Tribeca 2012- Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie

Movie Review by Matthew Schuchman

Our airwaves are packed with overbearing, malicious personalities that rile up mobs of rabid fans who believe everything that spout out of their “leader’s” mouths. Bill O’Reilly, Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, etc. While Morton Downey Jr. certainly wasn’t the first of the breed, he perfected the outraged, ferocious persona and the mindset of turning it into a ratings machine. Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie does expose the transparent methods behind the men and women who perpetuate lies and false anger for their own good, but it also shines a light on a man who would do anything to be bigger and better than his father– even if it destroyed who he really was.

Morton Downey Sr. was possibly the most popular singer of his time. Breaking out in the 20s and 30s, Downey was the man Sinatra and Martin aspired to be. Downey Jr. also aspired to be like his father. At a young age he began his singing career and while it went well for him, he never could get passed people comparing him to his father. Eventually Downey Jr. found himself as a radio host with a fairly popular show. When Robert Pittman (the man who created MTV) wanted to bring back a talk show similar to that of The Joe Pyne Show, he saw Downey Jr. as the host with the most. In 1987, The Morton Downey Jr. Show premiered and quickly became one of the fastest growing shows in TV history. Within a year, it was in syndication and within two years, it crumpled faster than it grew.

If you’ve never seen the show, the film has plenty of archival footage.There’s footage of Ron Paul fighting with Downey Jr. and the audience about drug policies to Alan Dersohwitz being berated for his views on the death penalty. There are even a few fights between Downey Jr. and the more politically incorrect era Al Sharpton. The show started out more like an angry daytime equivalent of any Bill Maher show. Evocateur is not aiming to make you like or dislike Downey Jr., but through interviews with his friends, family, fans, and producers–it is clear that Downey Jr. was a damaged man who needed approval from anyone who would give it to him. If that meant turning into an insufferable prick whose audience members viewed as a God as they prepared to tear into anyone who opposed their views, so be it.

I was eight at the time of Downey Jr.’s height of popularity. Maybe this wasn’t news to others at the time, but for me, now discovering that Downey Jr. and his family were close friends with the Kennedy’s, is a surprise. The fact that Downey Jr. wrote a book of poetry to deal with his grief over RFK’s assassination (“Quiet Voices” Make the Loudest Sounds), is just astonishing. For every piece of obvious wretched events Downey Jr. was guilty of, there was something equally as amazing you would never think came out of him. The most important thing to remember is no matter what he was doing, be it good or bad, Downey Jr. was truly aware of what was doing–nothing was done without a purpose.

As much as this is a movie about Morton Downey Jr. the sheer fear and sadness it washes over me in reference to where we are today, is what hits home the most. Entertainers who want nothing more than to put on a pedestal will goad their followers into believing any junk that flows out of their mind with no evidence, simply because they won’t let the opposition get a word in edgewise–these are the people who are truly destroying this country. In a way, the astonishing crash of The Morton Downey Jr. Show, was brought on by Downey Jr. himself. He realized he had taken things to a level they shouldn’t exist on. While I can’t forgive him, even if he did own up to his mistakes, I pray his clones catch on earlier than he did and destroy themselves, soon.

Rating: 4 out of 5 ‘Staches

 

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