【Delires obscenes (1998)】
Coastal Eliteshas nothing nice to say about Trump. But he should be Delires obscenes (1998)flattered by it all the same.
Written by Paul Rudnick and directed by Jay Roach, the movie consists of what it describes as "five desperate confessions from people barely coping with the new normal." That "new normal" would seem to refer to the pandemic, which is built into the structure of the film: Each of the five segments is shot remotely, and all but one is presented under the guise of some socially distanced activity.
But really, the "new normal" means Trump. All the leads are defined by their relationship to the president: Miriam (Bette Midler) is a Jewish grandma arrested after a fight over a MAGA hat; Kelly (Issa Rae) is a former Ivanka classmate wondering what's under the first daughter's placid smile; Clarissa (Sarah Paulson) is a YouTube meditation guru who loses her chill after arguing with her Trump-loving relatives.
You May Also Like
So fixated is this movie on Trump that it wedges him into segments that don't need him. In "Supergay (March)," the second and strongest chapter of Coastal Elites, Mark (Dan Levy) unloads in a virtual therapy session about his recent audition for a gay superhero role in a Justice League-style blockbuster. It's the opportunity of a lifetime for an actor who's lost out on parts for being too, ahem, "sophisticated," and yet Mark feels uneasy playing up his queerness at the behest of a straight studio exec imagining a mostly straight audience.
Rudnick's script is thoughtful and empathetic about Mark's internal conflict, grounding the superhero story in believable details and recognizing there's no easy answer or obvious solution to be found. Levy plays the part beautifully, with excitement and anger and confusion and sadness wrestling across his face. But then his monologue gets around to Pence, painting the vice president as the supervillain to Mark's superhero.

The turn isn't unwarranted, necessarily — Pence's anti-LGBTQ work is well documented, and surely factors into the way lots of LGBTQ people think of their own work. But it makes "Supergay (March)" feel like a missed opportunity. There's rich material to be mined in Mark's discomfort with the not-so-progressive directives of his supposedly liberal industry, and yet Coastal Elitesleaves it barely touched, eager to get back once again to railing against Trump. As if none of these issues existed before or outside the Trump administration, and would cease to exist again if only Trump were voted out of office.
Similarly, "The Blonde Cloud (June)" squanders an intriguing lead character in Kelly, a Black Lives Matter protestor who recently visited the Trump White House as part of an unrelated business lunch with her wealthy dad. You'd think a movie satirizing clueless liberals would dig into the inherent tension of that premise. Instead, Coastal Eliteshas Kelly halfheartedly psychoanalyze Ivanka and her dad for 15 minutes without ever quite getting around to a point. The segment seems to exist solely so Coastal Elitescan acknowledge the protests — and perhaps because without Kelly, Coastal Eliteswould be an all-white affair.
Coastal Elites is so busy being mad about Trump that it forgets to be about anything else at all.
At least Rae, like Levy, is a natural in this format. Watch Coastal Eliteson your computer, and their segments just about pass muster as a friendly Zoom call. Other segments are clumsier with the conceit, and other actors less able to roll with it. "Lock Her Up (January)" is ostensibly an interview given by Miriam to a cop sitting across the table, but Midler seems to be playing to the back row of a Broadway theater. "Because I Have to Talk to Someone (May)" is framed as a YouTube livestream gone sideways, but if Clarissa's busy going off the rails in front of a green screen, who keeps fiddling with the camera angles?
These inconsistencies might be more forgivable if either Miriam or Clarissa had anything interesting to say, but both their speeches feel ported in from early 2017, despite Clarissa's references to social distancing and mask wearing. It's simply not news at this point that Trump's election was upsetting to Clinton voters and thrilling to Trump ones, or that families and friendships split up along party lines. Neither narrative brings anything new to the table.
For all the missteps of the first four segments, however, it's not until the ending that Coastal Elitesgraduates from merely annoying to grossly cynical. The fifth and final segment grapples with the human cost of the pandemic, centering on a nurse in New York at the height of the coronavirus crisis in April. It's a fine piece of acting from Kaitlyn Dever, who shows us both the lively woman Sharynn used to be and the delicate, brittle one the past few weeks have turned her into.

But the segment is not really about Sharynn, or death, or the coronavirus. It's about Trump. It's why Sharynn is a nurse not from New York but from Wyoming. Like Irresistible, Coastal Elitesis built on the fantasy that the coasts are populated entirely by out-of-touch snobs who've had too much book learning and not enough life experience, while somewhere in the American heartland exists a virgin oasis of pure and simple folks untouched by the cynicism of modern life.
"We don't say shit like that in Wyoming!" Sharynn marvels, recounting a morbid joke she heard from a patient in New York. But what kind of jokes they do tell in Wyoming we never find out, because what the film finds compelling about Wyoming is not what it is, but what it isn't, which is New York. And what it sees in Sharynn and all its other characters are not people, but voters. Not even voters defined by their own hopes or ideals or principles, but entirely by where they stand on Donald Trump.
Coastal Elitesis so busy being mad about Trump that it forgets to be about anything else at all. Trump is the only lens through which these characters view the issues nearest and dearest to their hearts. Standing against Trump becomes the only way any of them are able to express their love for the people around them. Psychoanalyzing Trump and his associates is the only tool they have for working through their own issues. Trump is the reason everything is bad — not areason, but thereason — and voting Trump out is the only tool this movie suggests for changing any of that at all.
The characters of Coastal Eliteswould claim to hate Trump. Miriam, in particular, claims to go to bed in a rage over him every night, and wake up panicking over him every morning. But in one sense, at least, Coastal Elites' heroes and villains are perfectly aligned: All of them agree that the entire world revolves around Trump.
Coastal Elitesis now streaming on HBO and HBO Max.
Topics HBO
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Best IPL deal: Save $80 on Braun IPL Silk·Expert
2025-06-26 04:52MotoGP 2025 livestream: Watch France Grand Prix for free
2025-06-26 04:05Best TV deal: Get the LG UR9000 4K TV for 21% off at Amazon
2025-06-26 03:37Trump administration is axing the Energy Star program
2025-06-26 03:23The Mismeasure of Media
2025-06-26 02:49Popular Posts
Waitin’ on the Student Debt Jubilee
2025-06-26 05:12MotoGP 2025 livestream: Watch France Grand Prix for free
2025-06-26 04:40The Vornado 660 fan is the next best thing to AC
2025-06-26 04:20The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
2025-06-26 02:37Featured Posts
Boeing's new VR simulator immerses astronauts in space training
2025-06-26 05:08The Vornado 660 fan is the next best thing to AC
2025-06-26 04:49Best Ember Mug deal: Ember Mug 2 is on sale for up to 39% off
2025-06-26 03:33The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
2025-06-26 02:54Popular Articles
Best IPL deal: Save $80 on Braun IPL Silk·Expert
2025-06-26 04:45Lego's adorable Tiny Plants are on sale for $39.99
2025-06-26 04:01Cost Per Frame: Best Value Graphics Cards in Early 2025
2025-06-26 03:36Best Apple Watch deal: Save $80 on Apple Watch SE
2025-06-26 02:56How to Squeeze the Most Out of Your iPhone's Battery
2025-06-26 02:40Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (1351)
Style Information Network
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 18: Tips to solve Connections #237
2025-06-26 05:15Pursuit Information Network
Best Apple M4 MacBook Pro deal: Save over $200 on Amazon
2025-06-26 05:14Sky Information Network
AI helped a victim speak at his killer’s sentencing
2025-06-26 05:06Star Information Network
Best Apple M4 MacBook Pro deal: Save over $200 on Amazon
2025-06-26 04:55Information Information Network
SpaceX's Starlink will provide free satellite internet to families in Texas school district
2025-06-26 03:11