Long Shot is often downright hilarious while also being unintentionally revealing about the state of Left Wing America, making it a very good movie, if a sad one at the same time. So it goes in our 2019 world.
The unlikely couple at the center of this post-rom romcom are Charlize Theron’s superwoman and Seth Rogen’s shlumpy writerman. She’s loosely inspired by the great and glamorous Nikki Haley. He’s directly inspired by hundreds of shlumpy writers in Left Wing America, Carl Bernstein wannabes all of them.
His silly politics are substantially indistinguishable from any of the two dozen Democratic presidential contenders to the left of Joe Biden, and yet the movie doesn’t seem to realize that it’s actually satirizing the politics of its creators, not to mention the politics of Hollywood, Brooklyn and elite America writ large.
Her politics are veiled, her political success chalked up to fabulous looks, indefatigable energy and polished presence. Everything in her life is down to the minute. To wit, she steals a semi-free moment to slot in some tricep curls. She also performs at a high level while running on minimal sleep, Trump like. In short, her brains and discipline are way beyond his, plus she’s way, way out of his league from an attractiveness POV.
Charlize Theron & Seth Rogen demonstrate real chemistry between extremely misfit lovers.
SUPPORTERS
Long Shot follows in the Lefty Hollywood tradition of The American President and Dave.
As with most Left Wing comedies, people say awful things that people in real life don’t say, especially about women. Piling on, the female hero voices sexual preferences that reinforce harmful stereotypes.
Long Shot was written by a guy, so it’s not surprising that it objectifies women while ostensibly railing against the objectification of women. Lefties get away with that.
Be warned also that its “body fluid comedy” goes a step further than There’s Something About Mary.
Long Shot is as much a satire as a comedy of manners, sex or romance. Thus the thinly veiled references to Fox News, horribly twisted references though they may be.