Morning Wire - Jon Voight: Reagan Still Relevant Today | Saturday Extra
Episode Date: August 31, 2024Academy Award winning actor Jon Voight sits down with Daily Wire culture reporter Megan Basham to discuss his latest role alongside Dennis Quaid in the Reagan movie. Plus his thoughts on Hollywood and... how the lessons of Ronald Reagan remain relevant today. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Presidential biopics have long been a popular genre, with movies about JFK, Lincoln, and Nixon winning critical acclaim and scoring at the box office.
Now, with the new film, Reagan, America's 40th president gets the Hollywood treatment.
Starring Dennis Quaid as The Gipper, it examines Reagan's legacy in light of his efforts to defeat communism and bring down the Soviet Union.
In this episode, Daily Wire Culture Reporter Megan Basham talks with Reagan star John Voight about the film and the qualities that enabled Russia.
Ronald Reagan to win the Cold War.
I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Editor-in-Chief John Bickley.
It's Saturday, August 31st, and this is an extra edition of Morning Wire.
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The following is an interview between Daily Wire Culture Reporter Megan Basham and actor John Voight.
Well, thanks so much for joining us, John.
So I want to start out by talking about your character.
You play a former KGB agent, and I would say that you're kind of the framing device of this
film in remembering Reagan and telling his story. So why was it so important to enter the narrative
through the eyes of this Soviet spy? I don't know if it was so important, but it's relevant.
It's an interesting way to do it because the people who are most interested in his rise in
every corner of his career were the Soviets, because they were looking for the dangers that
might appear to them from people across the globe. And they found talented people who were politically
gifted and who also had an understanding of the world and made a decision against communism, which was
him. So they knew he was an enemy in some way philosophically. And they saw him coming. So they were
very attentive. I've known everything. One of the things they came up was they knew that he meant what he said
and he said what he meant.
The whole world knew that aspect of him
when he came into government.
That's why after the Carter administration had been at sea
about these hostages in Iran,
five minutes after he was announced as president,
they released the hostages because they knew who he was.
It's interesting.
It's an interesting portrait to have at this time, especially,
even though it wasn't supposed to come at this time.
It was pushed back and pushed back because of COVID
and different other things,
and now it's coming out at this time,
and it seems very relevant at this time in many ways.
Yeah, it definitely does.
And, you know, another thing that was really interesting to me
as I read through some of the reviews
was that a few of the larger legacy media outlets
were somewhat negative.
But the reason for their criticism seemed a little telling.
So, for example, the Washington Post said that the movie
doesn't explain why Reagan was against communism.
And I'll say that that surprised me a little bit
that the post reviewer thought,
people needed to have it explain to them why communism is a destructive ideology. Does that kind of
thing surprise you? Well, it shows their leanings. You know, they're very well confused because
they're very communist leaning. I mean, that's what's going on today. We're resembling that kind of
behavior. And it's a very negative behavior. Anywhere socialism or communism has grown in any
part of the world, it's produced nothing but misery. And it's destroying it here. But see, the reason why,
by the way, the reason why it's come to this here is because of the KGB. The KGB had a menu to try to
destroy us from the inside by taking over different things in our society. And they listed that menu
in a book, a 1958, a former FBI agent wrote a book called The Naked Communist. And in that book,
he shows you what's going to go on. And they took passages from that book and put it into the congressional
record. So they knew that the communists were looking to take over our universities, take God out of the
schools, create a disruption by dividing us by race, by gender and by age, seeking to infiltrate
both political parties and Hollywood. Well, it's all taken place, hasn't it? Yeah, it has.
And so it's resembling the communist line now.
So this guy who's at the Washington Post, he doesn't know he doesn't know he's representing those views.
You know what I mean?
He's confused.
Why don't they talk about the, why are they against communism?
Oh, okay.
Anyway, it's amusing, but it's concerning.
By the way, it's very clearly explained why he has a concern.
There's a scene where someone comes back and escapes from me.
the communist ghettos and comes back and tells him when he's a child,
tells his parents all about the suffering that he's been through.
Well, that's it, kid.
That's a big chunk of the movie is explaining his concern about communism.
Right.
And, you know, that scene, and it was such a great scene,
it did explain Reagan's opposition to communism.
And that was part of what made me chuckle a little bit when I read that review.
But it was interesting that the scene took place in a church.
And that was also something of a through line in this film,
how important Reagan's faith was to him.
And just coincidentally, as I was watching the movie,
I also happened to listen to a podcast yesterday from Christianity Today,
which was a magazine founded by Billy Graham,
and their editor-in-chief likened Kamala Harris's joy theme
to Reagan's Morning and America theme.
So I want to ask,
do you think that's a fair comparison to liken the Harris-Walls campaign
to Reagan's 1980 Mornings?
in America campaign? Well, I think they would try to make that connection, but it falls apart
because it's simply not true. You know, there's no real joy in this past administration.
Her laughter is not real joy. Just take one thing. I don't want to get too political,
but I just want to say that the cancer that is that open border is all on their watching.
And she was called the czar. Can you imagine the word? The czar of the southern border.
This is a crime, a terrible crime. You know, the intention of it to get all those people in,
and it seems like they're all trying to get them to vote, where they're buying votes and millions
upon millions of people pouring into our border from, as people described, you know, they're
coming, they're sending the worst people in their communities into our communities because they want to get rid of
them from the jails and the streets. So a lot of that and the dangerous people coming in from
enemies of our country. And then, of course, the great tragedy, horror, the horror of fentanyl
coming in and killing so many children. I mean, really. And that's, that was her responsibility.
So do you think Reagan's legacy is still impacting politics today? Is the Reagan era, in other words,
still influencing us?
Yeah, I think there's similarities.
The crisis in the economy
and in government generally
after the Carter administration
was quite severe. A lot of fixing had to be done.
And he was the man to do it. And we're
in the same spot today. We see a lot
of problems. Our economy is
really in bad shape. It's much more serious than anybody
knows. The world is
coming very close
to the possibility of a nuclear war.
That's what the portrait seems to be painting.
So there's a lot of things that are very, very deeply concerning across the world because of it, across the world.
So somebody has to come in and fix it a little bit.
Not a little bit.
I say that a little bit.
Well, it has to fix it.
And I'm a spiritual guy.
I say, we really have to do a lot of, we have to pray.
And we have to rely on God's energy and get.
get back to a moral society. We're losing it.
Well, to shift gears a little bit from this film, I'd love to ask you about the state of
Hollywood more broadly. So I have noticed that just in recent months, we've started to see
maybe a little bit of pullback from the politicization of film that we saw in the last few
years. We saw the Twisters director, for example, say that he didn't want to push a political
message in that film. And we've even seen Bob Iger at Disney, Ted Sarandos at Netflix,
kind of step back a little bit from that stronger, let's say, more woke political language.
Do you think that maybe the fever has broken in Hollywood and will start seeing less political
messaging in films?
I think that the reason why you're seeing that is because of the box office.
Follow the money, they say.
In this case, the films have not been successful.
So they're trying to change direction and get more people in the seats.
and that's business.
That's their business.
And I think it will be helpful to have films that are more positive.
And I think that will help the box office and return Hollywood to its proper business.
Okay, well, last question then, John.
Obviously, we're a few years out from the pandemic now,
but I do think it's fair to say that Hollywood still hasn't returned to its former glory.
So do you think the experience of going to theaters ever return?
to what it once was?
Well, it's a complicated thing.
One is that we have theaters in our homes now.
We never did have that.
We have very sophisticated equipment
that is making our homes
into a very comfortable theater.
The problem with that is,
I mean, in terms of being an audience,
is that you have many distractions
when you're watching a film.
And that kind of storytelling and art
should be attended to, the subtlety of everything lends to the whole experience in a great film.
So you don't want people saying, put some more mustard on that sandwich, you know,
or somebody get me whatever it is, you kids stop, you don't want to have that interfering
continuously in the film.
And that's what's going on at home.
You know, you're not really watching the film completely.
I think there'll always be a place where people can get, and it's always good to,
to, I think, to have a group of 200 people or whatever it is, a thousand people,
whatever, watching the movie together and experiencing it together.
There's something quite magical about it, really.
It's something, this shared humanity.
And we find out we're laughing at the same places and we're crying at the same places.
And it's a healthy experience that brings us together.
Well, amen to that.
And we hope that a lot of people gather around Reagan.
to experience it together.
And we wish you the best of luck with this, Phil.
Thanks, Megan.
Appreciate it.
God bless.
That was Daily Wire Culture reporter,
Megan Basham,
interviewing actor John Voight
about the film Reagan in theaters now.
And this has been an extra edition of Morning Wire.
