The War Room (1994)
Facts
| Directed by | D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus |
| Cast | James Carville, George Stephanopoulos, Heather Beckel, Paul Begala, Bob Boorstin and Mike Evans |
| Theatrical Release | December 31, 1993 |
| DVD Release | October 5, 2004 |
| Running Time | 97 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 025192612824 |
| Buy this item ... | 4 new from $38.94, 7 used from $29.88 |
About The War Room
Documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker (Don't Look Back) and Chris Hegedus shot behind-the-scenes at command central for Bill Clinton's 1992 election campaign and came up with this film. You won't find the kind of daily damage-control and skirt-chasing indirectly alleged in Primary Colors, but the filmmakers do give us a strong sense of the uphill battle of a presidential campaign. The center of the film is really James Carville, who steered the machine for Clinton's '92 run and who comes across in this film as a deeply passionate, complex, and somehow timeless man who could have fit into any chapter of American history. --Tom Keogh Amazon.com essential video
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A Primary Source Document |
| A Lazy, Wasted Opportunity |
The tag-line for the movie is, "they changed the way campaigns are won." "They," in this statement, refers to lead campaign strategist, James Carville, and campaign communications director George Stephanopoulos. The statement derives from one that Carville is seen making late in the film. He tells his staff that "we changed how campaigns are run."
Now, if the movie was about how Carville and Stephanopoulos changed how American election campaigns are run, that would be terrifically interesting story, documenting a significant development. Yet, the movie is merely the footage that was shot, edited together with shots of newspaper headlines that provide the timeline, the continuity. There is not even the slightest attempt to say that up until that point, campaigns were run this way, but Carville and Stephanopoulos ran things differently, and the changes they have made have been adopted by other campaign teams.
I find it telling that, at the beginning of the DVD playback, the film makers comment on their work, and one of them describes how, at the outset, they were shooting proceedings and happened to focus on Carville because he was the most interesting character in the room, and it was only later that they learned he was the most senior campaign staffer in the room. That shows how little thought and research preceded the filming.
June 6, 2008
| Good Inside Look |
June 1, 2008
| Inside the Clinton war machine |
| "Brilliant" |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





