, assists
the director in painting a politically sanitized picture of the then-Texas governor.

The public would be lulled to sleep if it drew its impression of George W. Bush solely 
from
Journeys with George. In this regard, the film speaks volumes about the state of 
American
liberalism, a political force so enervated that it is incapable of offering a serious 
critique of
the extreme right, much less putting up a struggle against it.

The film’s scenes fall into three general categories. Those treated most fleetingly, 
to some
extent deservedly so, involve the would-be Republican nominee’s appearances before live
audiences. These are wholly stage-managed events, with vetted audiences and banal
speeches. As Pelosi makes clear, Bush repeatedly gives the same speech, proclaiming his
allegiance to “faith and family” and promising to restore “higher standards” to the 
White
House.

Everything about the Bush campaign is reactionary and dishonest. Even the 
“hand-painted”
signs carried at rallies, one learns, are mass-produced by Republican functionaries. 
“No
real people,” as one journalist notes, are anywhere near the events.

The film follows Bush as he attempts to win Republican contests in Iowa, New Hampshire,
South Carolina, Michigan, California and beyond. Television news footage takes us to 
the
general election, the conflict over the Florida result and, ultimately, Bush’s 
swearing in on
January 20, 2001.

The second concern of Pelosi is the press corps itself, with whom she travels for more 
than
a year. She is too much of this crowd to notice what a damning picture her film 
provides of
the “free press.” Although there are a few cynical and observant comments of a fairly
obvious character, particularly from Wayne Slater of the Dallas Morning News and R.G.
Ratcliffe of the Houston Chronicle, in general the media representatives are docile and
deferential to the Bush camp. In an astonishing admission, one reporter tells Pelosi 
that
“everyone [in the press corps] goes weak in the knees when he [Bush] comes back here.”

No member of the media chooses to ask a difficult question for fear of being 
ostracized.
Pelosi learns this first-hand when she asks Bush at a press conference about the record
number of executions in Texas. He later tells her that she hit him “below the belt,” 
and he
snubs her for a time. Having learned her lesson, Pelosi never asks a tough question 
again.

The essential fraud of the Bush campaign, the extreme right-wing agenda concealed 
behind
the slogan of “compassionate conservatism,” is never exposed. Pelosi makes next to
nothing, for example, of Bush’s appearance—captured by her video camera—at the ultra-
right center of religious bigotry, Bob Jones University in South Carolina. There is
unquestioning acceptance throughout the film that Bush, an ignoramus bankrolled by
corporate interests to the tune of tens of millions of dollars, is a legitimate and 
substantial
political figure. This was the general line of the liberal media during the election 
of 2000.

One journalist, trooping from “photo op to photo op,” comments that he and his 
colleagues
are all “lemmings ... we follow and do what they [the Bush officials] say.” Despite the
occasional grumbling, the media can be seen functioning in this campaign primarily to
conceal the truth about the threat represented by Bush from the public.

This is not an oversight. The journalists, who travel in what is appropriately termed 
“the
bubble,” constitute a particularly cynical upper-middle-class layer, insulated from the
problems of ordinary people. In one of the few half-honest comments in Journeys with
George, Richard Wolffe of the Financial Times tells Pelosi, “We’re a lot of really 
well-paid
people trying to convince a lot of other really well-paid people that we know what’s 
going
on in ordinary people’s minds.”

The third category of scenes involves what is obviously of paramount importance to
Pelosi—her efforts to establish a friendly relationship with Bush. This is the most 
repellent
aspect of the film. The film’s title, Bush’s own suggestion, is a tribute to the cozy 
relations
between the director and her subject.

Pelosi’s idea of penetrating filmmaking is to catch Bush or his aides (Karen Hughes, 
Karl
Rove) at supposedly unguarded moments and reveal their “human” side to the spectator.
The superficiality of this method points to an underlying weakness of so-called cinema
verité, particularly in this debased and intellectually lazy incarnation: the notion 
that a
filmed image, or even a series of images, reveals by itself the truth about a given
phenomenon. An image presented outside the necessary social and historical context can
be as false as a doctored photograph.

Nothing is given to the spectator of Journeys with George about Bush’s history or 
political
program, except the brief reference to his having presided over more than 150 
executions
as governor of Texas. No reference is made to the extreme right-wing forces pushing him
forward, the same forces responsible for the sex scandal and impeachment drive that
nearly toppled an elected president less than two years previously.

No connection is made between George W. Bush and his father’s administration,
responsible for the first war against Iraq and the resulting mass suffering and death.
Nothing is made of Bush’s wealth and his ties to the most corrupt elements of the 
corporate
elite.

Bush comes across in Pelosi’s film as a political nonentity, a Cheeze Doodle and 
bologna-
eating lightweight, far more interested in bantering with the media members and making
silly faces at Pelosi’s camera than discussing a political matter, or any substantive 
matter of
any kind. When Pelosi asks the candidate, “Are you going to look out for the little 
guy?,”
Bush cannot even find it in himself to give a stock, fake-earnest reply. He answers, 
“I am
the little guy. Have you noticed that I’m five-eleven and my brother is six-three?”

The eternal frat boy, with a pronounced streak of cruelty and vindictiveness, Bush 
glad-
hands his way around the media plane. He shows an inordinate amount of interest in
Pelosi’s love life, making vaguely suggestive remarks throughout.

In one of the most revealing sequences, Bush intervenes in a dispute on the press plane
between media members drinking and playing loud music and those who want a little peace
and quiet, including Pelosi. He sides with the former, telling her, “Look, these guys 
were
just up there trying to have a good solid margarita, they wanted to play some music, 
they
wanted to get hopping here at 45,000 [feet]. And you stepped in ... and you rained on 
the
parade.”

Pelosi asks, “What’s it like being ... with all these animals back here?” Bush 
replies, “These
are my people. It takes an animal to know an animal. And, uh, I’m not admitting I’m an
animal with 60 days to go in the campaign, I am admitting I like the animals.... 
You’re back
here with my people. You’re back here with the tequila drinkers, yeah. What you need 
is to
go up there and make a little whoopee with the tequila drinkers, get to know them 
better.”

Scenes like this presumably induced an HBO cable television network publicist to write,
“This is the Bush that Pelosi captures frequently over the course of the documentary:
unguarded, light- hearted, flirtatious, a jokester.” Each to his own taste.

The Republican candidate-to-be seems relatively little interested in politics. He 
remains
remarkably unaffected by his defeats in early primaries in New Hampshire and Michigan.
Only after Bush’s South Carolina victory does he begin, clearly on the advice of his 
handlers,
to adopt a more decorous manner. At one point, he tells Pelosi, “I started out a 
cowboy.
Now I’m a statesman.”

Journeys with George lends credence to the argument that Bush is essentially an empty
vessel, the idle son and scapegrace of a powerful family, a front-man for more 
conscious
and politically motivated forces. He seems fully capable, out of stupidity and 
indifference, of
signing anything pushed across his desk. A war with Iraq, or North Korea, or Iran, 
with its
inevitably bloody consequences, would not trouble his sleep any more than the state
execution of poor blacks and whites in Texas. Hannah Arendt’s famous comment about the
“banality of evil” seems to apply here.

Pelosi’s film, in the end, is a political whitewash. No wonder that Bush, according to 
the
director, congratulated her on the film when they met at a White House barbecue last
summer. She told the San Jose Mercury News, “And I said, ‘Have you seen it?’ And he 
said,
‘Everyone at the White House who’s seen it just loves it.’”

The degeneration in the personnel of a given ruling class (and its chroniclers) is a 
function,
in the final analysis, of the decline in its historic fortunes and prospects. Those 
who bemoan
the presence of someone as ignorant and crude as George W. Bush in the White House
underestimate the crisis of American capitalism and its objectively determined 
inability to
act in a farsighted and politically responsible fashion. Bush is an adequate 
representative of
the dominant section of the American elite: reckless, arrogant, shortsighted and 
criminal to
the core.

The distance that the US political class has traveled in the past four decades can be 
gauged
by comparing Journeys with George with another documentary treating a presidential
election campaign: Primary. In 1960 Robert Drew, a former Life magazine correspondent
and editor, assembled a remarkable group, including Richard Leacock, D.A. Pennebaker 
and
Albert Maysles (all future prominent figures in documentary filmmaking), for the 
purpose of
filming the Wisconsin Democratic Party primary in March and April of that year between
Senators John F. Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey.

The film, which provides a relatively cold-eyed and even cynical glimpse at the inner
workings of a political campaign, pioneered the cinema verité style in the US: it had 
less
than three minutes of narration, no interviews with the candidates and no intrusive
presence of the filmmakers.

It would not be idealizing either Kennedy or Humphrey, Cold War anticommunist 
politicians
both (Kennedy, a millionaire, traveled around the state in a new 40-passenger jet), to 
note
that the level of political discourse in Primary is considerably higher than that in 
Journeys
with George. The very fact there is a political discourse and an appeal to distinct 
social
layers and constituencies around policy issues, and not merely trivial banter, is 
already a
marked difference.

Kennedy later would comment: “I spoke in Wisconsin, for example, on farm legislation,
foreign policy, defense, civil rights, and several dozen other issues.... At almost 
every stop
in Wisconsin I invited questions—and the questions came—on price supports, labor 
unions,
disengagement, taxes and inflation.”

Humphrey, for his part, makes a populist appeal to Wisconsin farmers. He tells one 
group
of farmers that the eastern establishment media, including the Wall Street Journal, New
York Times and Boston Globe, “laugh at you.” Both political figures, within definite 
limits,
evoke considerable interest and even enthusiasm.

Pelosi’s film, on the other hand, reveals an intellectually and politically exhausted 
ruling
circle. Isolated from the mass of the American people and with no solutions to the
enormous social problems blighting the society, the political establishment has turned 
to a
George W. Bush. In the establishment’s selection of that figure one can gain some idea 
of
its historical blind alley.







Copyright 1998-2002
World Socialist Web Site
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