When Nostalgia Works
Emilio Estevez's sincere tribute to RFK is as galvanizing in its own way
as Altman's cynical Nashville

Bobby
BOBBY |
Directed and Written by Emilio Estevez | With Harry Belafonte, Joy Bryant, Nick Cannon, Estevez, Laurence
Fishburne, Anthony Hopkins, Helen Hunt, Joshua Jackson, Lindsay Lohan,
William H. Macy, Demi Moore, Freddy Rodriguez, Martin Sheen, Christian
Slater, Sharon Stone, and Jacob Vargas
By Jonathan Rosenbaum
November 24, 2006
I'M AUTOMATICALLY SUSPICIOUS of a movie whose premise is that Bobby
Kennedy's campaign for the presidency may have been the last chance this
country had to save itself. For one thing, Kennedy was running in the
Democratic primary against Eugene McCarthy, who was much more outspoken
about the Vietnam war and much more committed to withdrawing U.S. troops.
I'm also wary of an attempt to drape Kennedy's assassination in nostalgia
for the 60s as a way to reflect on the present. But Emilio Estevez's
Bobby, set in LA's Ambassador Hotel on the day Kennedy was shot,
June 5, 1968, is so keenly felt and so deeply imagined I couldn't help but
be moved, even grateful for its bleeding-heart nostalgia -- which winds up
feeling rather up-to-date. I'm troubled only that Estevez minimizes or
omits aspects of Kennedy's life that don't fit the idealistic image, such
as his early work for Roy Cohn, chief counsel to Joseph McCarthy.
Estevez unabashedly honors old-fashioned moral and humanist convictions.
An early allusion in his dialogue to Grand Hotel suggests that he's
also honoring an old-fashioned kind of hokey filmmaking. And he honors both
with polish and professionalism.
The film's characters can be divided into three basic categories. The
largest is the hotel employees: busboys (Freddy Rodriguez and Jacob
Vargas), chef (Laurence Fishburne), food supervisor (Christian Slater),
manager (William H. Macy), beautician (Sharon Stone), switchboard operators
(Heather Graham and Joy Bryant), and a retired doorman (Anthony Hopkins)
who still likes to hang out in the lobby playing chess with an old friend
(Harry Belafonte). Then there are the hotel guests: a high school student
(Lindsay Lohan) marrying a friend (Elijah Wood) to keep him from getting
drafted, an alcoholic vocalist (Demi Moore) performing at the adjoining
Cocoanut Grove and her put-upon husband (Estevez), a wealthy depressive
(Martin Sheen) and his insecure wife (Helen Hunt), and a hippie drug dealer
(Ashton Kutcher) who gives LSD to a couple of would-be Democratic Party
volunteers (Brian Geraghty and Shia LaBeouf), occasioning one of the
funnier (if somewhat overextended) subplots. Finally there are the people
connected to the Democratic rally being planned at the hotel, including an
angry black activist (Nick Cannon) and a Czech reporter who wants to
interview Kennedy (Svetlana Metkina).
This broad cross section requires Estevez to juggle many ethnic, racial,
and class issues, and he does so deftly. He also shows a flair for using a
star-filled cast with lightness and grace -- nobody's allowed to take over
the movie, yet everyone gets a chance to shine. (Stone critically
inspecting herself in a mirror is alone worth the price of admission.)
After seeing this movie's premiere at the Venice film festival I
defended its guts and intelligence to a French critic who described it as
"sub-Altman." I see it as "sur-Altman," especially if compared to
Nashville, another film with 20-odd characters that concludes with a
cataclysmic and seemingly unmotivated assassination. Despite its reputation
as an exuberant classic, Nashville knows zip and cares even less
about country music or the city of Nashville (where it was shot) -- which
doesn't prevent it from heaping scorn on both. It even ridicules a dowager
who tearfully reminisces about John and Bobby Kennedy, and it shamelessly
encourages viewers to share its contempt for the rubes. The relentless
cynicism that Nashville brandishes as proof of its hipness
ultimately gives way to glib, high-flown rhetoric in the climactic repeated
shots of an American flag filling the screen while a nihilistic
pseudocountry anthem, "It Don't Worry Me," builds to a crescendo, asserting
the concert audience's unembarrassed cluelessness.
In comparison, Bobby, which has a few plot twists that recall
Altman, is bound to seem a little square and flat-footed, especially when
it delivers its virtually antithetical message. But its sincerity adds up
to much more than good intentions. Its equivalent of Altman's concluding
song is an offscreen speech Kennedy made about senseless violence and
assassinations, including that of Martin Luther King Jr. The speech is
allowed to play at length following Kennedy's own assassination -- a nervy
move that's every bit as masterful and emotionally galvanizing as Altman's
ending. But Altman's use of the American flag to dominate
Nashville's ending is a form of aesthetic bullying, an attempt to
stop us from thinking too hard about his nihilistic conclusions. Estevez
also uses an American flag -- but only briefly, as a detail in a graceful
shot looking down at the hotel's grounds. The shot functions as a coda and
asks us to think about our own larger priorities. 
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