Bush's Brain Movie Review
Bush's Brain Review
"Bush's Brain" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Joseph Mealey,Michael ShoobProducer : Joseph Mealey,Michael Shoob
Screenwiter : James C. Moore
Starring : George Bush,Karl Rove
The line of reasoning goes like this: George Bush is an idiot, yet he’s now
happily perched in the White House; the only reason he’s there has to be the
dark, Svengali-like figure who’s masterminded his rise to power, Karl Rove.
This theory is posed in the opening scene of the nervy documentary Bush’s
Brain, which shows Bush being treated to all the pomp and circumstance of his
office, before plastering a question on the screen: “How did this happen?” What
the filmmakers promise is an investigation into the mind and methods of Rove,
the GOP puppetmaster, but what is actually delivered is much, much less –
proving once again that Rove always wins.
Bush’s Brain is based on the book of the same name by Wayne Slater, Dallas
Morning News bureau chief in Austin and TV correspondent James C. Moore, both
of whom are extensively interviewed in the film. Both long-time Texan
journalists, they’ve been covering Bush and Rove for years – the wry Slater is
especially engaging and sharp-witted, as he proved before in the documentary
Journeys with George – and it’s in the Texas-based sections of the film that it’
s most successful.
A nerdy political consultant with an acid tongue, a zealot’s conviction and a
long memory for enemies and slights, Rove seems to have played dirty ever since
his years in the College Republicans during the 1970s. This is good for the
film because it provides a laundry list of slighted adversaries willing to hold
forth on the man.
The evidence piles up fast: a 1986 election in which Rove likely faked a
wiretapping of his own office, creating a scandal that turned things in his
candidate’s favor, partisan-motivated FBI investigations of Rove’s rivals, and
the “whisper campaign” of scurrilous rumors against Ann Richards, who Bush
defeated in the 1994 governor’s race. (This last was a tactic used again pretty
successfully by Rove in the 2000 South Carolina primary that featured rumors of
John McCain having an illegitimate black child.) Unfortunately, there isn’t a
whole lot of rock-solid proof to go around, and once the film tries to draw
conclusions about Rove after he rode Bush’s coattails to Washington, it
founders.
There’s no end of people in Bush’s Brain willing to talk about how certain
things seemed to have Rove’s handiwork (or what’s called in Washington, “The
mark of Rove”), but should it be any surprise that this pudgy little
Machiavellian didn’t leave a whole lot of evidence behind? The film contains
connections and coincidences aplenty, but its central thesis, that Rove is the
brains behind the president, is already very widely known. The lack of a
smoking gun seems to force the filmmakers – who have already managed to take a
large pile of juicy political gossip and turn it into a dull, meandering mess –
to overreach.
As a case in point, the filmmakers, in an unusually magnanimous gesture,
provide excerpts of a lengthy fax that Rove sent the authors refuting most of
their accusations (not surprisingly, Rove had obtained a copy of the book
before it was even published). However, the fair-handedness of including Rove’s
own words is torpedoed by the awful decision to have them read in a whiny,
vaguely evil voiceover. The directors’ lack of art is most apparent, though,
during a pointless sidebar on a Marine who died in Iraq. If the film had
managed to prove beforehand that Rove had masterminded the war to solidify Bush’
s stature, then it would have made for a meaningful coda; as it stands,
however, the moment is just a shameless tug at the heartstrings.
If this is all Rove’s enemies could muster, he’s got nothing to fear.
Reviewed at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. The DVD of the film includes about
20 minutes of extra interviews.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





