WT

Absolute Power

1997 · Directed by Clint Eastwood

🧘4

Woke Score

52

Critic

🍿66

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 48 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1112 of 1469.

🎭

Representation Casting

Score: 8/100

The cast includes Dennis Haysbert and other minority actors in professional roles, reflecting 1990s baseline diversity without intentional progressive casting or commentary.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No evidence of LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or representation in the film.

👑

Feminist Agenda

Score: 0/100

Female characters exist within conventional plot functions tied to male characters, with no examination of gender politics or feminist themes.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 0/100

No engagement with racial dynamics, institutional racism, or racial consciousness beyond the presence of minority actors fulfilling genre roles.

🌱

Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No environmental or climate-related themes present in the film.

💰

Eat the Rich

Score: 15/100

Mild skepticism toward presidential/governmental corruption, but this reflects libertarian distrust of centralized power rather than anti-capitalist ideology or systemic critique.

💗

Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

No engagement with body positivity, disability representation, or body image commentary.

🧠

Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No representation of neurodivergent characters or themes related to neurodiversity.

📖

Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

The film makes no attempt to reexamine historical narratives or challenge conventional historical understanding.

📢

Lecture Energy

Score: 5/100

Minimal preachy tone; the film is primarily a plot-driven thriller without significant expository speeches about social issues or progressive values.

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Synopsis

A master thief coincidentally is robbing a house where a murder, in which the President of the United States is involved, occurs in front of his eyes. He is forced to run, while holding evidence that could convict the President.

Consciousness Assessment

Absolute Power arrives as a political thriller of the pre-9/11, pre-woke variety, interested primarily in the mechanics of its heist-meets-scandal plot rather than any systematic interrogation of power structures or social hierarchies. Clint Eastwood directs himself as Luther Whitney, a career burglar who stumbles upon presidential misconduct, and the film treats this discovery as a conventional narrative obstacle rather than an opportunity to examine systemic corruption or institutional violence. The story unfolds with the tidy moralism of a network procedural: the protagonist does the right thing, the guilty are punished, order is restored. There is no interrogation of whether such systems deserve restoration.

The cast includes Dennis Haysbert in a supporting role, lending the film a baseline of professional diversity that reflects 1990s Hollywood convention rather than deliberate progressive casting. His character functions as a competent Secret Service agent without commentary on race, institutional racism, or power dynamics beyond the immediate plot. Laura Linney and Judy Davis provide female characters whose agency is entirely circumscribed by their relationships to the male leads. The film contains no evident engagement with gender politics, sexual orientation, environmental consciousness, neurodivergence, or the other contemporary markers of progressive sensibility. It is, in short, the work of a director and studio content to entertain within existing frameworks rather than challenge them.

What intellectual ambition the film possesses centers on old-fashioned themes of individual integrity against institutional corruption, a framework that predates modern progressive cinema by decades. Eastwood's Luther Whitney is presented as a man of principle precisely because he acts alone, outside systems, a rugged individualist rather than someone advocating structural change. The film's skepticism toward presidential power is libertarian rather than progressive, rooted in a suspicion of centralized authority rather than a critique of how that authority is distributed along lines of race, gender, or class. By the standards of 2020s cultural consciousness, Absolute Power remains resolutely indifferent.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

52%from 21 reviews
San Francisco Chronicle100

A first-rate thriller about arrogance at the top.

Mick LaSalleRead Full Review →
Newsweek90

Eastwood is at his effortless, slyboots best and the film is as preposterous as it is delightful.

David AnsenRead Full Review →
Chicago Sun-Times88

A tight, taut thriller with a twist.

Roger EbertRead Full Review →
Washington Post20

Promises to speed up the pacemakers of grumpy old Republicans with its ruthless indictment of the unzipped presidency.

Rita KempleyRead Full Review →