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Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie 2013 123movies

Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie 2013 123movies

Jun. 07, 201387 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie 2012 123movies, Full Movie Online – Long before O’Reilly and Beck, Morton Downey, Jr., was tearing up the talk-show format with his divisive populism. Between the fistfights, rabid audience, and Mort’s cigarette smoke always “in your face,” The Morton Downey Jr. Show was billed as “3-D television,” “rock and roll without the music.” Évocateur meditates on the hysteria that ended the ’80s and ultimately its most notorious agitator..
Plot: Long before O’Reilly and Beck, Morton Downey, Jr., was tearing up the talk-show format with his divisive populism. Between the fistfights, rabid audience, and Mort’s cigarette smoke always “in your face,” The Morton Downey Jr. Show was billed as “3-D television,” “rock and roll without the music.” Évocateur meditates on the hysteria that ended the ’80s and ultimately its most notorious agitator.
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Ratings:

6.8/10 Votes: 996
91% | RottenTomatoes
70/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 17 Popularity: 2.652 | TMDB

Reviews:

Entertaining Documentary That Offers Insight Into Today’s Media
Morton Downey, Jr. was a kind of real-life Howard Beale (the mad-as-hell crazy anchorman from the 1976 classic “Network”), and his meteoric rise and fall parallels that of another fictional populist TV personality: “Lonesome” Rhodes, played by Andy Griffith in Elia Kazan’s under-rated 1957 movie “A Face in the Crowd.” But this story really happened, and Mort really existed.

Downey’s New Jersey-based talk show was only on the air for two years, from 1988 to 1989. So why is he important? Why watch a documentary about a talk show that ran for just two years, 25 years ago? Understanding this story can help us understand how we got the media we have today.

Journalist William Greider called it Rancid Populism. This was the appeal of the Republican Party starting as far back as Nixon. The party posed as the voice of the “Silent Majority,” the disaffected common man, while in reality it appealed to the angry, white working class who jumped ship from the Democratic Party following the Civil Rights movement.

White working-class people felt “their” country was going down the tubes, and they were partly right. There was a lot to be unhappy about: de-industrialization leading to the decline of manufacturing and the rise of the Rust Belt (go watch “Detropia” for that); the decline of working peoples’ wages and the rapid growth of inequality and creation of a new Gilded Age in America. Politicians like Nixon, Reagan, and Bush Sr. were all better at tapping into this anger than the Democrats, making Republicans seem like the party of Joe Sixpack and Joe the Plumber — instead of the party of Big Business, Big Money, and Wall Street (which is ultimately what both major parties became).

The Republicans also understood the marketing of this message better than the Democrats: tap into people’s hatred of “the Government” and make the Dems synonymous with Big Government. (How many times already have we heard conservative politicians running for office who say they hate government? Then why run?)

The early 90s was when the right-wing Big Media really started up in earnest (what former conservative pundit David Brock has called “The Republican Noise Machine”). Rush Limbaugh, for example, got his start during the Clinton presidency. The Fox News Channel itself also started during the Clinton years, in 1996. Both were part of a generalized conservative backlash against a Democrat in the White House.

And this tactic of right-wing populism continues to work today (especially with another Democratic president to attack), and is bigger business than ever — with billionaire Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News channel going strong, the Koch brothers’ successful Tea Party movement, and all those TV and radio hosts like Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity who are paid tens of millions of dollars to tell us they’re speaking up for the “little guy.”

Morton Downey, Jr. helped lead the way to this kind of TV “news” or “journalism,” even if his show appears obvious and amateurish compared to the slick format and presentation we see today. But a figure like Bill O’Reilly, in particular, owes a tremendous debt to Downey’s confrontational, damn-the-torpedoes style of doing “news” and interviews. At the same time trash-talk-show hosts like Jerry Springer and Maury Povich also partly owe their style of crazed three-ring-circuses to Mort. Even the Reverend Al Sharpton, perpetual African-American leader and professional racial ambulance-chaser, owes a debt to Mort, appearing on his show frequently during its short run.

The friendship between Sharpton and Downey (briefly shown in the film) offers a clue to the truth behind the image: Mort didn’t really believe what he said on the air. Or maybe he did. Anyway, it really didn’t matter: it was all just for ratings. Working the crowd into a frenzy, yelling at his guests, having a fight break out in the middle of the show — Downey knew this was what made for great TV . . . or, at least, it got people’s attention. (Most certainly, this is also the case of Bill O’Reilly today: he’s a showman who stumbled onto a sure thing; about as authentic as a TV preacher.)

At the time, Downey was hated and judged by the “respectable” media. But give ’em a few years, and they’ll come around: trash-talk-shows, “reality” shows like “Jersey Shore,” Rush, Billy-O, “To Catch a Predator,” etc. It’s the race to the bottom, the lowest-common denominator, anything in the name of ratings. Entertainment, Infotainment, “News.” Who cares if we believe it? Who cares if it’s true? He who yells the loudest wins.

Mort’s show was like an (un-)controlled experiment in pushing the TV talk-show format to its absolute limit, right up to the breaking point — supposedly in the name of some Archie-Bunker, knee-jerk reactionary-conservative populism that Mort himself didn’t even really believe in. Yet, people ate it up, it made him a star and a working-class “hero” almost overnight, and it set the stage for a lot what came later in TV “news” and opinion shows. That’s why you should watch this movie.

Review By: teaguetod
A searing portrait of a deeply bitter, tortured, and self-destructive man who nonetheless made quite a mark on the 80’s television landscape
The Morton Downey Jr. Show blazed like an incendiary comet for about two years on television in the late 1980’s only to crash and burn due to the all-too-human flaws and foibles of its exceptionally crude, rude, and abrasive host Morton Downey Jr. Notorious for the ruthless way he ferociously bullied and berated guests that he disagreed with, Downey Jr. played the role of the angry and abusive ultra-conservative right-wing wacko to the deliciously slimy hilt. Naturally, it was basically all a cunning and calculated act, but Downey Jr. still managed to achieve significant iconic status with a huge segment of the disenfranchised American public as a kind of say-it-like-you see it blue collar folk hero. Born to show business parents (his mother was a dancer and his father was a famous singer), Downey Jr. initially made an abortive attempt to become a singer like his much-despised father before going on to work for the Kennedy family as a liberal senator (!) in the 1960’s prior to recreating himself as a hostile Republican loudmouth rabble rouser in the 1980’s.

Fortunately, this documentary neither glorifies nor vilifies Downey Jr; instead it presents him warts’n’all as an extremely angry and insecure man whose fragile ego and continual desire for acceptance caused him to self-destruct in the most excruciatingly painful manner possible (Downey Jr. infamously staged an incident claiming that he had been attacked and brutalized by skinheads in an airport bathroom, which this documentary states for the record was an outright hoax concocted by Downey Jr. to get one of his wives to feel sorry for him). The clips from The Morton Downey Jr. Show are every bit as outrageous and hilarious as one would expect — obnoxious gadfly Al Sharpton was knocked flat on his then fat pompous keister on one legendary episode which made the news — while the latter footage of habitual chain smoker Downey Jr. transforming into a staunch anti-smoking advocate in the wake of being diagnosed with lung cancer registers as remarkably poignant and heart-wrenching. Mort’s daughter Kelli Downey Cornwell and his best friend Lloyd Schoonmaker offer touching insights into the more human side of Mort while Chris Elliot, Sally Jessy Raphael, and Pat Buchanan discuss Downey Jr.’s legacy as a true trash TV pioneer who kicked politeness and civility out the door and replaced it with roaring rage and fury. Moreover, producer Bob Pittman admits he feels guilty about providing Mort with an ideal forum in which to bring about his own ruination while writer Jim Langan and bodyguard David Giegold tell some colorful stories about their wild ride working for Downey Jr. Although not without its flaws (for example, this documentary completely ignores the fact that Mort was a gay baiter who had a homosexual brother with AIDS who appeared as a guest on his show as well as glosses over Mort’s subsequent career as an actor after his show went down the tubes), this documentary still overall sizes up as a fascinating chronicle of a singular 80’s icon.

Review By: Woodyanders

Other Information:

Original Title Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie
Release Date 2013-06-07
Release Year 2012

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 30 min (90 min)
Budget 300000
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Documentary, Biography
Director Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, Jeremy Newberger
Writer Daniel A. Miller, Chip Miller
Actors Morton Downey Jr., Glenn Beck, Victoria Jackson
Country United States
Awards 1 nomination
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio 1.78 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Original title Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie
TMDb Rating 6.1 17 votes

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