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Journeys With George

Play trailer Poster for Journeys With George Released Mar 8, 2002 1h 15m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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75% Tomatometer 12 Reviews 86% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
Alexandra Pelosi embarks on the campaign trail with George W. Bush and other journalists during the 2000 primaries, using her video camera to document informal moments with the then-presidential hopeful, and examining the complex rapport between Bush and members of the media. Pelosi's film features her interactions with Bush, from their playful banter to his efforts to persuade her to vote in his favor. Her video diary is combined with news clips from the election and its outcome.
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Journeys With George

Critics Reviews

View All (12) Critics Reviews
John Leonard New York Magazine/Vulture You'll like Alexandra. Jan 31, 2018 Full Review Caryn James New York Times An amusing, breezily apolitical documentary about life on the campaign trail. Rated: 3/5 Mar 13, 2003 Full Review J. Hoberman Village Voice The movie is virtually without context -- journalistic or historical. What's worse is that Pelosi knows it. Mar 11, 2003 Full Review David Walsh World Socialist Web Site A serious work could have been made from the experience Pelosi underwent, but only if a filmmaker were capable of standing back from the day-to-day flow of events and asserting an independent and critical viewpoint. Feb 16, 2021 Full Review Film Threat Rated: 3.5/5 Dec 6, 2005 Full Review Ryan Cracknell Movie Views Pelosi's willingness to open up and look into her own spot in the campaign frenzy makes this meta-documentary important the media and those who consume it. Rated: 3.5/5 Jun 30, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Greg R Absolutely fantastic. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 07/17/23 Full Review Audience Member Breaking the Bubble What I find interesting is that, despite the temptation which must have been there, Alexandra Pelosi scarcely mentions her mother, never mentions her mother's accomplishments, and only mentions her mother's politics in context of her own history and what brought her to this position. If anyone else mentioned it, Alexandra did not choose to show it in the film. The movie is not about her mother. It is not even really about the conflict between her own politics--and she is very clearly leaning the same way as her mother--and the politics of the man she's following. That hardly comes up; she seems to be working to limit her bias, though she does not succeed. She does, when we are leading up to the California primaries, tell us who she voted for, and it's no surprise that it isn't the candidate she's following, but the whole thing is limited. Alexandra Pelosi's mother told her, when Alexandra was young, to stay away from Republicans and the media. Naturally, Alexandra went to work for NBC news and ended up on the George W. Bush campaign bus. She was a producer, not a reporter, but she brought a camcorder along to cover her own personal experiences. Little of her documenting seems to be of the candidate so much as it is of the experiences of the media. There's a lot of footage of Bush, but little of it has to do with the scripted campaign appearances. At those stops, she talks more about the other reporters, few of whom ever really get identified by name within the film, leaving me uncertain now who "[i]Newsweek[/i] Guy" really is. What's most interesting about the film is the open contempt and hostility the Bush campaign shows to the press corps. Karl Rove calls them evil and actually seems to mean it. Many of Bush's friendlier moments seem almost as scripted as those campaign stops and the signs provided by the campaign for audiences. (No, those signs are not necessarily things actually made by devoted followers and carried to rallies.) At least once, it is blatantly because he's trying to win over the press and prevent them from emphasizing an error he'd made in a speech. Bush seems genuinely friendly at times, of course, but we know that "seems" is the operative word, there. We know he was saying unpleasant things behind at least some of their backs. And that may inform the distaste Alexandra clearly feels toward her subject. Four years later, she was on a bus full of Democrats instead, and I'm curious as to whether or not the attitude there is the same. It is true that a lot of her annoyance is more directed toward the press experience regardless of the candidate. We are treated to many shots of the interminable turkey sandwiches provided to the press corps for their meals, sandwiches which eventually drive Alexandra to vegetarianism. (Bush tells her that she needs to eat meat.) We know she is not able to bathe as much as she likes. We know that she and the others spend much of the beginning of the campaign shivering in the snow while "real Americans" can go inside and hear the candidate give the same speech she and the others of the press corps have heard dozens of times. (What, you think they give a new speech at every stop?) This is not, she makes clear, a vacation. Bush is as much a character as anyone else. He gets a cinematography credit here for a brief sequence wherein he takes Alexandra's camera away and does some filming himself. This is one of a handful of things within the story that, in my experience, represent universal human reactions to camcorders. It doesn't work the same way with news cameras, of course, but a little hand-held one? (I saw one the other day which will record an hour of video and fit in the palm of your hand. One item more in my list of things which make me feel old.) Everyone wants to take it away. Everyone wants to get right up close to it. I have a dozen or more hours of footage I recorded back when I was living in Port Angeles, many years ago, and owned an enormous, bulky camcorder myself, and I must have footage of quite a lot of eyes and mouths from when people brought them as close to the lens as they could. It's apparently a thing people do. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Audience Member what a great guy W is.. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Following a campaign trail, it was very interesting. Bush is a character no doubt. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/03/23 Full Review Audience Member A portrait of the traveling press corps and the man who is their purpose: George W. Bush, 2000 Presidential candidate. Divorced from his policies or his competence to lead the United States, this is a revealing portrait of George W. Bush, the man: constant joker, effortless charmer, highly camera-aware. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/19/23 Full Review Audience Member Shows a side of Bush rarely seen or considered, especially by his strongest critics. Although Pelosi seems to be a principled journalist and wants to ask the right and tough questions, you can see how the "embedded" journalist who craves access over anything can slowly start to lose objectivity as Bush wines and dines and charms the press core. At least she was smart enough to take a step back and realize this. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Journeys With George

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Movie Info

Synopsis Alexandra Pelosi embarks on the campaign trail with George W. Bush and other journalists during the 2000 primaries, using her video camera to document informal moments with the then-presidential hopeful, and examining the complex rapport between Bush and members of the media. Pelosi's film features her interactions with Bush, from their playful banter to his efforts to persuade her to vote in his favor. Her video diary is combined with news clips from the election and its outcome.
Director
Alexandra Pelosi
Producer
Alexandra Pelosi, Aaron Lubarsky
Screenwriter
Alexandra Pelosi
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Mar 8, 2002, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Nov 14, 2019
Runtime
1h 15m
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