{"id":9153,"date":"2010-09-18T19:04:53","date_gmt":"2010-09-18T18:04:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=9153"},"modified":"2010-09-18T19:04:53","modified_gmt":"2010-09-18T18:04:53","slug":"the-special-relationship-hbo-bbc-tony-blair-bill-clinton","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2010\/09\/18\/the-special-relationship-hbo-bbc-tony-blair-bill-clinton\/","title":{"rendered":"The Special Relationship"},"content":{"rendered":"
The third film to explore the career of Tony Blair<\/a> is a well staged drama about his political\u00a0relationship with Bill Clinton<\/a>.<\/p>\n Screenwriter Peter Morgan<\/a> previously dramatised key periods in the career of the former British Prime Minister in The Deal<\/a> (2003) and The Queen<\/a> (2006), both of which were directed by Stephen Frears<\/a>.<\/p>\n The latest film charts Blair\u2019s relations with Clinton in the 1990s as he sought to form an alliance with a political soul mate who could package \u2018third-way\u2019 liberal politics to an electorate that had fallen for Thatcher and Regan.<\/p>\n The bulk of it deals with Blair (Michael Sheen) and Clinton (Dennis Quaid) debating \u00a0various issues in the late 1990s, whilst Cherie Blair (Helen McCrory) and Hilary Clinton (Hope Davis) look on and provide commentary on this transatlantic relationship.<\/p>\n Sheen can now do Blair blindfolded, so it is no surprise that he gives a convincing portrayal of the period when the former PM began to become enamoured with power and military intervention.<\/p>\n Quaid offers an impressive take on Clinton, which goes beyond surface mannerisms to suggest that, for all his flaws, he was a shrewd observer of political minefields.<\/p>\n Davis also manages to convey the cadences and mannerisms of Hilary Clinton with enough skill and class to suggest that she could have her own biopic.<\/p>\n But aside from offering accurate depictions of famous politicians, what is this film actually saying?<\/p>\n Essentially, it is a cautionary tale written from a post-Iraq perspective.<\/p>\n The energetic Blair, in his rush to war, is meant to mirror the later version that joined forces with George W Bush<\/a> for the war which would ultimately wreck his legacy.<\/p>\n Although this means there is plenty of dramatic irony, often it feels a bit too cute. Clinton\u2019s soothsaying speeches imbue him with an improbable amount of foresight and the script\u2019s episodic nature means it occasionally feels like a current affairs checklist.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
<\/a>The two major issues at this time were the Monica Lewinsky scandal<\/a> which engulfed Clinton’s presidency and the Kosovo conflict<\/a> in which Blair pressed his politically weakened US ally into military intervention.<\/p>\n