Keep an eye out for Grassroots

From CinematicalGrassroots is shaping up to be an interesting little Indy film. Based on the book Zioncheck for President: A true story of Idealism and Madness in American Politics, the film will be directed by Stephen Gyllenhal (Maggie and Jake’s Dad), and star Jason Biggs, Joel David Moore, Lauren Ambrose, Tom Arnold, Cedric the Entertainer, Christopher McDonald and Emily Bergl.

Biggs will play Campbell, an ex-reporter who agrees to run his eccentric friend’s (Moore) campaign for a seat on the Seattle City Council. Ambrose will be filling in as Biggs’ girlfriend, Smulders a skeptic of Moore’s absurd campaign, Arnold as a supportive bartender, and the Entertainer as the incumbent Moore is gunning for.

Book Jacket:

This offbeat true story is a comedy and a tragedy about politics, from anti-globalist protest to domestic turmoil. It’s about idealism, obsession and failure in Seattle, a progressive city on the fringe of America’s continent and consciousness.

Grant Cogswell is a poet, a punk rock-fan, an anarchist, a grassroots activist, and one very temperamental character. He loves Seattle so much he has the city logo tattooed on his arm. In the summer of 2001 he decides to run for city council. He’s so determined to win that he’ll even wear a polar-bear suit to a city hall meeting. Phil Campbell, the author, is a burnt-out recently fired alt-weekly reporter, a manic depressive who sees few reasons to live. Inspired by his friend Grant’s passion, and without anything better to do, he agrees to manage Grant’s campaign. For eighteen weeks, Phil devotes himself to Grant’s grassroots challenge—all the while fending an overzealous roommate challenging him for his position as manager of their shared house. Overshadowing the story is the tale of U.S. Rep. Marion Anthony Zioncheck, a legendary boozer and forgotten lefty radical from the 1930s. As Grant’s campaign unfolds, so does the story of Zioncheck’s tragedy — his rise and fall from an energetic young politico to a madman who is sent to the insane asylum. The question: Is Zioncheck’s tale a lesson already learned, or a prophecy waiting to be repeated?