Similar Artists:
- Genres: Celtic
- Instrument: Guitar, Accordion, Vocals Representative Album: "Songs from the Sailing Barges"
| Artist: Bob Roberts |
Similar Artists:
| Wikipedia: Bob Roberts |
| Bob Roberts | |
Bob Roberts film poster |
|
| Directed by | Tim Robbins |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Forrest Murray |
| Written by | Tim Robbins |
| Starring | Tim Robbins Giancarlo Esposito Fred Ward Alan Rickman Ray Wise Brian Murray Gore Vidal Rebecca Jenkins Tom Atkins Jack Black |
| Music by | David Robbins |
| Editing by | Lisa Zeno Churgin |
| Studio | Live Entertainment Miramax Films Working Title Films |
| Distributed by | Paramount/Miramax (USA theatrical) PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (non-USA) Live Entertainment (1994 USA video) Artisan Entertainment (2001 USA DVD) Lions Gate Entertainment (current USA DVD distributor) |
| Running time | 102 min |
| Language | English |
Bob Roberts is a 1992 film written and directed by Tim Robbins. It is a satirical mockumentary, chronicling the rise of Bob Roberts, a conservative politician who is a candidate for an upcoming United States Senate election. Roberts is well financed, due mainly to past business dealings, and is well known for his music, which presents conservative ideas as rebellious. The film suggests that shady deals, hypocrisy and deceit are mainstays of U.S. politics.
The film is based on a short segment, also named Bob Roberts and featuring the same character, that Robbins did for the television sketch comedy program Saturday Night Live on December 13, 1986, and is the first film in which Robbins takes on the role of director.
Contents |
Bob Roberts takes place in Pennsylvania during the Gulf War. It depicts a fictitious senatorial race between conservative folk singer, Bob Roberts (Tim Robbins) and the incumbent Democrat, Brickley Paiste (Gore Vidal). The film is shot through the perspective of Terry Manchester (Brian Murray), a British documentary filmmaker who is following the Roberts campaign. Through his lens we see Roberts travel across the state, performing songs about drug users, lazy people and the triumph of traditional family values over the rebelliousness of the 1960s. As the campaign continues, Paiste remains in the lead until a scandal arises involving him and a young woman who was seen emerging from a car with him. Paiste claims that she was a friend of his granddaughter who he was driving home, but he cannot shake the accusations.
Throughout the campaign the reporter Bugs Raplin[1] (Giancarlo Esposito) attempts to use the documentary being made about Roberts as a way to expose him to the public as a fraud. Raplin claims that Roberts’ anti-drug charity, Broken Dove, is connected to an old Central Intelligence Agency drug trafficking scheme. As the election approaches, Roberts is asked to appear on a network’s sketch comedy show. When Roberts announces that he will not be playing the song he had originally proposed, a dispute breaks out between the cast and producers of the show. This new song turns out to be nothing more than a thinly veiled campaign endorsement, and an angry staff member of the network pulls the plug mid-performance. As Roberts is leaving the studio, he is shot by a would-be assassin. Raplin, who has been causing problems for the campaign, is initially linked to the shooting, but he is later cleared when it is found that due to constrictive palsy in his right hand he physically could not have fired the gun. Following the incident, Raplin contests that Roberts was never actually shot and that the gun was fired into the ground.
The campaign is boosted by public support following the assassination attempt, and Roberts wins the election with 52 percent of the vote. Although Roberts claims that his wounds have left him paralysed fom the waist down, he is seen tapping his feet at a celebration party. While Terry Manchester is interviewing Roberts’ supporters outside the new Senator’s hotel, a boy runs up shouting, ‘He’s dead, he’s dead, they got him!’ When Manchester asks him what he's talking about, the boy shouts, ‘Bugs Raplin! He’s dead! They got him!’ A joyful celebration breaks out among Roberts’ supporters, the shot changes to an image of his hotel room, and a shadow walks past the window before the lights go out. The film ends with a radio news report about Raplin’s death at the hands of a right-wing fanatic and a shot of Manchester standing in the Jefferson Memorial, looking at the words, "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man," inscribed there.
The style of Bob Roberts is drawn from a number of real and mock documentaries, and its shots are crafted to create this effect, in many cases through the use of hand-held cameras. Not only does Roberts’ character draw from 60’s era iconography of Bob Dylan, it also contains scenes inspired by the 1967 documentary, Don't Look Back, made about the singer, employing a similar (although consciously constructed) cinema verité style[2][3]. The film also draws from the mock-documentary This Is Spinal Tap (Rob Reiner, 1984) which Robbins states to be a favorite film of his[4], and directly references this during the scene in which Roberts gets lost in an auditorium attempting to find the stage before his performance. Another technique which Robbins takes from Reiner is the use of improvisation, which he encouraged the cast to use. In the case of Gore Vidal’s character, the majority of the lines were not scripted, and instead Vidal based his role upon his own political beliefs, and his real life positions on many of the fictional election topics.[5][6] Robbins borrows from a wide range of films and historical campaign events.
While critics and audiences have responded to this film by connecting Roberts’ character to various political figures, such as George H. W. Bush and Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, Robbins has said that the film related more to the political system in general than any specific politician.[7] In the film Robbins does not clearly identify either candidate's partisan allegiance (although we do see Senator Paiste identified on TV as a Democrat, so viewers are left to assume that Roberts is almost definitely a Republican). Much of Robbins' commentary is addressed at the role of the media in election campaigns.[8] Some have critiqued Robbins for his approach toward political satire, stating that his references to Reagan-era politics and the rebelliousness of the 1960’s are simply too anachronistic in the context of the 1990s,[9][10] but others have praised it for framing political commentary as a Hollywood comedy.[11]
| Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (July 2007) |
|
|||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Steve Guttenberg: Saturday Night Live (TV Episode) (1986 Comedy TV Episode) | |
| Bob Roberts (1992 Comedy Film) | |
| Deemus (1978 Album by Barrett Deems) |
| Is Debra Roberts related to Robin Roberts who is also an ABC person? Read answer... | |
| Where are the children of Richard and Patti Roberts from Oral Roberts Ministry? Read answer... | |
| TV anchor John Roberts got his start in Canada as JD Roberts Doing what? Read answer... |
| The bob roberts link is not accurate to the musician who played on Deemus and other jazz recordings he was my dad and played with notable acts like louie prima cso and billie holliday? | |
| Is Robin roberts related to sallie anne roberts? | |
| Where is Patty Roberts - exwife of Richard Roberts? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bob Roberts". Read more |
Mentioned in