(part of the plot revealed)
160 years ago, on the land stained with the blood of the Indians, the tribal leader Tecumseh severely cursed: Harrison who slaughtered the Indians Is about to die. From today, every 20 years, an American president will not be able to leave the White House. So from Harrison, doom began to lead to those hapless presidents who just caught up with the time, Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, Harding, Roosevelt, Kennedy, Reagan, except for Reagan who escaped by chance, none of the people in front were spared. And 20 years later, it was Bush Jr. who had caught up in this cycle since he took office.
Channel 4 of the UK, which is good at producing pseudo-documentaries, used this legend as the basis, combined with the Bush administration's governance policy and the US foreign policy, gave full play to its imagination, and used rigorous reasoning and assumptions to fabricate the 2007 Bush assassination incident during the speech. From the outside, it seems that it is a meaningless spoof movie "low style" (partly in American), but in essence, "DOAP" has amazing insight and forward-looking, compared with , It is even more serious and rigorous than Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 911". In fact, we can't see anything more novel and unimaginable in the film. Every clue follows the usual American approach when dealing with major events. The voice-over of the Arab woman in the opening said: "When I heard this terrible news, I prayed in my heart, Lord, don't be a Muslim." This hugely informative sentence sharply pointed out the embarrassment that the United States is in. In the current situation, revenge is a double-edged sword. The shame of 9/11 must be washed away by the blood of the people of Afghanistan and Iraq. On the other hand, the hatred of the invaded and slaughtered nations will inevitably turn into a sword of vengeance and plunge into the heart of the enemy. When Muslims who had been oppressed by the dictatorship came to the United States, they did not get more freedom. On the contrary, they placed themselves in a whirlpool of hatred.
In the wars that have been fought for faith since ancient times, almost no one truly holds the truth in my hands.
The irony is that after Bush's death, investigators took it for granted that they locked the target on a Syrian. The reason was simple: he was a Muslim, and he was trained at the base. These were enough. In countries where there are no more democracies, the power of so-called democracy is extremely terrifying. The conviction of the jury represents the value trend of the entire country. When someone criticizes the directionality of its ideology, all unreasonable responses are fatalistic inevitable. From the perspective of the American people, Michael Moore exposed the sordidness of the Bush family and the Laden family, while the British Gabriel Range seemed to be more merciless. He made a big impact on the entire American society. At least he played a role of two or two. I still remember that at the beginning of 9/11, some Americans threw wine bottles on Muslim doors and cursed maliciously. The national ideology often influences the direction of the country. Bush said that he is a clown or a war madman. To put it bluntly, he is only given an opportunity. Who will grant the opportunity? When their own children are killed in battle, angry people certainly have the right to shoot a bullet into Bush’s head, and they must also pay for their fanaticism. That is, leave the last bullet to yourself.
The self-determination of black fathers was a self-examination by the British instead of the Americans, or at the same time they also examined themselves. This is more deafening than the assassination of Bush itself. The scary thing about the film is that it lets you know that all you are experiencing now point to the results of October 19, 2007. What it does is just telling it in advance.
The impact of this serious spoof film should not be less than the impact of "Fahrenheit 9/11". The two films basically point out the past and future of the United States.
View more about Death of a President reviews