Jessica Chastain John Lithgow Gugu
Mbitha-Raw Mark Stuhlberg Mark
Strong Alison Pitt Sam
Waterston Jake
Lacy
If you like exciting courtroom dramas that have
key relevance for our time, you will love Miss
Sloane and another captivating performance by Jessica Chastain. Miss Sloane is a Washington lobbyist
with the reputation of being the best in the city. She is more than intellectually sharp and in speaking her
mind, lets the facts roll off her tongue like automatic gunfire. [Pun intended, as she is lobbying for a
gun control law.] She is
unpredictable and usually many steps ahead of anyone else involved in an
issue. “Never be taken by
surprise”, she says, and “play your trump card after they play theirs.”
(A demonstration of which she uses brilliantly in the final moments of
the film.) She teaches her six or
so protégées maxims, tossing them out in rapid fire while working together on a
project.
To the screenwriter Jonathan Parera’s credit,
we get a bird’s eye view of the lobbying industry in Washington, D.C. and its
corruptive influence on Congress members.
Along with Chastain’s portrayal of Sloane, this is the most valuable
aspect of the film. Viewing
television coverage of the Lobbyist Jack Abramoff scandal in 2005 inspired
Parera to write the script about lobbying. Independently, Chastain read
Abramoff’s book in preparing for the role. She also interviewed female lobbyists to guide her in
portraying one of them. The
true-to-life quality of the film is likely a reflection of the Abramoff case
and the additional research by Parera and Chastain.
Unfortunately, Director John Madden has chosen
to use the ploy that seems to be a fad now in movie making, that of presenting
events out of order in time. Not only
does this distract us from following a complex set of events and the import of
Sloane’s rapid verbal output, it’s confusing for the viewer. I was frustrated in not being able to
process everything that is said by Sloane and her team. Jumping around in time one has to spend
a lot of attention on re-orienting.
Supporting cast deserve recognition for the
excellent roles they play in the drama.
Gugu Mbitha-Raw in particular, eloquently shows the sensitivity of her
character on one hand and a sharp investigator on the other. Mark Strong and Sam Waterston live up
to their fine reputations by playing CEOs of lobbying groups, along with their
staff members Mark Stuhlberg and Alison Pitt. Jake Lacy is perfect as a studly character available to
single women.
Winning is the mantra in Miss Sloane, which we see as an all-important motivator for all the
lobbyists, Sloane included.
Winning elections is key to survival for Congress members, hence their
vulnerability to pressures coming from all sides. But implicit in the story are questions about the costs
sometimes involved in winning, whether that should always be a primary goal,
and what happens to a person for whom that is a fundamental aim.
An exciting courtroom drama that has
timely relevance.
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