The Special Relationship

10/Aug/2010

Comments: 1 reader has left a comment

Double act: Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) and Bill Clinton (Dennis Quaid) in <I>The Special Relationship</I>. Double act: Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) and Bill Clinton (Dennis Quaid) in The Special Relationship.

PETER Morgan – the writer of 2008’s superb character-driven film Frost/Nixon – has turned the microscope to another meeting of egos, this time between US President Bill Clinton (Dennis Quaid) and energetic UK Prime Minister Tony Blair.

The Special Relationship examines the most complex Bill and Tony relationship to be found outside a cricket commentary box, as the singular vision and close personal friendship of the leaders is put to the test by domestic political forces and personal political goals.

Frost/Nixon’s Sheen reprises the Blair character he played in Morgan’s The Queen (2006) and made-for-television film The Deal (2003) and as usual, the talented actor does an incredible job of impersonation .

The other actors in the film’s central quartet (Tony and Cherie Blair, Bill and Hillary Clinton) bring more of their personalities to their characters rather than try to copy the originals.

Quaid is sometimes maligned for his choices of roles and his clunky performances, but his performance here should silence the doubters for some time at least.

The sympathetic treatment afforded to the main protagonists may rile some, but one of the film’s biggest strengths is the enormous amounts of empathy created for its characters.

Blair may come across as a hero idealist, but the film also sets up his future involvement with the Bush administration as folly.

The Special Relationship (M)

Directed by: Richard Loncraine
Starring: Michael Sheen, Dennis Quaid
Rating: Four stars
Reviewed by: Christian Wilkinson


Bookmark and Share

What everyone else is thinking

Tim Swinden

23/08/2010

As Kosovo reveals Blair believed in liberal intervention long before Bush, the latter having campaigned in 2000 against nation building. This renders the poodle slander against Blair not only childish but also historically illiterate.

Blair's conviction about freeing Iraq from Saddam's tyranny may be seen as folly by some, but others might not see it so. Certainly the Kurds would not have their freedom described as folly. If a stable, democratic Iraq emerges Blair and Bush will be seen as visionary liberators in a region that has known very little of that concept and those who opposed them as apologists for tyranny as political convenience.

Share your thoughts in 60 seconds!

Members : login to comment


 

Friday 18 May 2012

  • Min 8°C
  • Max 21°C

Saturday

  • 9 - 23°C

Sunday

  • 10 - 23°C

Most Popular Articles


community digital epaper link

Latest Competitions



Win a share in $20,000 of Coles groceries Go>:


driveway comp

Fuel up with Driveway Go>:



Win a double pass to Bel Ami  Go>:


Win a romantic getaway for two at Fremantle's finest!  Go>:


Win a double pass to the Good Food & Wine show Go>:


Win tickets to FRAGILE  Go>:



Featured Video Clips


2012 RAAF Pearce Air Show promo



Community Newspaper Group Photographer Jon Hewson goes for a spin in a P/C-9A Hawk to help promote the 2012 RAAF Pearce Air Show on May 19 and 20. Video, images and editing by Jon Hewson.



Circus performer Brenna Day



Circus performer Brenna Day talks about her career and upcoming performances in the Perth International Burlesque Festival. Video, images and editing by Matthew Poon.


See more videos 

Deliver our newspapers linkCommunityPix banner linkSolahart