바카라You know the results of the latest Gallup Poll?바카라 Bradlee (Jason Robards), Executive Editor of The Washington Post, asks Woodward (Robert Redford) and Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman). 바카라Half the country never even heard of the word 바카라Watergate바카라. Nobody gives a shit.바카라 Panting from the palpable tension, Woodward and Bernstein look at Bradlee intently. He continues 바카라You guys are probably pretty tired, right? Go on home. Get a nice hot bath, rest up 15 minutes, then get your asses back in gear. We바카라re under a lot of pressure, and you put us there. Nothing바카라s riding on this except the First Amendment of the Constitution, freedom of the press, and maybe the future of the country.바카라 Bradlee gives the two journalists a moment to absorb the gravity of what he바카라s saying. Then, in his characteristic matter-of-fact style, he adds, 바카라Not that any of that matters. But if you guys mess up again, I바카라m going to get mad.바카라
This defining scene from Alan Pakula바카라s All the President바카라s Men (1976) sets the stage for the resignation of then President Richard Nixon after Bradlee and Bernstein ultimately expose his connection to the Watergate scandal. In a remarkable frame towards the end of the film, inside The Washington Post바카라s Office, President Nixon is seen taking oath for his second term on TV, while Woodward and Bernstein are seen typing furiously. Eventually, their relentless investigation exposes one of the biggest breaches of faith of the American citizens by a political leader.
Cut to fifty years later. All is not quiet on the Western front. The current owner of The Washington Post, Jeff Bezos, has reportedly axed the endorsement of the Democrat presidential candidate Kamala Harris, which was drafted by the newspaper바카라s Editorial board. The newspaper바카라s Union has expressed serious concern over this move, which happened barely 11 days before the presidential election. A former executive editor of The Post, Marty Baron, said, 바카라Donald Trump will celebrate this as an invitation to further intimidate The Post바카라s owner, Jeff Bezos. History will mark a disturbing chapter of spinelessness at an institution famed for courage.바카라 It is intriguing that the same newspaper, whose journalists unearthed the infamous Watergate scandal in the 1970s, is now being arm-twisted by a Republican candidate to withdraw endorsements for the Democratic Party. This is the perfect moment to revisit films like All the Presidents Men, which have succinctly captured how the US elections are driven by the media perceptions built by political parties among the citizenry.


While American journalism buckles under political pressure, some American films offer a critical counterpoint in these elections. Independent American films have presented remarkable takes on the issues highlighted in the upcoming US elections바카라ranging from endless wars and gun control to abortion rights and homelessness. Filmmakers such as Michael Moore are a crucial part of this tradition of cinema, which has served as a mirror to American society. In their whacky aesthetics and piercing content, Moore바카라s films have reflected the insufferable anxieties and aspirations around being 바카라American바카라. In light of the US바카라 endless wars and prevalent gun culture, Moore바카라s Bowling for Columbine (2002) is one such film, which brings a deeper perspective to the current election discourse.
The film interrogates the deep-seated fear in the minds of White American citizens, which has been carefully cultivated by the news media and successive political leaders. With the Columbine school shooting of 1999 as its backdrop, Bowling for Columbine tries to uncover why two White teenagers woke up one fine day and chose violence. Under the film바카라s comical facade, the deep rot within American society is laid bare for viewers. Moore traces the colonial traditions of pillage and carnage바카라that White Americans have historically subjected Native and Black populations to바카라in this documentary. He squarely locates the collective hysteria of American citizens and their consequent affinity to gun culture within these traditions.
In a scene where Moore interviews members of the Michigan militia, one of the members says, 바카라This is an American tradition. It바카라s an American responsibility to be armed. If you바카라re not armed, you바카라re not responsible. Who바카라s gonna defend your kids? The cops? The federal government? No, none of them. It바카라s your job to defend you and yours. If you don바카라t do it, you바카라re in dereliction of duty as an American. Period.바카라 Moore connects the individualism behind the gun-wielding psyche to the larger American warfare policies. People involved in the production of missiles are seen to be recommending anger management classes to youngsters so they can avoid school shootings. On the other hand, local militias are seen expressing deep distrust in the capability of the State to maintain law and order. A paradoxical understanding of the State machinery rationalises the annihilation of both the 바카라enemy without바카라 and the 바카라enemy within바카라.


While gun control and accountability of war expenditure form crucial talking points of this election, abortion laws are another issue driving the current debates. American cinema has shaped public opinion significantly in this regard too. Eliza Hittman바카라s Never Rarely Sometimes Always (2020) is a poignant and heartrending tale of the horrors that a teenager must undergo, when faced with an unwanted pregnancy. The film, shot in the cinema verite style, follows seventeen-year-old Autumn Callahan (Sidney Flanigan) on her journey from Pennsylvania to New York, to get an abortion. In the very real dangers that Autumn and her cousin Skylar (Talia Ryder) face while navigating their way through New York city, the film emphasises how the State fails to provide protection to citizens where it바카라s due. Through legislation that prohibits women바카라s safe access to abortion, government policies often compel women to resort to dangerous means to terminate unwanted pregnancy. In a powerful scene, a religious group is seen protesting outside an abortion centre in New York, where Autumn is about to go in for her check-up. The stark contrast between the disregard for the life of the young girl in favour of an unborn life is brought to the fore. When juxtaposed alongside a film like Bowling for Columbine, one is left wondering why these protests about 바카라saving lives바카라 are never actually seen outside stores that sell guns.
Never Rarely Sometimes Always also takes up the discourse around the contentious question of 바카라safety바카라. Before getting an abortion, Autumn has to answer the questions posed about her sexual history by a counsellor. Through their conversation, it is revealed that the teenager may have been experiencing sexual abuse at the hands of a perpetrator who is someone she knows. Though Autumn바카라s history is never fully revealed, what becomes clear is how the denial of abortion doubly jeopardises the lives of young girls, who are already vulnerable and in danger. The grand visage of 바카라safety바카라바카라that defines the American dream바카라falls apart as the audience realises that children are probably not safe in their own homes.
This question of security is further unravelled in Sean Baker바카라s The Florida Project (2017). The film highlights a bizarre reality about a security-obsessed country바카라while helicopters buzz in the skies in a surveillance State, the people on the ground are left to fend on their own in the midst of rapidly drying resources. Here, security is not just about what citizens feel within their homes; it바카라s about the security they must first be provided by the State through housing. Shot in the less glamorous backyard of Disney World in Florida, The Florida Project explores the adventures of a six-year-old named Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) and her friends during their summer vacation. In a bid to avoid homelessness, Moonee and her single mother Halley (Bria Vinaite) stay in a budget motel in Kissimmee, while Halley does odd jobs to make rent. Driven to desperation by the dwindling economy, Halley has to resort to sex work to feed Moonee and keep a roof over her head. The promised security of the State evades Halley, who is ultimately forced to give up Moonee바카라s custody to child protection services.
To authentically represent the material realities of citizens affected by the catastrophic state of the US economy, Baker has situated The Florida Project within the real milieu of the budget hotels in Florida. Inputs for the film were taken from homeless people living on the edge of the wonder world of Disney to supplement the story with actual accounts. The film shows the adverse impact of government policies on the urban poor through a sympathetic lens. A glaring disparity is revealed when viewers realise that while the right to abortion is curbed for women, they are denied the fundamental means to exist with dignity if they do give birth to these children.
With no home and no job, Halley is not offered an alternative of sustenance. Instead, her child is forcefully snatched from her on the charge of poor parenting. If there바카라s any scope of redemption, we can only see it through the innocent eyes of Moonee. As she says to her friend, 바카라Do you know why this is my favorite tree? 바카라Cause it tipped over and it바카라s still growing.바카라