Our Brand Is Crisis Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Our Brand Is Crisis quiz and we will tell you which Our Brand Is Crisis character you are. Play it now.

A movie that combines Mike Nichols’ “Primary Colors” and Costa-Gavras’ “Z” might be possible, but David Gordon Green’s “Our Brand Is Crisis,” which appears to be an attempt to produce something similar, is not that movie. Peter Straughan’s screenplay for “Our Brand is Crisis,” which was allegedly “inspired” by the 2005 documentary of the same name, awkwardly combines the star vehicle with the screwball political comedy/satire and the (in the end, half-hearted) emotional call to social consciousness arms. Although not without its amusing moments, Sandra Bullock’s cast members are animated, intelligent, and given a good deal of meaty material to rock out with. However, taken as a whole, “Our Brand is Crisis” is a disorganized affair that drags along when it ought to be humming with confident cynicism.

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A strange montage that cuts to staged “interview” footage, where Bullock’s character, “Calamity” Jane Bodine, formulates an excuse for we-don’t-quite-know-what, marks the film’s awkward beginning. Video of newspaper headlines and, strangely, pictures of Bullock’s hands shaping clay at a pottery wheel are cut in between her speech. The ultimate low point of Woodstock-era protest music, Ten Years After’s “I’d Love To Change The World,” is playing below it all. The movie’s sound editor deserves some sort of recognition for skillfully removing the song’s opening assault against “dykes and fairies.”
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Our Brand Is Crisis quiz.

Our Brand Is Crisis Quiz

The pottery industry is immediately described to allay our fears about “Ghost” influence. Bodine has retired to the icy mountains, where she doesn’t smoke and creates bowls, following a traumatic career as a political campaign adviser. Old friend Nell (Ann Dowd) takes idealistic young man Ben (Anthony Mackie) to the woods in order to persuade Jane to travel to Bolivia in order to oversee the presidential campaign of a conservative senator whose previous tenure as that nation’s leader was very… autocratic. Jane is sufficiently distracted from the wheel by the knowledge that Pat Candy, a political strategist with whom she has a history, will be her opponent. However, arriving in Bolivia, she is unable to immediately demonstrate her Sun Tzu-informed genius to tense candidate Castillo due to acute altitude sickness (the journey down is accompanied by a primer on the terrain and general stressed-out disposition of the location) (Joaquim de Almeida). not straight away, at least. Jane is immediately inspired by Castillo’s spontaneous response to being egged (in which he decks the egger) and her personal animus against Candy, who first give her the impression that her man is a dud.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Our Brand Is Crisis quiz.

About the quiz

Billy Bob Thornton portrays Candy, who is reminiscent of real-life political guru James Carville thanks to his serpentine southern charm and understated tonsorial stylings (it is perhaps no coincidence that Thornton also played a deep-fried political strategist in “Primary Colors”). James Carville was featured in the aforementioned documentary. Determining the extent to which this film is a clef exposé isn’t particularly entertaining, though. The clever nasty tricks Candy and Bodine pull on each other are where the comedy and drama really shine, and they could serve as an introduction to the contemporary political tactic known as “rat-f**king” (although that phrase is never uttered in the film). The movie has a contagious energy when Bullock’s fervently arguing turns negative or when Thornton mockingly plays Mephistopheles to her from across their hotel balcony—they are close enough to speak to each other directly yet insist on staying on their mobile phones. The viewer is never quite sure who actually did what to whom in the Candy-Bodine love-hate relationship because the show veers into forced visual humor, tedious periods of earnestness, and dense backstory psychology.
Also, you must try to play this Our Brand Is Crisis quiz.

It doesn’t help that David Wingo’s forceful, obtrusive musical score is present, nor does the fact that there are far too many “We Need A Montage”-style montages that follow. The fact that this movie’s creators were entirely capable of inventing something as cunning and cruel as its lead character is ultimately what irritates me the most. They simply chose to appear affable and sentimental.

For more personality quizzes check this: First Period Quiz.

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