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Comments
I think Prez Benson comes close to Trump.
Terrifying
Kevin Smith, by contrast, has suggested that Donald Trump himself be cast as Jabba the Hutt, given that little make-up will be required to complete the transformation. ;-) We love you, Kev. :)
Ok, that one didn't actually happen. At the time, it was thought impossible to make that film under Obama's Presidency. Well, it isn't like Jeffrey Combs isn't too old to reprise his role...
Any help with providing examples of this would be greatly appreciated!
They're both different from what you describe as the standard statesmanlike approach.
And of course as @fire_and_ice reported the horrific DEAD ZONE future president Martin Sheen is the zenith, one for the ages.
Yes.
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Robert Culp played a president with some culpability (forgive me) in The Pelican Brief, which is an excellent film.
Jeff Bridges doesn't necessarily play a bad guy, but his president is devious and cunning in The Contender (a great film by the way).
Dave Moffat in Clear and Present Danger has already been mentioned.
Elizabeth Marvel is playing a president who is being courted by the dark side due to circumstances in the new season of Homeland.
Of course there is also the most obvious candidate. The big kahuna himself. Kevin Spacey as Francis Underwood in House of Cards.
YES!!!!
His defiance of Zod produced some great moments.
Of course, as others have no doubt said making fun of Trump could alienate a large part of the American audience who voted for him and continue to support him. There are very definite inherent risks involved in the depiction of Trump as president on the large and small screen.
There is no way he will win the Peace Prize. Even if he did deserve it, which I don't think there is substantial reasons or arguments for, there is no way a panel of Norwegian politicians will vote in favor him. Besides, when and if he repeals the Iran deal, he will have created a mine field in the middle east.
Also of interest are the presidents in the two versions of Whoops, Apocalypse!. In the TV version President Johnny Cyclops is a naive Reagan stand-in under the thumb of religious fundamentalists. The film version gives us the well-meaning and competent female President Barbara Adams. She gained the office after the previous president, a former circus clown, died from asking a journalist to hit him in the stomach with a crowbar. She is disappointingly intelligent and well-adjusted, but the film compensates by giving us Peter Cook as the completely and irrevocably insane Prime Minister Sir Mortimer Chris: