If you think the “tail wags the dog” (that the media controls the event, not the other way around), you haven’t been paying attention. Now, the dog is a disc. And it has a very sharp bite.
In the hyper-speed, 24-second news cycle of 2025, where deepfakes blur reality and a “distraction” can be manufactured in a single tweet, one film has never felt more terrifyingly prescient: Barry Levinson’s 1997 political satire, Wag the Dog . wag the dog bluray
The Blu-ray is an artifact of permanence—ironic for a film about manufacturing false history. Owning the disc is an act of media literacy. You can pause it. You can frame-step through the montage sequence where De Niro splices a cat into a war film. You can listen to the commentary track while a modern election unfolds on your phone. If you think the “tail wags the dog”
5/5 Stars (and one imaginary war hero, "Old Shoe," crying tears of grain-free joy). In the hyper-speed, 24-second news cycle of 2025,
For years, fans of this razor-sharp Dustin Hoffman and Robert De Niro vehicle have been stuck with lackluster DVD transfers and grainy streaming versions that compress the film’s visual wit. But the recent announcement of a new 4K-restored Blu-ray release (from Warner Archive or Criterion, depending on your region) isn’t just a tech upgrade—it’s a cultural intervention.
Wag the Dog isn’t a comedy anymore. It’s a documentary from the past about the present. The new Blu-ray doesn’t just clean up the picture; it clarifies the warning.