Oxford Dictionaries just declared “post-truth” as its 2016 international
word of the year. The heart of the definition is how public opinion is
shaped
less by objective facts and more by emotional appeals.
Which brings me to the movie, Miss Sloane, directed by John Madden
and
starring Jessica Chastain. Billed as a political thriller, I prefer to call
it
a drama filled with plenty of edgy twists and turns, and, yes politics
are
involved. On its surface, the game is about the gun lobby and its
opposition.
The real story is about Power—its pursuit, the avid hunger
for it, and who can
play the game best. The movie is also a character
study.
Enter Elizabeth Sloane, the Machiavellian heroine/villain of the movie.
She’s
a successful special-interest lobbyist on Capitol Hill, who is driven
to win
and appears to give no empathy to the various causes she
represents, or to the
people she uses to achieve her goals. She
manipulates not only the truth, but
the emotions of the people
involved.
People in business cultivate a placid demeanor that reveals nothing
of what
they might be plotting, I mean, thinking. Women generally
have to work harder
at this since we’re encouraged from childhood
to be open, amenable, and
cooperative. Miss Sloane didn’t get that
memo. Jessica Chastain not only plays
a brilliant, unscrupulous character,
but she manages to conceal all emotion
while she’s scheming. Her private
time is another matter.
I like my heroes and heroines to be a mixed bag of angel and devil:
Miss
Sloane epitomizes this, but it takes a while for the cracks to show.
She’s an
insomniac who pops prescription uppers to keep going. So she’s
got a bit of
ADHD. Who doesn’t?
She hires a male escort to meet her in bed—sex and no emotional
exchanges,
please. This humanized her for me. Don’t count on erotic
scenes here, Miss
Sloane is on a schedule and while she’s squeezed t
his interlude into her
calendar, her orgasm only requires his cooperation.
She’s successful, but what will her next challenge be? For some
inconceivable reason, she resigns from the most powerful lobbying
organization
in Washington. Her employer accepts the gun lobby’s
appeal to get the female
vote against a bill requiring background checks
for firearm purchases. She leaves
to go work for the other side fighting to
pass the bill, taking her crew with
her, all except for Jane Molloy
(Allison Pill). She remains behind and asks for
a raise.
Is there some personal history that would explain Miss Sloane’s decision?
The story turns on our lack of backstory. No flashbacks, folks. No gun
violence revealed in her childhood. But that doesn’t mean her crew might not
have
experienced such barbarity. Miss Sloane is not only willing to use such
a
personal history but she’s ready. She leaves no stone unturned, no file
unread,
no internet device unhacked. The most remarkable aspect of the film
is how
viewers don’t question this pristine—no doubt Ivy League educated—
female’s
access to back alley nerds, the techno-henchman of the 21st century.
The back
alley scenes are dark, wet and dirty. No secret knocks, but Chastain
does look
over her shoulder before entering.
She appears to be winning public opinion in the gun control battle and her
former firm calls for an “inquisition” into her tactics. Miss Sloane
anticipated
this. The pressure mounts. A few more cracks appear in her façade:
she throws
some stuff around in the privacy of her office. Still, Chastain
makes it a
momentous desk-clearing. A few exhausted tears, and more pills slide
down
her throat while she plans her next move. Make sure you surprise them is
her
motto.
Miss Sloane is in control of her future. She’s all about choices. Prepare
for the
post-truth ride. You’ll be surprised.
Opens: Nov. 25 (EuropaCorp. USA)
Cast: Jessica Chastain, Mark Strong, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Alisson Pill, Michael
Stuhlbarg, Jake Lacy, Sam Waterston, John Lithgow, David Wilson Barnes, Dylan
Baker, Raoul Bhaneja, Chuck Shamata, Christine Baranski
Director: John MaddenScreenwriter: Jonathan Perera
Also at Huffington Post
Follow Sandra Ramos O’Briant on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sramosobriant
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