Casino Jack finds a middle ground. Abramoff is portrayed as the victim of the hypocrisy of other politicians, including president George W. Bush and especially Sen. John McCain, who were quick to distance themselves from the disgraced Abramoff even as they were allegedly beneficiaries of his schemes.Given Spacey’s and Hickenlooper’s political leanings, conservatives have room to argue that the film is far more unflattering to the Republican Party than it is to Jewish lawbreakers.Hickenlooper was a self-professed political junkie and former Republican who became disillusioned with the Bush administration and switched sides by voting for Barack Obama.Spacey denies any political agenda; it’s a cautionary tale about the abuses of power.“I think the Democrats are just as guilty in terms of power and influence and access as the Republicans are,” Spacey said. “He happened to be a Republican, but this isn’t a oneparty problem.”In Casino Jack, it takes another Jew to call Abramoff out on his Jewish hypocrisy.Abramoff’s front man in his disastrous attempt to take over the SunSail gambling cruise line (factually SunCruz) is the sleazy, chubby, moblinked disbarred lawyer and mattress mogul Adam Kidan, played by Jon Lovitz. Kidan calls Abramoff a “fake Jew fat f*ck” when they argue over the gangland style hit of SunSail owner Gus Boulis.Lovitz, a friend of Spacey’s for more than 25 years, had no qualms immortalizing a scandal by playing such a seedy Jew. Sitting in Spacey’s chair in an interview a few weeks earlier, Lovitz, a nonpracticing Jew, shared thoughts that might allay some concerns about damage to the public reputation of the faith and the faithful.“Look, if someone’s Jewish and cheap, it’s not because they’re Jewish. It’s because they’re a cheap person. It’s not the religion. There are good people and bad people of everything. I never looked at it like he [Kidan] was a bad ‘Jewish’ guy, but [rather that] there are bad people who are Jewish.”Spacey plainly shared those sentiments and also sounded that characteristic empathetic note for his on-screen character. “Yes, he [Abramoff] did some things he shouldn’t have done,” he said. “He crossed the line; he broke the law. All of that’s true.“But if there is an environment and culture in which you think that’s what everybody’s doing, boy, it sure is convenient to throw someone like him under the bus and say, ‘See, we’ve cleaned up our industry. We put this bad man away.’”
He's all right, Jack
Kevin Spacey turns disgraced Jewish lobbyist Jack Abramoff into an empathetic figure in the new film 'Casino Jack.'
Casino Jack finds a middle ground. Abramoff is portrayed as the victim of the hypocrisy of other politicians, including president George W. Bush and especially Sen. John McCain, who were quick to distance themselves from the disgraced Abramoff even as they were allegedly beneficiaries of his schemes.Given Spacey’s and Hickenlooper’s political leanings, conservatives have room to argue that the film is far more unflattering to the Republican Party than it is to Jewish lawbreakers.Hickenlooper was a self-professed political junkie and former Republican who became disillusioned with the Bush administration and switched sides by voting for Barack Obama.Spacey denies any political agenda; it’s a cautionary tale about the abuses of power.“I think the Democrats are just as guilty in terms of power and influence and access as the Republicans are,” Spacey said. “He happened to be a Republican, but this isn’t a oneparty problem.”In Casino Jack, it takes another Jew to call Abramoff out on his Jewish hypocrisy.Abramoff’s front man in his disastrous attempt to take over the SunSail gambling cruise line (factually SunCruz) is the sleazy, chubby, moblinked disbarred lawyer and mattress mogul Adam Kidan, played by Jon Lovitz. Kidan calls Abramoff a “fake Jew fat f*ck” when they argue over the gangland style hit of SunSail owner Gus Boulis.Lovitz, a friend of Spacey’s for more than 25 years, had no qualms immortalizing a scandal by playing such a seedy Jew. Sitting in Spacey’s chair in an interview a few weeks earlier, Lovitz, a nonpracticing Jew, shared thoughts that might allay some concerns about damage to the public reputation of the faith and the faithful.“Look, if someone’s Jewish and cheap, it’s not because they’re Jewish. It’s because they’re a cheap person. It’s not the religion. There are good people and bad people of everything. I never looked at it like he [Kidan] was a bad ‘Jewish’ guy, but [rather that] there are bad people who are Jewish.”Spacey plainly shared those sentiments and also sounded that characteristic empathetic note for his on-screen character. “Yes, he [Abramoff] did some things he shouldn’t have done,” he said. “He crossed the line; he broke the law. All of that’s true.“But if there is an environment and culture in which you think that’s what everybody’s doing, boy, it sure is convenient to throw someone like him under the bus and say, ‘See, we’ve cleaned up our industry. We put this bad man away.’”