Sunday, November 11, 2007

Daniel Nutty Day-Lewis

And in America, the articulate use of language is often regarded with suspicion. Especially in the West. Look at the president. He could talk like an educated New Englander if he chose to. Instead, he holds his hands like a man who swings an ax. Bush understands, very astutely, that many of the people who are going to vote for him would regard him less highly if he knew how to put words together. He would no longer be one of them. In Europe, the tradition is one of oratory. But in America, a man’s man is never spendthrift with words.
So it's all an act?

I always think Day-Lewis is a bit nutty and Lynn Hirschberg's piece The Frontier's Man in The New York Times just confirmed that.

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