| Leaning ever
so slightly on the side of Republican, this cloying,
saccharine and entirely didactic offering of Capra-esque
summer counter-programming, may be the perfect treat
for the senior citizen crowd who will surely gasp and
feel a little naughty during the many occasions that
Kevin Costner cusses and takes the Lord’s name
in vain. From the moment the film opens onto a charming
small town in the south, to the moment that we learn
that every person and every vote counts, Swing Vote
keeps its morally superior and idealistic values at
the forefront, even when alcoholism, under-aged driving
and politically incorrect campaign commercials occasionally
fizzle to the surface.
While doing a class project on the historical significance
of the American political landscape and the right to
vote, the precocious Molly Johnson (Madeline Carroll)
asks her redneck alcoholic father Bud (Kevin Costner)
if she can be involved in the voting process. When he
gets drunk and forgets to meet her at the polling station,
Molly decides to sneak in and make his vote for him.
A series of mishaps leave the vote uncounted, which
becomes significant when the entire presidential election
comes down to a tie and has to rely on Bud’s vote
to decide who the next president will be.
When industrious local journalist Kate Madison (Paula
Patton) breaks the story to the media, both the Republican
(Kelsey Grammar) and Democratic (Dennis Hopper) presidential
candidates make an effort to “swing” Bud’s
vote, while he garners his 15-minutes of fame and his
daughter learns of the political hypocrisy that masks
the true needs of the American people.
While the implication that Republican political candidates
use fear tactics and forcefulness to sway affiliation
and Democrats blow a lot of hot air up everyone’s
behind with their idealistic platforms is amusing, it’s
not particularly fresh or insightful. Also, given that
everyone learns their lesson in the end, any intended
subversion is lost in an uplifting score and the usual
“people really do mean well” crap.
What may be the most interesting subtextual aspect of
Swing Vote is the notion that the average American voter
is an easily manipulated, borderline-retarded, lemming.
This may have been unintentional, but exists nonetheless.
Despite the contrived and calculating nature throughout,
there are some moments of true hilarity that arise when
Bud makes entirely inappropriate statements about political
issues like abortion, gay marriage and immigration.
Both candidates (illogically) change their platforms—through
television commercials no less—with amusing results,
which involve Mexicans running across the border with
chickens, gay stereotypes standing on a rainbow flag
with Kelsey Grammar and exploding children in a playground.
This mild amusement does mildly detract from the manipulative
nature of the film and Kevin Costner does do his best
to make his alcoholic cliché palatable, but little
else is particularly digestible for anyone who doesn’t
enjoy being spoon-fed pablum.
Overall, what attempts to be an accessible mediation
on current political landscapes, winds up feeling a
lot like those early 90’s Jim Belushi movies where
an average douchebag learns a valuable lesson and helps
make the world a slightly better place.
- Robert Bell
|
Although I do enjoy politics, I will be staying faaaaar away from this one. (cough-waterworld-cough)
Nice review Bell!