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Bulworth (1998)
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Warren Beatty directed, co-produced (with Pieter Jan Brugge), co-scripted (with Jeremy Pikser), and stars in this political satire, a comedy drama about a U.S. senator who decides to start speaking the truth. Despondent California senator Jay Bulworth (Beatty), up for re-election, is disillusioned by the usual campaign banalities; his marriage to Constance (Christine Baranski) seems equally hollow. In the midst of a nervous breakdown, Bulworth goes without sleep or food for three days and takes out a ten-million-dollar insurance policy on himself while arranging his own assassination. Drinking during a return to Los Angeles, Bulworth is scheduled to speak at an African-American church in South Central L.A. Once there, he tosses aside his prepared speech, startling both the audience and his campaign manager, Murphy (Oliver Platt), by improvising truthful remarks instead of the familiar rhetoric. These loose-cannon salvos gain the attention of an attractive young woman, Nina (Halle Berry). Bulworth finds an exhilaration with this new freestyle approach, and after shocking a gathering in Beverly Hills with further fulminations, Bulworth invites Nina and her girlfriends into his limo. During a spaced-out sojourn at one of South Central's more frenzied after-hours clubs, Bulworth gains respect for hip-hop culture.

Still reeling from insights gained by this nightlife, he arrives the next day for a fundraising function at the Beverly Wilshire, startling everyone with a diatribe delivered in the intonations of a rap artist. His interest in Nina and his new optimistic outlook on life give Bulworth a sense of elation and a will to live. He phones to call off the hit, but the gears have been set in motion. After an assumed hitman turns up during a church appearance, Bulworth flees, and Nina offers him a safe-house hideout at the home of her family, veterans of the civil rights movement. Here Bulworth goes through the final steps in his transformation -- making a Kennedy-styled connection with the disenfranchised as he tunes in to forgotten memories of the '60s. Outfitted in homeboy clothing, the born-again Bulworth heads for a TV station to unleash even more caustic comments on the American political scene. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi

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Starring:
Warren BeattyHalle Berry, (more)
Director(s):
Warren Beatty
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD
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    Judith B.

    Besides being hysterically funny, watch it the first time to laugh hysterically. Watch it the second time and take note of The Truth. Some of my friends didn't find it funny because sometimes the truth STINGS. And most times when something is truly funny, it's because you recognize yourself, someone you know and the truth of it. Also take note of the "grassy knoll" metaphor ending. Maybe the humor is done too well if people can't see the message that's also here.

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    Kim O.

    Best movie ever. Not a movie for children, due to language and a strong dose of the truth about how the United States government really works !!!

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    Keith G.

    Other than a few forced silly moments, this is the sharpest, darkest, bravest. most disturbing political satire out of Hollywood since "Network". A career best performance by Warren Beatty, making his rapidly breaking down ex-liberal Democrat senator into a character simultaneously howlingly funny, pitiable, admirable, wince inducing, pathetic and horrifying. Beatty has made a film that walks the razor"s edge right along with its lead character, playing into racial and cultural stereotypes at the same time it shreds them. This is not a polite "the system needs fixing" movie, it’s an in-your-face scream that the system is broken, perhaps beyond all repair. That theme seems only more timely now.

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