The Ides of March

All’s fair in love and politics. Except when it isn’t

The Ides of March

(C) 2011 Ides Film Holdings, LLC

Director: George Clooney
Starring: Ryan Gosling, George Clooney, Philip Seymour Hoffman
Time Out rating:
Japanese title: Super Tuesday

George Clooney’s fourth film as a director takes us to territory not unexpected of the man: behind the scenes of a modern American political campaign. Clooney acts too, although his role as Governor Morris, an Obama-lite politician striving to win a primary that will set him on the road to the White House, is mostly ceremonial, decorative even, but only because the story (adapted by Clooney and others from a Beau Willimon play) demands it. The real drama lies with the puppeteers: Morris’s press spokesman Stephen (Ryan Gosling) is being wooed by a rival campaign manager (Paul Giamatti), while a hungry intern (Evan Rachel Wood) is making eyes at Stephen over the photocopier.

The points made about politics by The Ides of March are valid, if obvious: shit goes on behind the scenes and people in the game are shits. Who knew? Yet it’s good on the value of knowledge in political circles – and how that knowledge can be traded. There’s a dullness to the film’s edges that means it’s not cutting enough, and a late lunge for noir stylings is weak, even if all involved do their best to stress the horrible gulf between public ideals and private ambition.

The Ides of March opens nationwide on March 31



By Dave Calhoun
Please note: All information is correct at the time of writing but is subject to change without notice.

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