By Michael A. Memoli
Supporters of Sarah Palin who fear HBO's "Game Change" will present a negative portrayal of the former Alaska governor will have their own viewing options this weekend.
Palin's political action committee, "SarahPAC," emailed supporters Friday to direct their attention away from HBO and instead to the Reelz Channel, which will have the cable television premiere of the pro-Palin documentary "The Undefeated" on Sunday night.
"Please tune in to see the real Sarah Palin story," the email stated, without reference to HBO's depiction of Palin.
The HBO film version of the best-selling campaign book debuts on the network Saturday, with Julianne Moore playing Palin as she navigated the intense two-month stint as the GOP's surprise nominee for vice president.
Much of the cast and crew of "Game Change" came to Washington Thursday for a preview screening of the film, which also drew some of the figures portrayed on screen and many of the reporting class that had covered the campaign themselves. Among them: Steve Schmidt, the former campaign manager who was in part responsible for Palin's selection.
Aware of the criticism that has come from Palin's inner circle even without seeing the finished product, co-executive producer Danny Strong said he thought both Palin, along with running mate John McCain, would "probably be pleasantly surprised with how the film portrays them," even if he doesn't expect them to say so publicly. He noted that Schmidt, for his part, has endorsed the final product.
Moore, whose depiction of Palin impressed many of those who saw the screening Thursday, said she expects many will come away from the film with a greater appreciation for what she went through in the campaign.
"I think that the movie is less about Sarah Palin than it is about our political process," she said. "You don't consider that the ground is shifting underneath them every single day. That kind of campaigning, those kinds of pressures - it's something I just hadn't thought about before and didn't know about."
One scene in the film shows Palin being escorted to the stage of the vice presidential debate by an unnamed staffer for the commission that puts on the events every four years. She tells Palin that she did the same walk with Geraldine Ferraro 24 years earlier, when she was the first woman nominated for the number two position.
"That's so flippin' cool," Moore as Palin responds.
It turns out, Moore revealed Thursday, that she herself has a connection to that campaign -- she was a volunteer for the Mondale effort just out of college, mostly "leafleting."
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