Man with a Plan (film) explained

Man With A Plan
Caption:DVD Cover
Director:John O'Brien
Producer:Richard Morse
John O'Brien
Molly O'Brien
Jack Rowell
Starring:Fred Tuttle
Editing:John O'Brien
Runtime:89 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Gross:~$1 million[1]

Man With A Plan is an independently produced satire released in 1996, starring dairy farmer and actor Fred Tuttle as himself in a fictional story that finds him running for the U.S. House of Representatives. Since its release, it has remained a local cult classic in Vermont.

Many details of the film can be read as poking fun at certain public figures and groups in Vermont; for example, Fred describes himself as being affiliated with the "Regressive Party," a clear reference to the Vermont Progressive Party. The fictional incumbent Representative William Blachly also bears a definite resemblance to Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy. Parts of the film also satirize American politics in ways that the voice-over narration makes explicit—for example, it is made very clear at the beginning of the film that Fred's main reason in running for office is that he lacks the skills, strength, and education for any other job that would be lucrative enough to pay his father's costly medical bills. It is also made obvious during the campaign section of the film that Fred's victory is entirely the result of his charisma and charm, rather than of any amount of political savvy or wisdom.

Tuttle would go on to run for a seat in the United States Senate in 1998. He won the Republican nomination but was defeated by Democratic incumbent Senator Patrick Leahy, whom Tuttle famously endorsed.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 25 years later, 'Man With a Plan' saga shows real-life politics is stranger than fiction. Valley News. Hanson. Valley. October 30, 2021. May 27, 2022.