Largely, it feels like it could've been 2-3 YouTube videos, with very little actually tying everything together. I feel like the main conceit of the marketing/"why I made a movie" statements were "I got a ton of inside footage of Jan 6," so only for it to be revealed that he had covid during that time and little of the movie actually focuses on the events of Jan 6th was disappointing. You do get a very satisfying arc where one of the main Q guys gets confronted about being a convicted pedophile after calling everyone else pedos. I think one of the main interactions that will stick out in my head is

Immediately after confrontation "Do you know what projection is?"

"Yeah Hilary Clinton does it all the time!"

Which was just great. Still, it feels like we get to see more of Andrew's directorial/production chops and they're, a bit lack luster. He narrates the movie much more than he ever did any of the YouTube videos, I'm not sure if he felt his usual style wouldn't fit a feature length movie, but 1. Incorrect take, see Harlan County USA 2. His observations are.... very surface level. The whole point is basically just "99% of media is grifters" which while true, is a message he directly posits from since he casts himself as a sort of alt-news/media guy. I feel like you need a more profound take when you directly profit from that conclusion.

  • commiewithoutorgans [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Yeah it was definitely a bit disappointing to me also. It had it's moment for sure that i enjoyed immensely, including Alex Jones working out of course, but it was very unsatisfying how real problems weren't tackled