Monday, March 12, 2012

"The Artist" Review


The world is abuzz with Michel Hazanavicius’s movie “The Artist.” It has won a wide array of accolade from critics and regular movie-goers everywhere. Specifically, it was prized with a surprising five Oscars and is the first silent film to capture the Best Picture award since “Wings” in the fist Academy Awards presentation in 1929. All of this praise is more than deserved.

Sometimes, despite its rave reviews “The Artist” is derided for its innocent nature. This scorn is thoroughly pretentious. Hazanavicius’s movie is innocent but that is just what makes it great. There is always a place for dark and intense movies like Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now” but there is just as much a place for light and funny ones. It dials in on the better angels of our nature and lets them loose. It makes you smile both with its humor but also with the reality that there is good in the world, untainted by the evil that surrounds.

But all of this would be thrown to waste were the movie not deftly executed. And this is why it earned its other Oscars. Jean Dujardin, whom I had previously seen in “OSS 117 Nest of Spies,” takes his art to a new level in his portrayal of George Valantin while Ludovic Bource’s score is sublime as it accompanies the mastery on screen. So, if you had not yet gathered from what I have said so far, this movie is worth seeing for your whole family, I guarantee it. 

Monday, March 5, 2012

The Decline and Fall of the American Republic Review


I have just finished reading Bruce Ackerman’s The Decline and Fall of the American Republic, a good little book if I do say so myself. In fact, I had not planned on reading it at all and only did so as my friend was fortunate enough as to forget it in my car. Regardless of this story, the book puts out quite an idea, not radical as it has been around for a good amount of time, but nonetheless prescient and forceful. This is the idea of an “imperial” presidency.

As Ackerman dutifully notes in this volume this idea of an imperial presidency was first put forth by Arthur Schlesinger Jr. in his aptly-named book The Imperial Presidency. But in his own volume written four decades after the original, Ackerman puts forth a methodical and systematic study of how the trends first seen by Schlesinger have matured and transformed. According to Ackerman areas for concern include the politicization of the military, the hyper-partisan Executive Branch lawyers, and the increasing use of sound bites as substitute for true political discourse.

These characteristics of our political culture, he says, will add to an ever increasing executive that will become one of the largest constitutional crises ever faced. For this the author presents a number of solutions that taken together start ameliorating the present condition. Among these is the idea of a national holiday with the sole purpose of having the voting public discuss the very policies and ideas that are most important to them. It would be run very much like a caucus with each candidate having a representative speak on their behalf and then allowing for discussion and debate to occur. Now, this would have the effect of diminishing the impact of television as well as increasing voter knowledge.

This is purely one of the many great little nuggets found in this book. I very much encourage you to read it. For if one were to judge the author by his stated purpose, namely to start a dialogue concerning this problem, it is a very good book and accomplishes this goal very deftly.