The
Critics Are Talking About
BUSH'S
BRAIN
AP
Entertainment News
(the following article ran in over 1,000 outlets, including
CNN.com, FOX News, MSNBC)
'Bush's
Brain' looks at presidential adviser
Documentary examines Rove's role in administration
Tuesday, March 16, 2004
By Christy Lemire
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- "Bush's Brain"
has been cracked open and exposed for the world to see.
The documentary, based on the book of
the same name about presidential adviser Karl Rove, had been
kept tightly under wraps before making its world premiere to
a packed theater at the South by Southwest film festival.
Both the book and the film depict Rove
as the true brains behind the Bush administration, and practically
a co-president. The film, which screened Saturday night, begins
with the image of Bush confidently descending the stairs of
Air Force One with "Hail to the Chief" signaling his
arrival.
Then comes the punch line. On a black
screen with simple white lettering, the question is posed: How
did this happen?
(Laughter and applause erupted at this
point among the crowd of 1,200.)
The answer the movie supplies: Rove.
"Nobody knows who this guy is or
how critical he was to the ascension of George Bush," said
co-director Michael Paradies Shoob. "But they'll find out
who he is and it will allow people to deconstruct the activities
of this administration."
Rove declined several interview requests
from the filmmakers; he also declined to return calls for comment
on the film from The Associated Press.
But he did send a 14-page e-mail to The
Dallas Morning News' Austin bureau chief Wayne Slater, co-author
of "Bush's Brain," after reading an advance copy of
the book that somehow got out before its 2003 release. (Hence
the filmmakers' apprehension about letting anyone see the documentary
too early.) Bush’s Brain Page 14 Press Kit That e-mail,
in which Rove rebuts several points in the book, becomes his
voice in the film.
"We invited him to participate.
We encouraged him to participate," said coproducer Elizabeth
Reeder. "He had no interest in participation."
Nonetheless, Shoob and co-director Joseph
Mealey, working from the text by Slater and co-author Jim Moore,
detailed Rove's rise from Utah high school debate geek to Texas
political juggernaut.
In interviews with Republicans and Democrats,
we learn that Rove had his eye on the White House long before
Bush ever did.
Rove helped Bush get elected as Texas
governor in 1994 and again in 1998 before leading the charge
toward the presidency in 2000. Even former Texas GOP Chairman
Tom Pauken acknowledges that Bush wouldn't be president without
Rove.
But Rove also helped Republicans get
elected to key positions throughout the state -- and it's suggested
that he doesn't simply want to beat the opposing candidates,
he wants to destroy them.
"He seems to effectively rationalize
and compartmentalize," said Moore, a former television
correspondent who has covered Bush since his unsuccessful run
for Congress in 1978. "I think he is able to say to himself,
`Yeah, this is maybe outside the rules, this may be wrong, this
may even be illegal, but I'm doing it for the greater good of
the party."'
Shoob hopes that since it's an election
year, his film will prompt voters to scrutinize Bush's presidency.
There are no plans yet for "Bush's Brain" to appear
in theaters or on television, though.
"When you make a film like this,
you want to contribute to the national debate, to have people
look at the administration and say, here's why things are happening,
and are we happy with this? If we're at war, why are we at war?
Was this a political decision or a policy decision?"
"It's really about winning and losing,"
he added.