How Arnold Won the West Movie Review
How Arnold Won the West Review

"How Arnold Won the West" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Alex CookeProducer : Patrice Barrat,Alan Hayling
Screenwiter :
Starring : Arnold Schwarzenegger,Gray Davis,Darrel Issa,Bill Clinton
The California election season of 2004 was the closest thing to a political
earthquake that the free world has witnessed. The upheaval came about as a
too-shrewd Republican operator saw a way to take advantage of the California
energy debacle and a century old law concerning state ballot propositions as a
means to remove the just-reelected Democratic Governor Gray Davis and,
presumably, put himself in office. But Republican Congressman Darrell Issa's
personal investment of $1.7 million to initiate a recall and promote his
political ambitions went swiftly awry. His party had another idea about
candidates. When they decided that super ambitious Arnold Schwarzenegger's fame
would make him more electable, it was all over for Issa (pronounced, eye-sa).
In a quick recognition of realities, this former owner of America's biggest car
alarm company (and, according to his own admission, brother of a car thief)
retreated to the sidelines.
130 plus others didn't -- people who saw the recall as an opportunity to
qualify themselves on the ballot and acquire a nanosecond of fame they never
would in any other way. Leave it to California to be open to an adult film
actress, an actor, a comedian, a musician-laborer, a stay-at-home mom, a golf
pro, various attorneys including one calling himself a marijuana legalization
attorney, a sumo wrestler, a tribal chairman, students, the barely
intelligible, the delusional hopefuls and other dreamers with bizarre ideas
bordering on profound political ignorance to run for the state's highest
office. Small wonder people across the world saw the affair as a circus.
For residents of California, the How Arnold Won the West DVD documentary by
Alex Cooke will seem like a bit of deja vu. But it provides a comprehensive
picture for those who missed some of the details or just want to recall the
recall. Cooke has pulled together footage of the broad spectrum of events,
reportage and media exploitation into a comprehensive understanding of the
episode, from the moment Arnold Schwarzenegger announced his candidacy through
to his victory, capturing the mirth and the moronic, the street interviews and
the more colorful candidates singled out for quickly pasted-together TV
spectacles. It reprises the atmosphere of a political cum showbiz promotion,
with all the hucksterism of a headline-grabbing sideshow.
All of which resulted in Arnold taking a new stage in his long and eventful
career and new dialogue to flow from his lips. "From the time you get up in the
morning, you're taxed. You have a coffee, you're taxed. You go to the toilets,
you're taxed. You get into your car, you're taxed. You go to the gas station,
you're taxed. And this goes on all day long. Tax, tax, tax." As a Californian I
can tell the rest of the world looking in that the Terminator's promises were,
as all politicians' are, to win the election. What did the enraptured fans...
er, citizens, who voted for him think, that he was going to squash taxes like a
CGI effect?
He may be an opportunistic guy, but his sudden political presence is aided and
abetted by a polished ability at self-promotion. The currency of his celebrity
was spent in overcoming accusations of womanizing, steroid-using and
environment insulting and now, as the victor, that store of good will is his to
exploit in advancing his non-fiction, right-leaning agenda and winner image.
Which leaves us hoping that his latest role as the good-natured, fun-loving
Governator doesn't hurt us. There's more than boxoffice at stake here.
The DVD illustrates that what started out as a lively episode may have
furthered California as the envy or the scorn of the world. What is fame in one
context could be taken as infamy in another. With appearances by Bill Clinton,
Maria Shriver, George W. Bush as well as the election principals, this is a
documentary that will prove its value in the course of democratic time. It's
certainly a wake up call to the political possibilities, especially for those
who may have missed parts of the variety show while it was being scripted into
the history of the world's fifth largest economy.
Citizen Schwarz.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





