nzherald.co.nz

Movie review: You've Been Trumped

By Peter Calder
7:00 AM Sunday Dec 9, 2012
Anthony Baxter follows tycoon Donald Trump as he tries to establish a resort in Scotland. Photo / Supplied

Anthony Baxter follows tycoon Donald Trump as he tries to establish a resort in Scotland. Photo / Supplied

If Donald Trump's ludicrous flaxen pompadour and that nauseating reality television show were not enough to put you off him, this documentary should do the trick. In a vigorous and unabashedly partisan manner, it charts the oafish and bullying New York tycoon's attempt to establish a resort development with two golf courses in a sensitive heritage coastal zone near Aberdeen in Scotland.

Lawyers for Trump tried unsuccessfully in October to stop the BBC from screening the film, calling it "highly biased and manipulative", and they have laid complaints with the relevant authorities.

That's hardly surprising: Baxter, a British journalist, makes Trump, who both literally and metaphorically bulldozes everything in his way, look pretty bad, though it has to be said that Trump gives him plenty of help. When, at a function, he comes across a local woman he plainly considers easy on the eye, Baxter's microphone catches him suggesting to his minders that "she may want to work for sales and stuff".

Baxter wisely builds his story around a handful of impressively immovable local residents, who constitute the very thin front line of opposition. But he lays out his case with cool precision: the Scottish Government ignores its own environmental rules to give the project the green light and the local constabulary do not exactly cover themselves with glory.

The film's channelling of Bill Forsyth's 1983 film Local Hero, set on the same coast, and over-energetic editing are both distracting and unnecessary and the repeated sequences that depict Baxter's travails in making the film risk a loss of focus. A passing mention of what the project's impact might have been on the endemic unemployment would have been useful, too. But in a country like ours, where governments are keen to bend the rules for rich foreigners, this makes compelling viewing.

Stars: 3.5/5
Director: Anthony Baxter
Running time: 95 mins
Rating: PG (low-level offensive language)
Verdict: Portrait of an oaf

- TimeOut

By Peter Calder
John Edwards () | 10:01AM Tuesday, 11 Dec 2012
"A passing mention of what the project's impact might have been on the endemic unemployment would have been useful"

As the film makes clear, the area has full employment. Aberdeen is a boom town. The full plans include 450 large detached houses, about a dozen 'golf villas', and a 400 bed hostel for employees. If DT hopes to sell 450 expensive houses, the area is not economically depressed. The hostel is clearly not for local people, showing that the jobs will go to migrants.
Thomas Cochrane () | 10:01AM Tuesday, 11 Dec 2012
I keep reading about how this documentary could have been more balanced if... "they'd shown Mr Trump kissing babies and feeding the homeless". I didnt think it missed any of this... it was a man with a camera showing the world what Trump was up to. Balance was not required.
Peter Calder (New Zealand) | 12:42PM Tuesday, 11 Dec 2012
John, you are quite right. I see that Aberdeen's unemployment rate (1.2% in second quarter 2012) is barely a third of the Scotland average (4.2%). It is some time since I saw the film and wrote that review so I cannot remember what occasioned the comment: in any case, the film could and should have made the point you do, so as to head off arguments like mine. The tricky balancing act between environmental and employment considerations is a universal theme in arguments about development and I am aware that employment-creation potential is routinely overstated. Thanks for writing.
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