
'Prime Minister' brings the stirring run of New Zealand's progressive leader Jacinda Ardern to life
Politicians typically don't mind campaign documentaries, because a race is a road show and the camera is a practice run for the performance part of the gig. Having a lens on what postelection governance looks like, however, is a rarity in nonfiction, which makes 'Prime Minister' something of a unicorn: an intimate view inside the consequential, galvanizing five-year administration of New Zealand's progressive leader Jacinda Ardern, who also became a first-time mother simultaneous to taking her country's highest seat of power.
Of course, partnering with someone who has behind-closed-doors access is a terrific asset, and co-directors Michelle Walshe and Lindsay Utz have a key one in Ardern's partner and now husband Clarke Gayford, one of the film's cinematographers (and sometimes its most humorously hesitant interviewer, especially when your formidable girlfriend has had a tough day). Despite the laughable scrutiny Ardern endured from critics about whether a new mom could govern (or whether a head of state should "mommy"), 'Prime Minister' makes clear in its many relatable domestic scenes featuring new daughter Neve (who's adorable) that such questions are ridiculous.
Read more: With strongmen on the march, Jacinda Ardern's new film touts 'empathetic leadership'
The point made by the filmmakers is that the job of looking after a country's people — and the mix of love and steel required to personally care for a child — might just go hand in hand. We certainly know which looming responsibility triggered the most reluctance in Ardern, as early on we watch the special minority coalition circumstances in 2017 that thrust a then-37-year-old Ardern from opposition-party leader to prime minister in only two months.
For Ardern, an articulate spokesperson of heart and mind, it was an unexpected chance to effect change on a platform of issues that mattered to her. That opportunity was greater than any personal doubts she may have had, including a nagging sense of impostor syndrome. As she says, 'I could only be myself.'
Which means: compassionate, wry and unbowed. Ardern was quick-witted enough to sparkle on Stephen Colbert and shrewd enough to pass effective climate change legislation and protect a woman's right to choose. "Prime Minister" is not be that interested in wrangling, dealing and lawmaking, or even the nuts and bolts of her progressive views. (You crave more scenes of her debating — she seems especially strong at it.) But in the fleet, pacey manner of the editing, toggling between private and public moments with highlight-reel efficiency, the film is a stirring glimpse of top-down kindness as a winning leadership style. After the Christchurch tragedies, twin shootings that took 51 lives, she showed the most heartfelt empathy, then knuckled down and got assault weapons off the streets. Tears beget toughness.
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Ardern is so appealing, her manner so purposeful despite her admitted anxieties, that her struggle to respond forcefully and humanely to the pandemic — then endure threatening protests fueled by American-grown disinformation — is hard to watch. She became a rageful minority's easy target, exemplary COVID management statistics be damned. Stepping down in 2023, Ardern sacrificied power for her own sanity. (One wonders if 21st-century leadership is just too chaotic for thoughtful people — and only suited to megalomaniacs.)
'Prime Minister' is an essential political portrait in how it seeds optimism and concern, leaving you with hope that more Jacinda Arderns are in the wings ready to enshrine common sense, despite the risks. There's no doubt that when it mattered most, her high-wattage sensitivity was a towering strength. As showcased in this film, it's a precious resource we could use a lot more of.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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