Reince Priebus says a lot of goofy things, but the chairman of the Republican National Committee has a point.
Films can dramatically alter the way famous people are viewed, making them cooler, more glamorous, more sympathetic — and the reverse. Clever filmmakers can offer up delicious souffles of propaganda and storytelling, putting a new imprint on the historical record.
Priebus has complained to NBC and CNN executives about plans for what he calls Hillary Clinton "puff pieces" while Hillary is "on the dance floor." NBC is doing a four-hour miniseries starring Diane Lane, and CNN Films is producing a documentary by Charles Ferguson, who won an Oscar for "Inside Job," his scorching 2010 documentary on Wall Street.
Priebus says the films would be political ads "masquerading" as unbiased productions. He should know, since Republicans popularized full-length attack films, sliming the Clintons and Obamas.
NBC is planning to make the miniseries soon, before Hillary formally announces, so that the network doesn't run into problems with less scintillating rivals demanding equal time. Priebus says that shows "a guilty conscience."
You need look no further than "The Queen" — Helen Mirren's Oscar-winning turn in 2006 as Queen Elizabeth — to see how reputations can be burnished. After Princess Diana's death in 1997, the royals were seen as bloodless ice cubes, and there were questions about the viability of the monarchy. But when the sympathetic movie came out, the queen's popularity soared. Peter Morgan, the British screenwriter of "The Queen," acknowledges he played "a small part" in that.
"When people sobered up from the week after Diana's death, a lot of them felt pretty silly," he told me. "The royal family behaved badly, but we behaved worse, millions of people who knew nothing about Diana holding her up as a patron saint.
"The surprise in the movie was, oh, the queen is quite an emotional woman. We connected to her terrible loneliness, a privileged person living in vast houses, a woman who was making mistakes, getting lost, missing steps, getting confused. It was endearing."
Morgan, who rooted for Hillary against Barack Obama in 2008 and still feels "pretty sure she'd be a great president," doesn't think there's much potential for dramatically revising her image.
"The horse has bolted in terms of original thought," he said. "You can only further consolidate stuff we already know."
Of course, Priebus being Priebus, he went on to say something goofy, petulantly threatening to cut NBC and CNN out of Republican debates if they don't cancel their Hillary shows by Aug. 14.
After his 2012 autopsy, the RNC chief said there should be fewer Republican debates, so the candidates have fewer chances to self-destruct or self-deport to the right. So maybe he's just trying to kill two birds with one stone.
The Clintons, working hard to cast themselves as models of civic virtue, are upset at scandals rippling through their world. The Virginia gubernatorial race of their pal Terry McAuliffe has been roiled by the revelation that the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating GreenTech, the electric-car firm he co-founded. And there's the potboiler in New York, where Clinton pet Huma Abedin props up digital dog Anthony Weiner.
But, fortunately for Hillary, Reince Priebus is working hard to make her look more important.
Maureen Dowd writes for The New York Times.