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Controversial "Courting Condi" Cancelled By Cronies

 

The 2008 election year may have ended, but Bush & Co. aren't splayed out on the front steps of 1600 Pennsylvania, waiting for the Obamas to roll in. 

Condoleezza Rice, for one, hasn't resorted to phoning it in. She shows up for work every day in classy Saks, brushes the Katrina victims aside, and strides through the front gate to the White House, where her boss, her hero, awaits with a non-alcoholic beer and a bag of pretzels. Together, they are Nixon and Kissinger, circa 1974, with the fireplace ablaze and the rocks in a glass of whiskey clattering back and forth, hashing out their escape plan.

Part of that plan is to ensure their legacy and making sure, for starters, that any revealing documentary films are dead in the water before they're even released...

We're not sure we buy the filmmakers claim that Karl Rove asked the Discovery Company to rescind its promise to fund the film or that the State Department had their hotel rooms bugged, but it may be true friends of or even Condoleezza Rice herself asked that Stanford University cancel an advance screening of "Courting Condi," a documentary following an actor-musician's quest to at least go on a date with Madame Secretary.

The Stanford Film Society (SFS) today cancelled a screening of a controversial documentary about Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and a debate on whether Stanford University should welcome her back to its faculty when she leaves office in 2009. 

The film's director, Sebastian Doggart stated: "This has all the hallmarks of Rice's cronies scaring the Stanford Film Society into pulling the screening." 

The movie, Courting Condi, is a documentary about Condoleezza Rice, charting her life and career from her birth in Alabama, through her time as Provost at Stanford, to her tenure as Secretary of State. Contributors include close friends of Rice, her top biographers Marcus Mabry and Glenn Kessler, and senior Republican politicians such as Brent Scowcroft and Lawrence Wilkerson... [it] is due for general release in February 2009.

We'd like to add that the film also co-stars Adrian Grenier and Steve Earle's music, plus its lead by the kid (now grown) who played Macaulay Culkin's demented brother in Home Alone.

The SFS at first offered no explanation for the cancelation; after some prying, the President claimed a Professor had asked to use the space and his agenda took priority. But the SFS added that they didn't think the post-screening debate would be balanced and that that fear factored in their decision. Doggart chalks all this up to a, well, not-so-vast right-wing conspiracy:

"Our documentary has seen these tactics of obstruction and intimidation before," Doggart states. "Eighteen months ago, Discovery committed to financing $600,000 for the movie. One week before shooting, they pulled out. We subsequently learned that Karl Rove found out about the deal and advised the CEO of Discovery it would be bad for their 'good relations with government' to proceed. Discovery pulled out the next day, leading to legal wrangling and a final settlement of a $150,000 'kill loan' from Discovery, and forcing us to make the film on a shoestring." 

Doggart continues: "The obstructive measures got worse. Her supporters did all they could to stop us securing archive materials of Rice's time at both Denver University and Stanford.  And then her agents raided our inn when we were filming in Washington DC."

Here's the film's trailer. Tell me-- is this a documentary or more likely a mockumentary?

Via Courting Condi.

 

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Comments ( 3 )

Nov 23 08 at 11:14 pm
EmilyFarris

Ha, BF! I was there when they were filming some of these scenes? Did you notice that :35 and 1:33 and 1:53 were shot at WORD? (wordbrooklyn.com)

I blogged about this way back when: https://hooksexup.com/CS/blogs/scanner/archive/2008/01/02/is-condoleezza-...

P.S. That fat guy totally fell asleep in the rocker in the kids section the second they wrapped shooting.

Nov 25 08 at 4:40 pm
Anonymous

This is utterly ridiculous! The screening was not cancelled for censorship reasons. I doubt Rice's people even knew about it. Everything I've heard has pointed to the idea that this filmmaker is a pain in the ass to deal with, and the Stanford students used the unavailability of the space to cut ties with him. Using censorship claims as a bullying tactic to push your own personal agenda won't work with Stanford students.

Nov 29 08 at 2:18 pm
Anonymous

What works with Stanford students is being able to make up our own mind. The Film Society has refused to re-schedule the screening, making a mockery of its initial claim that they canceled the film for "logistical reasons". Sadly, most filmmakers can be a a pain in the ass, but that is no excuse to cancel a screening of an award-winning film about a subject that matters to everyone at Stanford

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