If you've been to the movies this year, chances are, you've seen Ryan Gosling. In Ides of March, co-starring, written and directed by George Clooney, Gosling plays 30-year-old Stephen Meyers. Stephen is one of Governor Mike Morris' (Clooney) chief presidential campaign staff members.
A political movie called the Ides of March… this has betrayal written all over it.
What unites Stephen and Morris are their optimism. Morris is a democrat candidate - he's pro-choice and pro-gay marriage. He calls loudly for alternative energy sources and is an atheist. He's also committed to running a clean race. No dirty ads or tactics, no selling cabinet seats. A race of integrity.And that's what inspires Stephen. We learn that Stephen is something of a prodigy. Already recognized as one of the best in the country, he's had offers from many candidates. But he doggedly supports Morris because he believes in Morris.
Stephen's and Morris' idealism comes to a head in the Ohio caucus.*
Meanwhile, Stephen takes a secret meeting with Pullman's campaign manager, Tom Duffy (Paul Giamatti). Duffy offers Stephen a job on his campaign, but Stephen refuses outright, reasserting his total faith in Morris.
Duffy warns Stephen that his optimism is naïve. He'll eventually end up corrupt and jaded, just like the rest of them.
Meanwhile, Morris' campaign manager (and Stephen's boss) Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is trying to negotiate the support of a Senator Thompson for Morris. Thompson wants a cabinet position in return for the votes he can guarantee. Morris is still unwilling.
Both Stephen and Morris see these compromises as small sacrifices they must make to get Morris in office. Ideals can't be implemented if you're not in office.
Stephen goes to Duffy to accept his job. Duffy politely refuses at first, but when Stephen presses him, Duffy finally confesses that he played Stephen. Stephen's skill made him a threat, and Duffy knew that Zara would fire him just for meeting with Duffy. So Duffy arranged a meeting and took Stephen out of the equation all together.
Stephen is left abandoned and friendless, facing a career that seems over before it really began.
Morris' acquiescence is the last step in both men's journey to the bottom. Duffy's prophecy turns out to be eerily accurate: Morris has become the candidate he swore he never would. And Stephen is supporting a man he no longer believes in, running a corrupt, compromised campaign.
Ides of March is a brutal critique of our political system.
Everyone wonders why there're no honest politicians. According to the film, it's because principles and ideals won't get you elected. If you want the office, you have to play the game. And the game is backdoor deals and compromise.We wonder why nothing changes in our country? Ides of March points to the system itself. It's broken, poisoned. And it breaks and poisons anyone who joins it, anyone who participates in it. In that sense, the American political system betrays us all.
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