I first saw note of this film in the 26 Sept 2011 "Movies - Fall Preview" column in the New Yorker. IMDb has the plot summary as "An idealistic staffer for a new presidential candidate gets a crash
course on dirty politics during his stint on the campaign trail." Critics in Rotten Tomatoes give it 85%, the public a lesser 73%. Its summary: The Ides of March takes place during the frantic last days before a
heavily contested Ohio presidential primary, when an up-and-coming
campaign press secretary (Ryan Gosling) finds himself involved in a
political scandal that threatens to upend his candidate's shot at the
presidency.
With heartthrobs George Clooney and Ryan Gosling, one might expect that the movie did well at the box office, but its $41 million take is not, in relative terms, very good. Why? The subject matter? Perhaps.
Ironically, one ends up feeling both skeptical and cynical about this
movie that wants to have it both ways but, instead, ends up just as
deeply cynical and flawed as its characters and the system it seeks to
expose.
January 13, 2012
Full Review
This critis has it about right. Anthony Lane in the New Yorker also demurs from singing its praises: The result, slimy with unfeasible plotting, will gratify those who sniff
out all politics as a conspiratorial murk. On the other hand, viewers
who treasure Clooney, both as actor and director, for the deftness of
his comic touch, or who remain alert to the grinding farce of the
electoral machine, may prove harder to woo.
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