How about Afghanistan? Iran?
Or on the coming lines to the soup kitchen, right here in America. Will they show it there?
Will the relatives of the 1 million dead Iraqi civilians care if Bush snorted Coke in College? Will they care if he was a drunken frat boy? Will they care what Daddy though of him? Do they wish to know more about the real person, that is Bush ?
Will they find photos of him smirking with his feet on his desk, or sitting on a toilet amusing?
Cute?
Irrelevant?
For me, the wounds caused to our world by George W. Bush are way to severe to ever be funny, amusing, cute, or even vaguely understandable, although many have lost so much more truly dear things than what his group has caused directly to me.
I don't need to know if he's an idiot or not, I can decide this without Oliver Stone's dubious input; and it's entirely irrelevant anyway.
Yes, the 8 years of Bush really is in need a serious looking at, but a fictionalized account looking at just George W. Bush being George W. Bush is as useless as it's subject.
I'd go see a film about all the power players involved in this sad era, about all the money made and lost, about torture, about the way religion has been used to manipulate the populace, and about our populace itself which capitulated far to easily, when shock and awe seemed like a little lark we could go on with no consequences to ourselves, beyond the empty promise of cheap gas for all.
I'd go see a movie about causes such as Project for a New American Century. About the influence of Lockheed Martin et al on our government. And or about real world results: about the dismantling of the EPA, the Justice Department, and those pesky dead civilians in places with names most of us didn't know about before.
And much much more. So very much more, that could be strongly addressed by an insightful look at the last 8 years.
I strongly suspect that the worst victims of the Bush era won't be tripping off to the cineplex, ordering extra butter on their popcorn, and gleefully enjoying the frat boy's antics.
Honestly, I don't think Bush will be seen humorously in one hundred years, let alone now.