Dick


Posted on Mar 13, 2008 By Julia Szabo

Sony Pictures, 1999, 94 minutes - add this title to your Netflix queue

Cinematic Dog connoisseurs know a movie co-starring a canine isn't necessarily kiddie fare. It follows that a comedy about two teenage girls can be serious fun for adults who take their humor dark.  

This is one smart, sophisticated satire of politics and the media - not just Watergate. Never mind the fact that the real identity of "Deep Throat" was recently revealed, and he was a man. In reel time, this movie points the finger at two unusual suspects: a pair of D.C. teens, Arlene (Michelle Williams) and Betsy (Kirsten Dunst), who inadvertently run into G. Gordon Liddy in the Watergate Complex (where Arlene lives with her mom). Later, on a class trip to the White House, the girls get appointed Presidential dog-walkers and "Secret Youth Advisors" by Richard Nixon (a convincing Dan Hedaya), and ultimately wind up supplying a couple of comically competitive Washington Post reporters named Woodward and Bernstein with the information they need to make their mark on American history.  

When Betsy reports to the President's secretary that "Checkers pooped," she's corrected with, "The President's dog doesn't poop, he does his business." The political animal the girls are put in charge of is a German Shorthaired Pointer called Checkers. In actual fact, as everybody knows, Checkers was the name of the Nixon family's 1950s-era Cocker Spaniel, but by the early 70s, the time the movie portrays, Nixon's best friend was an Irish Setter named King Timahoe. All this deliberate dog-fuscation only makes the story more amusingly surreal.  

As unlikely as all this sounds, it's actually a very Swiftian-sensible - and enormously likable - story. FetchDog friend Sheryl Longin, who shares screenwriting credit with the movie's director Andrew Fleming, deserves a medal for astutely nailing the infatuation at the heart of any constituent's political passion - infatuation that's very timely now, in light of Barack Obama's rock-star status among young voters. A smitten Arlene, as googly-eyed as Monica Lewinsky, dismantles her bedroom-wall shrine to teen idol Bobby Sherman and replaces it with a mural tribute to her new love: Tricky Dick. We also get a very creative - and hilarious - explanation for those 18 and a half minutes of missing audiotape.

The movie's core message is one we've been hearing a lot lately: Youth can indeed pave the way for monumental change (whether or not it knows exactly what it's doing).


Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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