2012 television film directed by Jay Roach
Game Change
|
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Television release poster
|
Genre
| Political drama
|
---|
Based on
| |
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Written by
| Danny Strong
|
---|
Directed by
| Jay Roach
|
---|
Starring
| |
---|
Music by
| Theodore Shapiro
|
---|
Country of origin
| United States
|
---|
Original language
| English
|
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|
Executive producers
| |
---|
Producer
| Amy Sayres
|
---|
Cinematography
| Jim Denault
|
---|
Editor
| Lucia Zucchetti
|
---|
Running time
| 118 minutes
|
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Production companies
| |
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|
Network
| HBO
|
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Release
| March 10, 2012
(
2012-03-10
)
|
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Game Change
is a 2012 American
political drama
television film
based on events of the
2008 United States presidential election campaign
of
John McCain
, directed by
Jay Roach
and written by
Danny Strong
, based on the 2010
book of the same title
documenting the campaign by political journalists
Mark Halperin
and
John Heilemann
. The film stars
Julianne Moore
,
Woody Harrelson
, and
Ed Harris
, and focuses on the chapters about the selection and performance of
Governor of Alaska
Sarah Palin
(Moore) as
running mate
to
Senator
John McCain
(Harris) in the
presidential campaign
.
The plot features a 2010 interview of the campaign's senior strategist
Steve Schmidt
(Harrelson), using flashbacks to portray McCain and Palin during their ultimately unsuccessful campaign. The film aired on
HBO
on March 10, 2012. It was well received by critics, with Moore's portrayal of Palin garnering praise. Schmidt praised the film, while Palin and McCain both stated they had no intention of seeing it.
[1]
Alessandra Stanley of
The New York Times
described Moore's depiction of Palin as "a sharp-edged but not unsympathetic portrait of a flawed heroine, colored more in pity than in admiration."
[2]
Game Change
has earned many awards, including a
Critics' Choice Television Award
, a
Directors Guild of America Award
, a
Golden Nymph Award
, three
Golden Globe Awards
, a
Producers Guild of America Award
, five
Primetime Emmy Awards
, and a
Writers Guild of America Award
.
Synopsis
[
edit
]
The film opens in 2010 with a
frame story
:
Republican
strategist
Steve Schmidt
is being interviewed by
Anderson Cooper
for
60 Minutes
. Cooper poses a difficult question regarding former vice presidential nominee
Sarah Palin
: was she selected because she would make the best vice president or because she would win the election?
The story
flashes back
to Senator
John McCain
's
2008 presidential campaign
, which is struggling to compete with other Republican candidates during the
primary season
. McCain asks Schmidt to reconsider his promise to sit the election out. Months later, Schmidt is serving as McCain's senior campaign strategist, which culminates in McCain winning the Republican nomination.
McCain's preferred running mate, Senator
Joe Lieberman
, is rejected by Schmidt and the majority of his senior advisers. They quickly look for a "game change" candidate who will excite the conservative base, win over independents, distance the campaign from the Bush administration and close the gender gap. Investigating prominent female Republican politicians, the campaign finds Palin, the governor of
Alaska
, to have the qualities they want. She is selected after an exceptionally brief
vetting
process. Palin's eventual public reveal creates the buzz that Schmidt and McCain were looking for, bringing them to even or better with Obama in the polls.
While Palin's acceptance speech at the
Republican National Convention
is well received, the campaign becomes concerned that she is ignorant about many political issues and grossly unprepared. Schmidt handles controversies from her past, such as
Troopergate
and the
Bridge to Nowhere
, while other staff attempt to fill broad gaps in her understanding of domestic and foreign politics. While prepping for the interviews, she is preoccupied with her approval ratings in Alaska and the absence of her family while campaigning, eventually becoming unresponsive to advisers who begin to question her mental state.
Her disastrous interview with Katie Couric
becomes a source of mockery in the media and frustration in the campaign. Palin lashes out at Nicolle Wallace, claiming that it was a deliberate attempt to embarrass her. Wallace tells Schmidt she is done with Palin.
The staff also comes to accept that Palin is better at memorizing and delivering lines than she is at actually understanding issues. Thus, they grudgingly prepare her for the
vice presidential debate
by simply having Palin memorize about forty minutes' worth of
talking points
, which manages to get her through the debate without major incident. However, Palin's growing popularity with the Republican base, even as she alienates mainstream voters, soon overshadows the campaign; Palin becomes uncooperative, rejecting – and conflicting with – Schmidt and the rest of the campaign staff as she gains her own following. Later on, with prospects appearing poor, the campaign staff boosts a
negative campaign
against Obama's past associations with the liberal elite, which Palin supports but McCain resists. McCain, meanwhile, becomes discouraged by the negative campaigning, watching growing hostility and vitriol emerge toward Obama among McCain's supporters. With
Election Day
approaching, senior campaigners express regret that Palin turned out to be style without substance, with Schmidt lamenting that they neglected to vet her competency. McCain consoles Schmidt by reaffirming that taking a risk with Palin was better than fading away.
When Obama wins on Election Night, Schmidt tries to stop a rebellious Palin from giving a concession speech along with McCain's. She appeals to McCain, who agrees with Schmidt. He tells Palin that she is now one of the party leaders and warns her not to let herself be hijacked by extremism. Rick Davis (McCain's campaign manager) comments that Palin will soon be forgotten. During McCain's concession speech, he thanks Palin, who receives enormous and sustained applause, chants, and enthusiasm from the crowd, which is noted in the faces of McCain's advisors. The film returns to the 2010 interview; regarding Cooper's question about whether he would pick Palin again if he had the chance to go back, Schmidt replies that life does not give do-overs.
Cast
[
edit
]
- Julianne Moore
as
Sarah Palin
,
Governor of Alaska
- Woody Harrelson
as
Steve Schmidt
, Senior Campaign Strategist
- Ed Harris
as
John McCain
,
U.S. Senator
from
Arizona
- Peter MacNicol
as
Rick Davis
, Campaign Manager
- Jamey Sheridan
as
Mark Salter
, Senior Adviser and Speechwriter
- Sarah Paulson
as
Nicolle Wallace
, Director of Communications
- Ron Livingston
as
Mark Wallace
, Senior Adviser
- David Barry Gray as
Todd Palin
- Larry Sullivan
as Chris Edwards, Deputy Chief of Staff
- Melissa Farman
as
Bristol Palin
- Kevin Bigley
as
Track Palin
- Brian d'Arcy James
as
Ted Frank
- Bruce Altman
as
Fred Davis
, Chief Media Strategist
- Colby French
as
Tucker Eskew
, Senior Media Adviser
- John Rothman
as
Arthur B. Culvahouse, Jr.
, Vetting Attorney
- Sandy Bainum as
Cindy McCain
- Tiffany Thornton
as
Meghan McCain
- Alex Hyde-White
as
Lindsey Graham
, U.S. Senator from
South Carolina
- Justin Gaston
as
Levi Johnston
- Austin Pendleton
as
Joe Lieberman
, U.S. Senator from
Connecticut
The authors of the book
Game Change
,
Mark Halperin
and
John Heilemann
, appear in a cameo as two reporters questioning Schmidt. Actual footage from the 2008 campaign portrayed the
Democratic
candidates
Barack Obama
and
Joe Biden
as well as numerous reporters, including
Anderson Cooper
,
Katie Couric
,
Wolf Blitzer
,
Candy Crowley
,
Charles Gibson
, and
John King
. At times, the film employed
doubles
and editing to make it appear that the actors are interacting with historical footage, such as in the presidential debate scenes featuring the real Obama, the real Wolf Blitzer, and Harris as McCain.
Production
[
edit
]
HBO
optioned the book
Game Change
, by
John Heilemann
and
Mark Halperin
, in January 2010.
[3]
In February 2011, development began with
Danny Strong
writing and
Jay Roach
directing. The two had collaborated as writer and director on the 2008 HBO film
Recount
, about the controversial result of the
2000 U.S. presidential election
. Although Strong and Roach based the film on the part of the book dealing with the McCain?Palin campaign, they had also considered a film dealing with Obama's primary battle against
Hillary Clinton
? an idea ultimately dropped due to the length and complexity of that story, among other reasons.
[4]
Strong said he interviewed 25 people from the McCain?Palin campaign and referenced other books and articles, including Palin's memoir
Going Rogue
, in addition to the book on which the film was based.
[5]
The main cast was announced in March 2011, starting with Julianne Moore as Palin,
[6]
Ed Harris
as John McCain,
[7]
with
Woody Harrelson
, who plays McCain campaign chair Steve Schmidt, coming aboard soon thereafter.
[8]
The film was primarily shot in Maryland,
[9]
along with a hotel scene shot in Wilmington, Delaware.
[
citation needed
]
The film was also shot and produced in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico.
[10]
The film premiered at the
Newseum
in
Washington, D.C.
, on March 8 prior to its public debut on HBO on March 10, 2012.
[11]
[12]
Principal photography began on April 27, 2011 and completed shooting on June 22, 2011.
[13]
Reception
[
edit
]
Ratings
[
edit
]
Game Change
was watched by 2.1 million people on its debut night, which marked the highest ratings for an
HBO
original film since their 2004 film
Something the Lord Made
.
[14]
Reviews
[
edit
]
Game Change
received generally positive reviews, with 65% of the critics polled by
Rotten Tomatoes
giving it favorable reviews (based on 37 reviews), with an averaged score of 6.9 out of 10.
[15]
Metacritic
lists the film as scoring 74 out of 100, based on 25 reviews by critics, signifying a "generally favorable" critical response.
[16]
David Hinckley of
The New York Daily News
wrote, "Julianne Moore’s physical Palin in
Game Change
, which debuts March 10, is even more dead-on than
Tina Fey
's."
[17]
Fey, who was noted for her physical resemblance to Palin,
[18]
won an
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
in
2009
for her
satirical impersonation of Palin
on the sketch comedy TV show
Saturday Night Live
.
[19]
Several excerpts from these impersonations were used in the film.
The Hollywood Reporter
'
s Tim Goodman wrote that the movie "boldly raises the question about whether Palin is mentally unbalanced." He called Moore's performance "virtuoso (and likely
Emmy
-winning)."
[20]
Roger Ebert
gave the movie three and a half stars.
[21]
Entertainment Weekly
'
s
Ken Tucker
gave it an A?.
[22]
The
Los Angeles Times
wrote: "The overall atmosphere of the film is surprisingly kind to all, much more fatalistic than hypercritical and certainly not derisive. Palin's rise and fall is depicted as series of bad decisions made in relatively good faith that lead up to a hideous car crash."
[23]
Newsday
commented: "Moore's performance ... is superb. ... A luminous and fully alive portrait by a first-rate actress."
[24]
The
San Francisco Chronicle
also praised the acting: "
Game Change
is graced by three extraordinary performances in the leading roles, beginning with Moore's portrayal of Palin, which is both complex and entirely credible."
[25]
The
Boston Globe
wrote: "Whether “Game Change’’ is a definitive accounting of what happened, and whether some viewers will accept it as such is unknowable. But from a dramatic standpoint is the film entertaining? You betcha."
[26]
Response from the McCain campaign
[
edit
]
Palin herself said
Game Change
was based on a "false narrative" and that she did not intend to see it.
[27]
The film, and the book it is based upon, have been described by
John
and
Cindy McCain
as inaccurate.
[28]
Like Palin, McCain said he did not intend to see it,
[14]
and took issue with the "exceeding amount of coarse language" that was attributed to him in the film.
[29]
Many of Sarah Palin's campaign aides have criticized the accuracy of the film.
Randy Scheunemann
, who tutored Palin on foreign policy matters during the campaign, said: "To call this movie fiction gives fiction a bad name." According to her campaign staff, many had not been contacted by the filmmakers or the authors of the book on which it is based.
[30]
However,
Steve Schmidt
, the campaign's chief strategist, stated: "Ten weeks of the campaign are condensed into a two-hour movie. But it tells the truth of the campaign. That is the story of what happened."
[31]
He later said that watching the film was tantamount to "an out-of-body experience."
[32]
Nicolle Wallace
, a chief Palin 2008 aide, said she found
Game Change
highly credible, saying the film "captured the spirit and emotion of the campaign."
[31]
Wallace also told ABC News Chief Political Correspondent
George Stephanopoulos
that the film was "true enough to make me squirm."
[33]
Both Wallace and Schmidt have had public feuds with Sarah Palin since the 2008 campaign ended.
[30]
Melissa Farman
, who played
Bristol Palin
, said it was never the film's intention to portray
Sarah Palin
in a negative light because the film was not meant to be about Palin, but about "politics at large" and what it means to be a politician in this era.
[34]
Accolades
[
edit
]
Year
|
Award
|
Category
|
Nominee(s)
|
Result
|
Ref.
|
2012
|
Artios Awards
|
Outstanding Achievement in Casting ? Television Movie/Mini Series
|
David Rubin
, Richard Hicks,
Pat Moran
,
Kathleen Chopin, and Anne Davison
|
Nominated
|
[35]
|
Critics' Choice Television Awards
|
Best Movie/Miniseries
|
Nominated
|
[36]
|
Best Actor in a Movie/Miniseries
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Nominated
|
Best Actress in a Movie/Miniseries
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
Golden Nymph Awards
|
Best Television Film
|
Nominated
|
[37]
|
Best Direction
|
Jay Roach
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Actor
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Won
|
Ed Harris
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Actress
|
Julianne Moore
|
Nominated
|
Primetime Emmy Awards
|
Outstanding Miniseries or Movie
|
Tom Hanks
,
Gary Goetzman
, Jay Roach,
Danny Strong
, Steven Shareshian, and
Amy Sayres
|
Won
|
[38]
|
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
|
Ed Harris
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
|
Sarah Paulson
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special
|
Jay Roach
|
Won
|
Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special
|
Danny Strong
|
Won
|
Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards
|
Outstanding Casting for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special
|
David Rubin, Richard Hicks,
Pat Moran, and Kathleen Chopin
|
Won
|
Outstanding Cinematography for a Miniseries or Movie
|
Jim Denault
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Music Composition for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special
(Original Dramatic Score)
|
Theodore Shapiro
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Miniseries or a Movie
|
Lucia Zucchetti
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Miniseries or a Movie
|
David MacMillan
,
Leslie Shatz
, and
Gabriel J. Serrano
|
Nominated
|
Satellite Awards
|
Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television
|
Nominated
|
[39]
|
Best Actor in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Nominated
|
Best Actress in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or
Motion Picture Made for Television
|
Sarah Paulson
|
Nominated
|
Television Critics Association Awards
|
Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries, and Specials
|
Nominated
|
[40]
|
Women's Image Network Awards
|
Made for Television Movie
|
Won
|
|
Actress Made for Television Movie
|
Julianne Moore
|
Nominated
|
2013
|
American Cinema Editors Awards
|
Best Edited Miniseries or Motion Picture for Television
|
Lucia Zucchetti
|
Nominated
|
[41]
|
American Film Institute Awards
|
Top 10 Television Programs
|
Won
|
[42]
|
Art Directors Guild Awards
|
Excellence in Production Design Award ? Television Movie or Mini-Series
|
Michael Corenblith
, Samantha Avila,
Kuo Pao Lian, Kenneth Roman,
Francesca Gerlach, and Tiffany Zappulla
|
Nominated
|
[43]
|
Cinema Audio Society Awards
|
Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Movies and Mini-Series
|
David MacMillan, Gabriel J. Serrano,
Leslie Shatz, Chris Fogel,
Travis MacKay, and Tor McAfee Kingdon
|
Nominated
|
[44]
|
Directors Guild of America Awards
|
Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Movies for Television and Miniseries
|
Jay Roach
|
Won
|
[45]
|
Dorian Awards
|
TV Performance of the Year ? Actress
|
Julianne Moore
|
Nominated
|
[46]
|
Golden Globe Awards
|
Best Miniseries or Television Film
|
Won
|
[47]
|
Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Nominated
|
Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries or Television Film
|
Ed Harris
|
Won
|
Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries or Television Film
|
Sarah Paulson
|
Nominated
|
Gracie Awards
|
Outstanding Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Drama Special
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
[48]
|
Guild of Music Supervisors Awards
|
Best Music Supervision ? TV Long Form (Movies and Mini-Series)
|
Evyen Klean
and Deva Anderson
|
Won
|
[49]
|
Peabody Awards
|
Playtone Productions and Everyman Pictures,
in association with
HBO Films
|
Won
|
[50]
|
Producers Guild of America Awards
|
David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television
|
Gary Goetzman, Tom Hanks, Jay Roach,
Amy Sayres, Steven Shareshian, and
Danny Strong
|
Won
|
[51]
|
Screen Actors Guild Awards
|
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie
|
Woody Harrelson
|
Nominated
|
[52]
|
Ed Harris
|
Nominated
|
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie
|
Julianne Moore
|
Won
|
Writers Guild of America Awards
|
Long Form ? Adapted
|
Danny Strong;
Based on the
book
by
Mark Halperin
and
John Heilemann
|
Won
|
[53]
|
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Sperling, Daniel (March 12, 2012).
"Sarah Palin 'not concerned' by 'false' HBO movie 'Game Change'
"
. Digital Spy
. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
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.
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.
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- ^
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.
- ^
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.
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HFPA
. Retrieved
July 5,
2021
.
- ^
"2013 Gracies Gala Winners"
.
Gracie Awards
. October 3, 2016
. Retrieved
September 11,
2022
.
- ^
"3rd Annual Guild of Music Supervisors Awards"
.
Guild of Music Supervisors Awards
. Retrieved
February 20,
2013
.
- ^
"Game Change"
.
Peabody Awards
. Retrieved
May 15,
2021
.
- ^
Finke, Nikke (January 26, 2012).
"Producers Guild 2013 Award Winners: 'Argo', 'Homeland', 'Searching For Sugar Man', 'Wreck-It Ralph', 'Game Change', 'Modern Family', 'Amazing Race', 'Colbert Report'
"
.
Deadline Hollywood
. Retrieved
January 27,
2012
.
- ^
"The 19th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards"
.
Screen Actors Guild Awards
. Retrieved
May 21,
2016
.
- ^
"Previous Nominees & Winners: 2012 Awards Winners"
. Writers Guild Awards. Archived from
the original
on May 12, 2015
. Retrieved
May 7,
2014
.
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