Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 2
Young Washington Draws Stodgy Review in 2-Hour Biopic of George Washington
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 2

Young Washington Draws Stodgy Review in 2-Hour Biopic of George Washington

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 2

Summary

  • The 2-hour-5-minute film is faulted for “old-fashioned stodginess,” with declamatory acting and plainly stated motivations outweighing personality, humor and period texture.
  • Jon Erwin’s PG-13 biopic follows Washington in the mid-1750s, from a mission in the Ohio Country to service under Gen. Edward Braddock at the Battle of the Monongahela.
  • William Franklyn-Miller plays a dutiful, ambitious young Washington opposite Mary-Louise Parker, Kelsey Grammer, Ben Kingsley and Andy Serkis, but the portrayal is described as blandly upright.
  • Angel Studios closes the film with Grammer, out of character, urging viewers to make it the No. 1 box-office movie, a pitch the review says reveals the filmmakers’ own ambition more than Washington’s.

Insights

What does this film's narrative reveal about how America views its founders during its 250th anniversary?
How does the biopic balance its heroic Washington portrayal with the historical facts of his life as an enslaver?
Described as 'old-fashioned,' how does the film use the director's pioneering AI and virtual production filmmaking techniques?