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American Dreamz
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Directed by Paul Weitz.
The President of the United States (Dennis Quaid) seems to be having a nervous breakdown after picking up a newspaper for the first time in four years, and when his Chief of Staff (Willem Dafoe) determines to get the Commander in Chief out of his pajamas and back into the spotlight, the stage is set for a talent contest that the nation will never forget. To President Staton, the world is a fairly black-and-white place, but a glance at the daily headlines on the eve of his reelection leaves the most powerful man in the free world shaken to the very core. Now determined to read as much as possible in order to best assess the opinions of the general public, President Staton locks himself away and obsessively begins taking in as much information as humanly possible. With concern about the President's mental health soon taking precedence over all other issues in the White House, his nervous Chief of Staff attempts to get the Commander in Chief back in the public eye by booking him as a guest judge on television's top-rated talent show, "American Dreamz." A weekly ratings juggernaut hosted by self-loathing celebrity Martin Tweed (Hugh Grant), "American Dreamz" cashes in on the dominant culture of celebrity by affording everyday Americans the opportunity to be catapulted into stardom. As "American Dreamz" hopefuls Sally (Mandy Moore) and Omer (Sam Golzari) progress to the final round and the President takes his seat on the panel, an unexpected revelation about one of the finalists promises to make this season finale the biggest ratings grabber in television history. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 American Dreamz (2006)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Director: Paul WeitzReleased: April 21, 2006 *****Six years too late and too smarmy for it's own good, American Dreamz tells the story of an American Idol-type singing competition in conjunction with a parody of President Bush, mixed together with moments from the Iraq War in a final product so heinous and broadly pandering it's nearly unwatchable. Hugh Grant and Mandy Moore star as producer/host Martin Tweed and Kelly Clarkson-clone Sally Kendoo, respectively. As Sally catches the eye of "Tweedy," her army boyfriend returns to America after a laughable injury. Meanwhile, terrorists try to kill the president (Dennis Quaid) by planting a contestant on the show...and the president figures out he needs to think and not simply be a puppet.What a dismal piece of crap. The script seems to want to poke fun at any number of American foibles: Bush, Cheney, Iraq, terrorism, television production, American Idol...even film "logic" (looking through keyholes, for instance) with no real rhym ... " [More]
filmafic06filmafic06 unnecessary
by filmafic06 in filmafic06 Blog
is neutral about it.
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"Entertaining, but the whole analysis of TV as opiate of the masses has been done better in the likes of "Network." " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe American Dreamz - Charlie's Party
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Do you think American Idol is ridiculous? How about our president? American Dreamz is hoping that, in its own words, both make you “want to projectile-vomit.” Well, maybe you don’t have to feel that strongly about the TV show. After all, even if you believe AI is the epitome of the cookie-cutter mediocrity our screwed-up culture seems to embrace, you still watch it, right? If you didn’t, you wouldn’t get any of Weitz’s jokes. Writer-director Paul Weitz, who brought us 2002’s About a Boy and 2004’s In Good Company, does a fine job drawing up Martin Tweed (Hugh Grant), a transparently Simon Cowell–ish television personality who lords it over a familiar-looking show called American Dreamz. After heartfelt performances, Tweed says things to Dreamz contestants—many of whom mimic former Idol players—such as “Cindy, I’ve felt this way before. And it was just before I wanted to kill myself.& ... " [More]
 



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