A Perfect Candidate


1h 44m 1996
A Perfect Candidate

Brief Synopsis

Mudslinging highlights Oliver North's campaign for the Senate.

Film Details

Also Known As
Perfect Candidate
MPAA Rating
Genre
Documentary
Political
Release Date
1996
Distribution Company
Seventh Art Releasing

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 44m

Synopsis

In addition to chronicling the mud-soaked, ideologically polarized face-off between Lt. Col. Oliver North, the Iran-Contra martyr/hero, and Senator Charles Robb, the peccadillo-plagued New Democrat, during the 1994 Virginia Senate race, this feature documentary follows the more personal journeys of chief North strategist Mark Goodin and Washington Post correspondent Don Baker. Goodin, embittered by a career in the trenches of Republican politics, is driven to win at all costs, but plagued by doubts that his brand of hard-ball campaigning may be ruining the country. The wry and cynical Baker, on the other hand, is a lifetime liberal who feels betrayed by politician after politician, but who finds hope for American democracy coming from a most unexpected quarter. Like the people of Virginia struggling to choose between North and Robb, like voters across America this election year, both Goodin and Baker are chasing the elusive hope of democracy--the search for a perfect candidate.

Film Details

Also Known As
Perfect Candidate
MPAA Rating
Genre
Documentary
Political
Release Date
1996
Distribution Company
Seventh Art Releasing

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 44m

Articles

A Perfect Candidate


"Oliver North for Senate? You don't know the half of it..." read the tagline for directors R.J. Cutler and David Van Taylor's 1996 documentary A Perfect Candidate , chronicling the 1994 Virginia senate campaign that pitted Democratic incumbent and former governor, Chuck Robb, against Republican Iran-Contra figure, Oliver North.

Although the film concerns itself with North's failed campaign, the "stars" are Washington Post political reporter Don Baker, who doubts North's sincerity and is unable to understand why he is so popular, and North's campaign strategist Mark Goodin, whose job is to convince the public that North is the "perfect candidate," but later expresses his own doubts about what he's supposed to stand for. "We are obsessed with getting people elected, and we are obsessed with the show. So we provide daily entertainment. What we are not providing is serious solutions to what's going on in the country. Not us, not Chuck, not Clinton, not Bush - not anybody."

To the filmmakers' credit, neither man is given a clear advantage - because neither is a perfect, squeaky clean candidate; North lied to Congress during the Iran-Contra hearings investigating secret arms deals by the Reagan Administration, and is shown lying to school kids about having lied, while Robb had lied about his cocaine use and affair with a teenage girl, leading one voter to complain that choosing between the two candidates was like deciding whether to have "the flu or the mumps. The real question is when we'll find a cure for what's wrong with American politics." The film features appearances by characters as diverse as Watergate plotter G. Gordon Liddy, future president Bill Clinton and then Virginia governor Douglas Wilder.

Cutler and Taylor, who had also made the Academy Award-nominated The War Room (1994), shot A Perfect Candidate in locations around Washington D.C. and Virginia. The North campaign had given the filmmakers surprisingly close access to their strategy sessions, knowing that the film would not be released until well after the election.

A Perfect Candidate was praised by critics like Ron Weiskind, who wrote that the film anticipated "Baker's quest and Goodin's doubt, mixed with the personal capital he invests in the ultimately unsuccessful North campaign, provide an unexpected emotional and philosophical poignancy that raises A Perfect Candidate to a higher level." Chris Hicks pointed out the difficulties any filmmaker would have creating a film about an event whose outcome was already known. "So the journey is the thing. And in A Perfect Candidate, it's quite a revealing, amusing and ultimately dispiriting trip.

SOURCES:

Chapman, Roger and Ciment, James Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints and Voices

Fuchs, Cynthia "Terrific Documentary 'A Perfect Candidate' at Stranger Than Fiction 12 June" Popmatters June 12

Hicks, Chris "A Disturbing Look at US Politics" The Deseret News 6 Sep 96. McEnteer, James Shooting the Truth: The Rise of American Political Documentaries Weiskind, Ron "Oliver's Army: 'Perfect Candidate' charts Senate race" Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 18 Oct 96

By Lorraine LoBianco
A Perfect Candidate

A Perfect Candidate

"Oliver North for Senate? You don't know the half of it..." read the tagline for directors R.J. Cutler and David Van Taylor's 1996 documentary A Perfect Candidate , chronicling the 1994 Virginia senate campaign that pitted Democratic incumbent and former governor, Chuck Robb, against Republican Iran-Contra figure, Oliver North. Although the film concerns itself with North's failed campaign, the "stars" are Washington Post political reporter Don Baker, who doubts North's sincerity and is unable to understand why he is so popular, and North's campaign strategist Mark Goodin, whose job is to convince the public that North is the "perfect candidate," but later expresses his own doubts about what he's supposed to stand for. "We are obsessed with getting people elected, and we are obsessed with the show. So we provide daily entertainment. What we are not providing is serious solutions to what's going on in the country. Not us, not Chuck, not Clinton, not Bush - not anybody." To the filmmakers' credit, neither man is given a clear advantage - because neither is a perfect, squeaky clean candidate; North lied to Congress during the Iran-Contra hearings investigating secret arms deals by the Reagan Administration, and is shown lying to school kids about having lied, while Robb had lied about his cocaine use and affair with a teenage girl, leading one voter to complain that choosing between the two candidates was like deciding whether to have "the flu or the mumps. The real question is when we'll find a cure for what's wrong with American politics." The film features appearances by characters as diverse as Watergate plotter G. Gordon Liddy, future president Bill Clinton and then Virginia governor Douglas Wilder. Cutler and Taylor, who had also made the Academy Award-nominated The War Room (1994), shot A Perfect Candidate in locations around Washington D.C. and Virginia. The North campaign had given the filmmakers surprisingly close access to their strategy sessions, knowing that the film would not be released until well after the election. A Perfect Candidate was praised by critics like Ron Weiskind, who wrote that the film anticipated "Baker's quest and Goodin's doubt, mixed with the personal capital he invests in the ultimately unsuccessful North campaign, provide an unexpected emotional and philosophical poignancy that raises A Perfect Candidate to a higher level." Chris Hicks pointed out the difficulties any filmmaker would have creating a film about an event whose outcome was already known. "So the journey is the thing. And in A Perfect Candidate, it's quite a revealing, amusing and ultimately dispiriting trip. SOURCES: Chapman, Roger and Ciment, James Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints and Voices Fuchs, Cynthia "Terrific Documentary 'A Perfect Candidate' at Stranger Than Fiction 12 June" Popmatters June 12 Hicks, Chris "A Disturbing Look at US Politics" The Deseret News 6 Sep 96. McEnteer, James Shooting the Truth: The Rise of American Political Documentaries Weiskind, Ron "Oliver's Army: 'Perfect Candidate' charts Senate race" Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 18 Oct 96 By Lorraine LoBianco

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States April 1996

Released in United States July 3, 1996

Released in United States June 1996

Released in United States October 1996

Released in United States on Video October 7, 1997

Released in United States Summer June 19, 1996

Shown at Los Angeles Independent Film Festival April 18-22, 1996.

Shown at Nantucket Film Festival June 19-23, 1996.

Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival October 4-20, 1996.

Broadcast in USA over PBS on "POV" series August 8, 1997.

Released in United States April 1996 (Shown at Los Angeles Independent Film Festival April 18-22, 1996.)

Released in United States June 1996 (Shown at Nantucket Film Festival June 19-23, 1996.)

Released in United States Summer June 19, 1996

Released in United States July 3, 1996 (Quad Cinema; New York City)

Released in United States October 1996 (Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival October 4-20, 1996.)

Released in United States on Video October 7, 1997