Sayles, a maker of resonant historical dramas (Matewan, Eight Men Out) and complex social satires (Sunshine State, City of Hope), has chosen an easy target and missed his mark. Dickie disappears from Silver City early on, after Sayles wears out the obvious joke, and what we're left with in the second half is a half-baked, anti-climactic thriller involving a corpse floating in a lake, toxic chemicals stored in a mine shaft, illegal-immigrant workers and about a dozen or more corporate goons and various other thugs out to...out to...well, out to do something, though Sayles himself doesn't seem to have much of an idea just what that something is.
Using pristine Colorado scenery as his backdrop -- scenery about to be, ahem, pillaged by a real-estate mogul (David Clennon) and his lobbyist, played by Billy Zane -- Sayles attempts to indict Bush's lousy environmental record. Specifically, he's going after the President's allowing the corporate Superfund taxes to expire, rolling back environmental restrictions on the mining industry and calling for oil drilling in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. (Sounds like the stuff of scintillating cinema, eh?) But Sayles muddies the issue by throwing in a romance, a murder and so much talk of conspiracies it drowns out the message. Which is?
With some 30 speaking parts, including fifteen famous faces ranging from Kris Kristofferson as a media mogul who considers Dickie his own "treasure chest" to Richard Dreyfuss as Dickie's Karl Rove-like pit-bull advisor to Daryl Hannah as Dickie's stoned-out-bow-and-arrow-slinging sister, the movie's less a narrative than a Tower of Babel.
Also joining the party are Danny Huston, son of Chinatown baddie John Huston, as a disgraced journalist-turned-private-eye hired by Dreyfuss to investigate Dickie's would-be enemies; Maria Bello as a reporter and Huston's former lover; Michael Murphy as a senator and Dickie's powerful brother; Miguel Ferrer as a right-wing radio host; and Tim Roth as the suspicious editor of a political web-'zine. Listening to them chatter about greed and corruption is like surfing the Internet and landing on a message board populated only by the paranoid and panicked.
Silver City's attempts at satire and excursions into thriller never mesh; the two disparate elements never shake hands, much less lock you in their embrace. Sayles seems to have no idea what the movie's about, what agenda he's trying to serve: Is this a comedic Chinatown, a noirish The Candidate or just some extended Saturday Night Live sketch that goes on far longer than it should?
Cooper plays Pilager as an empty head containing blank eyes; he doesn't possess a whit of the charisma that made Bush a contender when his detractors wrote him off as a pretender during the Texas gubernatorial race. Bush may be a lot of things to the people who loathe him most -- bumbler, liar, puppet, fraud -- but at least he projects a frat boy's confidence, even when tripping over grade-school phrases. Dickie, when talking about such issues as capital punishment or the environment, appears completely bereft of conviction or even emotion; he's more automaton than human, a marionette incapable of jack-squat unless his handlers are there to feed him his next line or sentiment. Will Ferrell, playing Bush, does a far better job of portraying the President's rare, hypnotic combination of swagger and dim-wittedness.
Sayles has never been much for technique; most of his movies look as though they were shot by a cinematographer with one eye taking orders from someone without any sight at all. But where they're terrible to look at, they're usually engaging enough to listen to and think about and chew on; if only Sayles were making movies for radio broadcast. But Silver City feels particularly amateurish and heavy-handed, as though it's a lousy joke being told by someone who forgot not only the punch line but the joke itself. He rambles till he hits upon the occasional point of interest, but digresses again till he's completely lost you and whatever point he was trying to make. Silver City serves as agitprop more likely to irritate than agitate. It wears out its welcome well before its halfway point, by which time you're either so tangled up in plot points you're strangling, or so bored you just wish you were being strangled.