The Apprentice
A Razor-Sharp Satire of Greed and Ambition
A powerfully invigorating, thought-provoking ride through the formative years of a polarizing icon.
Directed by Ali Abbasi, The Apprentice offers a gleefully one-sided and unflattering look at the business origins of Donald Trump (Sebastian Stan) under the notorious tutelage of Roy Cohn (Jeremy Strong). Eschewing the shallow caricatures of late-night comedy, Abbasi delivers a biting satire with an urgent, independent vision. It is a cautionary tale of ambition run amok, painting a disturbing view of a mindset being sharpened into a tool of ruthless self-service.
"The assignment feels like it's supposed to ultimately be a cautionary tale of greed and ambition run amok and the film accomplishes that."— Ray Manukay
🎬 Production Brief
- Director: Ali Abbasi (Holy Spider)
- Starring: Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong, Maria Bakalova
- Genre: Biopic / Dark Comedy / Drama
- Aesthetic: High-budget sheen meets gritty, urgent handheld vision
A Masterclass in Transformation
The film is anchored by powerhouse black comedy performances. Sebastian Stan manages a grounded, almost tragically sympathetic portrayal of Trump, while Jeremy Strong is formidable as the mentor who peels away the layers of a "hopelessly rotten" apple. While the film undeniably carries an agenda in its depiction of the 45th and 47th President, it stands primarily as a very amusing and invigorating piece of cinema that earned its place in the awards season conversation.
💡 Cinephile Fun Facts
- Cannes Premiere: The film received an 8-minute standing ovation at its world premiere at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival.
- Legal Hurdles: The production famously faced legal threats and "cease and desist" letters from the Trump campaign during its release cycle.
- Stan's Method: Sebastian Stan reportedly gained weight and studied hundreds of hours of 1970s and 80s footage to capture the specific cadence and mannerisms of the era.
✅ Pros
- Masterful acting from Stan and Strong that avoids SNL-style parody.
- Razor-sharp, painfully biting satirical script.
- Invigorating, high-energy direction from Ali Abbasi.
❌ Cons
- Maria Bakalova’s feisty Ivana Trump feels somewhat underused.
- The overtly polarizing agenda may alienate specific audiences.
- Disturbingly dark third act may be jarring for some.
🏆 Final Verdict
A good movie is a good movie, and The Apprentice is a really good one. It is a powerful, amuse-bouche of historical friction that proves no portrait of a polarizing figure can truly be neutral—but it can certainly be brilliant.
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