What I Learned About Democracy From the Movies – The New York Times
In the past few years Ive found myself questioning my assumptions and doubting what I thought I knew about my country. What if the good guys dont always win? What if people cant find a way to get along in spite of their differences? What if the flawed heroes were really the villains all along? What if the arc of the universe bends toward chaos? I wonder sometimes why I ever believed otherwise. Maybe because Ive seen too many movies, or maybe I misunderstood what I saw.
Like many Americans, I had a movie education that was idiosyncratic, haphazard and intensive. I learned at least as much about American life from what I saw in multiplexes and revival houses, on late-night television and on VHS and DVD as I did from my teachers or parents. Moviegoing isnt really a civic duty, but it can feel like a ritual of citizenship. You may know that what youre watching isnt real historians and journalists are always eager to point out inaccuracies, omissions and outright fabrications in the Hollywood version but you also might believe that, on some level, its true. Thats how mythology works: not as blatant propaganda, but as a set of stories that shape our perceptions of whats fair, good and natural.
The only way to see clearly is to look again, even into a warped mirror. What follows isnt a history so much as a key to the national mythology, a guide to the civic imagination through moving-picture images. Its inevitably both subjective and collective, since movies, though we consume them alone, are something we have in common. Maybe the only things.
And like so much else in our common life, they are full contradictions, inconsistencies and outright delusions. Often a single movie will pull in both directions at once, offering reasons for faith and grounds for skepticism in the same gesture.
Each of these seven movies plays that kind of double game. But since no movie exists in isolation, each one is accompanied by others that heighten the contradictions and flesh out essential lessons. Together they suggest a syllabus, less a set of operating instructions than a guide to what we aspired to be, should have been and never really were.
Extremists on both sides is a treasured phrase in the American political lexicon. Its a rallying cry of the embattled middle, an appeal to moderation, a motto of pragmatic whataboutism. And in spite of occasional outbursts of radical or reactionary zeal, Hollywood has avidly upheld the ideal of heroic centrism.
Which is not exactly the same as defending democracy. Look at Caesar, the hero of the 21st-century Planet of the Apes trilogy. His name evokes the leader who transformed Rome from a republic into a dictatorship, and at the start of the second episode (Dawn, which comes after Rise and anticipates War) he is the wise, brave, beleaguered warlord of a simian settlement in the forests north of San Francisco. His ministate is hierarchical, patriarchal and militaristic, a utilitarian utopia rather than a revolutionary experiment.
Caesar (Andy Serkis) faces two main threats: from the humans who are his kinds historic oppressors and from Koba (Toby Kebbell), an ape whose experience of human cruelty has imbued him with a bitter, vengeful radicalism. The main drama involves the struggle of Caesar and his human counterpart to negotiate terms of peaceful coexistence. Each faces resistance from his own side, since anti-ape prejudice is still part of the formerly dominant species worldview.
To maintain control, Caesar must violate the prime ethical imperative of his movement ape not kill ape with the excuse that Koba has forced his hand. Caesar kills his rival and onetime ally with a heavy heart, an awareness of the tragedy of the situation. That combination of ruthlessness and regret is what legitimizes Caesars assertion of dictatorial authority.
Benevolent tyranny the rule of the smart and sensitive in the name of progress and good sense is the political ideal of 21st-century Hollywood. It defines the utopian horizon of the Marvel universe, where a politburo of super-empowered, unelected strongmen (and a few women) defend the interests of a passive and vulnerable public. Meanwhile, the Caesar-Koba dynamic repeats itself in the contests between Professor X and Magneto, and TChalla and Killmonger, reminders that the test of leadership is how mercilessly and sensitively you deal with the extremists in your own ranks.
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes is available to rent or buy on major platforms.
In politics, freedom has many different meanings and ideological colorations. Onscreen, its mostly a matter of geography. The kind of freedom that movies capture most naturally and celebrate most eagerly is the freedom of movement. The cinematic idea of liberty is bound to the romance of the open road.
Road movies offer visions of escape of the headlong flight from convention, oppression, habit and home made vivid by danger and buoyed by the possibility of friendship. Our most cherished vagabonds travel in pairs, sometimes romantic (like Bonnie and Clyde or the young outlaws in Badlands), but more often platonic. Some visions of solidarity on the run are more politically charged than others, like Thelma and Louise, which inspired some pearl-clutching back in 1991 for its forthright feminism. A Time cover story then purported to explain Why Thelma & Louise Strikes a Nerve. The answer was that the lengths to which its heroines were willing to go to be free to be left alone was thrilling to some viewers while it made others uncomfortable.
That nerve is always raw. When men onscreen fight back, take flight, drive fast and look great doing it, its just a movie. When women do the same, its an issue, and the question of what they are fleeing from or fighting against risks being drowned out by the question of whether they are going too far. Thelma & Louise, released in the year of Anita Hills accusation of sexual harassment against the Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, glances back to the second-wave feminism of the 70s and forward to the #MeToo moment.
The bravery and resilience of the heroines their humor, their honesty, their pursuit of pleasure, the absolute charm of Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis collides with an edifice of injustice that seems immovable. Its not just that some men (not all men!) are awful, or that male allies arent much help. Its that what Thelma and Louise are fighting against is so deeply embedded in the structure of normal existence that a solution seems unimaginable. In Callie Khouris brilliantly rigorous script, liberation and desperation become synonymous, a convergence indelibly captured in the final freeze-frame of their Thunderbird suspended in midair over the Grand Canyon. The poetry of the image almost inspires you to lose sight of its fatalism. The drive for freedom is strong, but the law of gravity the inertia of propriety, patriarchy and state power will win in the end.
Thelma & Louise is available to rent or buy on major platforms.
Is revenge the truest form of justice, or is true justice the transcendence of revenge? This is a philosophical conundrum that haunts American movies, whose obsessions with law and order have fostered an enduring romance with vigilantism.
Batman in his mid-2000s Christopher Nolan-Christian Bale Dark Knight incarnation, embodies that romance. He is motivated equally by a sense of duty to protect Gotham Citys residents from crime and a personal sense of grievance rooted in the violent deaths of people he loves. The personal and public motives operate in harmony. Bruce Wayne becomes a masked hero because he was a victim first, and his victimhood guarantees his authenticity. Hes not just some guy in a uniform doing a job, and he is free of the corruption and compromise that bedevil the legally constituted authorities.
Extralegal violence as a tool of social control and racist terror has a long and ugly history in America, and Hollywood has played a role in sanitizing and civilizing this toxic strain in the national story. In place of the bloodthirsty mob, movies put the law in the hands of a complicated hero, a lone figure who dwells on the margins of respectability. With or without a badge, hes a maverick, an anti-institutional player whose disregard for rules and procedures marks him as a rebel, an outlaw on the side of the good guys. That ambiguous DNA connects the gunslingers of classic westerns with the urban avengers of the 1970s and then with the sometimes antiheroic superheroes of our own time.
In the American entertainment system, law and order for the most part occupy distinct genres. The setting of most courtroom dramas is a merciful, rational place, where lies are exposed and gray areas are illuminated by the impersonal workings of a mostly benevolent system. But the real action is on the streets, where everything is personal and where the dirty work of the system is carried out in the dark.
The Dark Knight is available to stream on HBO Max.
MoneyThe Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
The relationship between democracy and capitalism is a subject of endless debate among historians and economists. The pursuit of wealth is seen as the basis of a society free from rigid old-world hierarchies, even as the acquisition of wealth creates dangerous inequalities. The rich are worshiped and demonized, and money itself is both the measure of success and the source of corruption.
Hollywood thrives on this ambivalence, and no movie expresses it more vividly than Martin Scorseses Wolf of Wall Street. Adapted from a boastful, semi-apologetic memoir by the renegade stock trader Jordan Belfort, the film oscillates between disgust at its selfish, obnoxious, amoral protagonist and giddy fascination with his exuberant, unabashed greed. Jordan has such a good time being bad, and it doesnt hurt that hes played by Leonardo DiCaprio with just the right blend of kid-brother charm and movie-star swagger.
There are those who insist that Wolf is a ferocious indictment of the money culture, or at least of the shallow scammers who treat the serious business of capitalism like a casino. And there are others who cant stop ogling the drugs, the cars, the boats and Margot Robbie, even if the spectacle makes us feel a little squeamish.
Everyone is right! Disapproval of excessive wealth and unchecked avarice is Hollywood gospel. See Citizen Kane, Its A Wonderful Life, Wall Street and the Godfather movies. But see the same movies for contrary evidence. Wealth onscreen is beautiful, exciting, erotic. Hollywood is as two-faced about money as about sex maybe more so, since it has more skin in the game. The movies are an industry, a con game with a half-guilty conscience. In Wall Street, Gordon Gekko proclaims that greed is good. (Does anyone remember a word that movies ostensible good guys have to say?) He was flattering us, though feeding us a line and letting us off the hook of our own hypocrisy. Jordan Belfort offers a more compelling, more troubling lesson. Greed is fun.
The Wolf of Wall Street is available to rent or buy on major platforms.
Lonesome Rhodes, the ebullient, harmonica-blowing celebrity played by Andy Griffith in A Face in the Crowd, was recently rediscovered as one of the cultural markers who supposedly predicted Trump. There isnt really much resemblance between the characters, though, and to view Elia Kazan and Budd Schulbergs post-McCarthy parable through the lens of very recent history is to risk missing its wider application to the pathologies of modern American life.
Movies about the news media tend either to romanticize or demonize the work of journalists. You either get crusading, ink-stained heroes (All the Presidents Men, Spotlight) or unscrupulous, self-serving cynics (Ace in the Hole, Absence of Malice). Sometimes the cynicism almost accidentally serves the causes of truth and justice, as in His Girl Friday. And sometimes the forces of idealism and greed do battle inside the newsroom, as in Network and The Insider.
A Face in the Crowd is a slightly different beast, though simultaneously a critique and a defense of the power of modern media. Lonesome is discovered in a Southern jail cell by a radio producer played by Patricia Neal, who transforms him (with the help of Walter Matthau) into a popular raconteur and pitchman and then into a populist political force. He connects effortlessly with his audiences aspirations and resentments, but turns out to be greedy, dishonest, predatory and an all-around threat to decency and civic order. The elites who empowered him, spooked by the monster they have created, contrive to destroy him. A hot mic captures an unguarded expression of contempt for regular folk, and the regular folk want nothing more to do with him.
Lonesomes downfall echoes that of Joseph McCarthy, who was humiliated on national television by Joseph Welch during hearings about alleged Communist influence in the Army. The reality was a bit more complicated, but the idea that the media can both empower and destroy demagogues that it can, in effect, break its own spell retains its seductive charm. Even though the movie looks less like a warning than a fairy tale.
A Face in the Crowd is available to stream on HBO Max.
Politicians love to present themselves as outsiders, uniquely capable of rising above partisan bickering and ideological posturing, rolling up their sleeves and solving Americas problems. That attitude is older than the movies, of course, but at the movies the story of a regular guy coming to Washington to shake things up is almost a genre unto itself.
The paradigm may be Jimmy Stewart in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, but the most memorable recent avatar of this tradition is Chris Rock in Head of State. It isnt a great movie, but thats part of the point: the anti-political political movie is a form of self-canceling satire, an argument that what the country needs is a bland, boring, uncontroversial approach to public life.
Of course, the name Chris Rock signifies the opposite of all that, and Head of State includes a few flights of profane, insightful inspiration. But what it does not include is any political issue that people are likely to argue about. Mays Gilliam, the city councilman whose frustration leads him to the brink of national office, takes stands that nobody could disagree with. Hes for good schools and jobs, fiscal responsibility and honest government. He sounds just like a politician, in other words. And also, perhaps improbably, like the voice of Hollywood consensus.
Head of State is available to rent or buy on major platforms.
Politicians love nothing more than to invoke the American people, but who exactly are they talking about? We are a pluralistic and often polarized nation, and we might have less in common than we would like to believe. But movies share a persistent reverence for what used to be called the common man, and very few films have the nerve to call him what he really is: a fraud, a fiction, an ideological construct hatched from the feverish imaginations of officeseekers, Hollywood moguls and other self-serving hucksters.
Sullivans Travels, written and directed by Preston Sturges on the eve of Americas entry into World War II, with the Great Depression very much in mind, remains the definitive celebration and debunking of Hollywood-style populism. The titular hero, played by Joel McCrea, is a hotshot director dissatisfied with the escapist fare that has made him rich. His filmography includes such gems as Hey Hey in the Hayloft and a nameless action picture that ends with two guys slugging it out on moving trains a clich even then. But Sullivan wants his studio to greenlight O Brother, Where Art Thou?, a passion project that he believes will tackle the real problems of humanity.
To placate their golden goose, the bosses arrange a heavily publicized junket through real America. Along the way, Sturges and Sullivan with the help of Veronica Lake as the Girl swerve into romance and farce before stumbling back onto the path of sincerity. After the official tour is over, a mishap throws our hero into the real real America, but without press coverage or an entourage. He winds up in a prison farm on a vagrancy charge, where the harshness of the conditions are relieved only by movie night. The convicts and the guards gather to watch a Mickey Mouse cartoon projected on a bedsheet, Sullivan learns his lesson and Sturges delivers his moral. What do the people want? They want to escape. They want to laugh. They want Disney.
Sullivans Travels is available to stream on the Criterion Channel or to rent or buy on major platforms.
Continued here:
What I Learned About Democracy From the Movies - The New York Times
- The State of Democracy 2025: Fake news, lack of accountability, extremism and corruption seen as top threats to democracy across Europe and the US -... - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Ken Burns The American Revolution explores the beginnings of the nations democracy - PBS - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Polls of western countries find deep dissatisfaction with democracy - The Guardian - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Delhis pollution is a crisis of democracy as much as public health, citizens say - France 24 - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Democracy in action: A civil tongue helps to get things done at the local level | OPINION - Cape Cod Times - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- This Week at Democracy Docket: The GOP Wants One-Day Elections, and Setbacks for Trumps Gerrymander Scheme - Democracy Docket - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- In Conversation With Ken Burns: Americas Story of Revolution, Liberty, and Democracy - The Pew Charitable Trusts - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- The American Revolution and the Story of Democracy - The Pew Charitable Trusts - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Dems Are Right: Trump Is Undermining Democracy. So Is Their Partys Right Wing. - Truthout - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Ultra-rich media owners are tightening their grip on democracy. Its time to wrest our power back | Robert Reich - The Guardian - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Longings that bind us: Recognition, art, democracy, and the search for home - PBS - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Gunboat Diplomacy: U.S. War in Latin America Feared as Hegseth Launches Operation Southern Spear - Democracy Now! - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Why Nations Thrive: Qualities Explaining the Health and Survival of Democracy - Arizona PBS - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Bringing Education and Democracy Together - Civic Media Radio - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Experts Map Irans Path from Dictatorship to Democracy in Transition Strategy Panel - National Council of Resistance of Iran - NCRI - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Jan. 6 lead investigator says apathy is the real threat to democracy in new book - New Hampshire Public Radio - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Ken Burns explores the beginnings of the nation's democracy - THIRTEEN - New York Public Media - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Iraqs 2025 elections reveal a democracy without belief - The Conversation - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Tracy Hunt: Democracy Is for All of Us, Not Just the Party Insiders - Bucks County Beacon - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- UMass Amherst Host Democracy at the Microphone: A Conversation with Lulu Garcia Navarro - MassLive - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- The FCCs News Distortion Policy should be rescinded - Protect Democracy - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Democracy at the Microphone: A Conversation with Lulu Garcia-Navarro - Amherst Indy - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- This Week in Democracy Week 43: The President, the Pedophile, and the Cover-Up - Zeteo | Substack - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- In a real democracy listening is better than domination | Opinion - The Topeka Capital-Journal - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Sherrilyn Ifill speaks on reimagining American democracy - The Daily Nexus - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Triumph for representative democracy in decision to preserve existing congressional districts - WNDU - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Ken Burns explores the beginnings of the nation's democracy - Cascade PBS - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- The judge who quit to save democracy and send a ripple of hope - Yahoo - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Georgia is dousing the last embers of democracy - The Economist - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Is Redistricting Ruining Democracy? - The Free Press - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- This Week at Democracy Docket: A Major Win for Democracy and the Coming Attack on Mail Voting - Democracy Docket - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Five Ways Tuesdays Results Will Affect Voting Rules and Democracy - boltsmag.org - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Federal Judge, Warning of Existential Threat to Democracy, Resigns - The New York Times - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- How Ranchers and Grassroots Organizers Are Shaping Democracy in Wyoming - The Fulcrum - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Why Liberals Do Not Understand the Value of Democracy - Hungarian Conservative - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Ali Velshi: Democracy is built by people who show up even when the odds say they shouldnt - MSNBC News - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Eagles Keep Democracy Rolling on Election Day - University of Mary Washington - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Too Young to Vote, Not Too Young to Fix Democracy - The Fulcrum - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier warned that the rise of the far right and increasing antisemitism pose a growing threat to Germany's... - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- The Down-Ballot Votes That Sustained The National Pro-Democracy Wave - Democracy Docket - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- "Courage is the New Currency": Skye Perryman and Democracy Forward - Interfaith Alliance - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- A Polish Jewish Artist Who Embraced Democracy and Explained Scripture to Englishmen - Tikvah - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Biden touts Dems election wins, says Trump is taking 'wrecking ball' to democracy - USA Today - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- TN State Rep on working in the minority, against the odds: Democracy is built up in the margins - MSNBC News - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Letter: Mail-in voting key to healthy democracy - Honolulu Star-Advertiser - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Letter | East Wing emblematic of destruction of democracy - The Cap Times - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- America can rebuild the East Wing, but what about democracy? - The Fulcrum - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Without Precedent: Lisa Graves on the Supreme Court, Tariffs, Voting Rights & Legacy of John Roberts - Democracy Now! - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- This Week in Democracy Week 42: Trump Pardons Crooks, Ignores Courts, and Threatens War - Zeteo | Substack - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Retired Navy rear admiral offers thoughts on military readiness and democracy [column] - LancasterOnline - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- This little-known position in WA is a huge democracy booster - The Seattle Times - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- National dialogue in the DRC: A tool for co-opting opponents or consolidating democracy? - Brookings - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Democracy Watch: The one-year countdown begins to midterm elections with big stakes. Can the nation live up to the ideals it embraced 250 years ago? -... - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Maine Rejects Anti-Voting Ballot Measure, Reaffirms Voting Access - Democracy Docket - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Reimagining Democracy: Lessons and strategies from Asia and Africas battle against backsliding - International IDEA - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Protecting Democracy and the 2025 Redistricting Battles: A Conversation with Xavier Becerra - UCLA Luskin - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- From Mamdani to Prop 50, John Nichols on Election Day Races & the Future of Democratic Party - Democracy Now! - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Newsroom Leaders on Gender, Press Freedom and Democracy - The 19th News - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Speaker Johnsons unprecedented, democracy-thwarting effort to keep the Epstein files secret - Popular Information | Judd Legum - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Information is the lifeblood of democracy - The Durango Herald - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Poll Shows Dissatisfaction With New Democracy, Tsipras Too - The National Herald - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Forget petty bribes, state capture is corruption so deep it is shaping the rules of democracy itself | Kenneth Mohammed - The Guardian - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Preserving Democracy: How CCIJ verified and permanently archived Nigerian election documents - MuckRock - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Who Can Rescue Democracy? Local Funders Have the Edge - Chronicle of Philanthropy - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- This Week at Democracy Docket: First on Voter Suppression News - Democracy Docket - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- An Open Letter to Speaker Johnson: Real Patriots Dont Fear Democracy - The Fulcrum - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Democracy in transition: Global struggle for governance in a changing world - Latest news from Azerbaijan - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Aarhus Centres strengthen environmental democracy at annual meeting in Vienna - Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- John Burtka III: America needs to be the "Arsenal of Democracy" again - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- From arsenal of democracy to arsenal of resilience - The Strategist | ASPI's analysis and commentary site - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Most Americans see unlimited election spending as a threat to democracy: poll - CaloNews.com - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Defending Democracy in a Topsy-Turvy World - Global Issues.org - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Judge Luttig: We the People are the final backstop for American democracy - Yahoo - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Fake information is all the rage and fanning division across the world. We are facing the question of how we could all defend democracy. We are... - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- This Week in Democracy Week 41: Trump Threatens Even More Troops on the Streets - Zeteo - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- What would you do if democracy was being dismantled before your eyes? Whatever youre doing right now - The Guardian - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
- From Copenhagen to Doha: Democracy and the Renewal of the Social Contract - International IDEA - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
- News Analysis: Prop. 50 is just one part of a historically uncertain moment for American democracy - Los Angeles Times - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
- Democracy in Action as Students Use Art to Express Their Hopes - Rutgers University - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
- NAACP Backs Virginia Redistricting Effort to Protect Black Representation and Defend Democracy - NAACP - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]