TEXT C
Primary Colors The
movie Primary Colors is about a grey-haired, gravel-voiced, doughnut-loving
Governor from a Southern American state who is running in a US presidential
campaign. He has a colourful past that is in danger of grabbing frontpage
deadlines and a no-nonsense lawyer wife, whose accent would be right at home in
a prestigious Chicago law school. The similarities with president Bill Clinton
and his wife Hillary seem hard to ignore. The book Primary
Colors, published under the byline "Anonymous", became best-seller when it came
out not long after the 1992 American presidential election in which Clinton was
elected to the White House. It appeared to be a thinly veiled account of what
happened during that campaign. But Mike Nichols, the director of Primary Colors
the movie, insists that there is no direct relationship between fiction and
fact. John Travolta, who plays governor Jack Stanton, agrees. He
says that of course there are elements of Clinton in the movie character, but
then there are also elements of previous presidents--Jimmy Carter, Ronaid
Reagan, Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy. Emma Thompson, the
British actress who, as Stanton’s with, masters an educated Chicago accent for
her role, says the idea that Primary Colors is a straight rerun of real life is
far to simplistic, and it annoys her to hear of their production talked about in
his way. "The movie may have connections with the Clintons but
it is fiction," she says. "It deserves to be reviewed and written about
seriously. "The furthest she will go is to admit:" You couldn’t have the film
without the Clintons, without the Kennedys, without the media, without any of
us." The film scored well at the box office and critics were
enthusiastic about the performances from Travolta and Thomson and co-stars Kathy
Bates, as a political fixer, Larry Hagman, as Stanton’s principal political
opponent, Billy Bob Thornton, as a political strategist, and Adrian Lester, as
Stantons aide. Director Nichols admits to having had some
worries about the spillover of real-life scandal on his film, "Of course we were
concerned when the Monica Lewinsky business became frontpage news. Life moved
along with us in a war we did not expect. But we made this film as an
entertainment, and that is how people eventually saw it."
Movie-goers in America were constantly reminded that Primary Colors was
’about them as much as it was about the Clintons or any other high-profile
political couple. "It’s about American politics, life, marriage, fidelity’,
infidelity--and doughnuts." According to this text how did critics respond to the movie
A.It was merely imitating life. B.It was too much of politics. C.It was merely fictious. D.It was too much of entertainment.