Movie — Steelman

Augie runs a shadow consulting firm. He doesn’t represent clients in court. He destroys their arguments before they get there. When a billionaire, a non-profit, or a government agency has a plan they think is airtight, they hire Augie. His job? Build the single most intelligent, ruthless, good-faith counter-argument against their own position.

The movie refuses to pick a political side. In Act I, Augie helps an environmental group steelman an oil company’s argument for drilling in ANWR—and discovers the environmentalists’ own modeling is flawed. In Act II, he helps a gun-control group steelman the NRA’s interpretation of the 2nd Amendment—and finds a historical loophole that shatters their data. The audience is never told who is “right.” We are only shown who thought harder .

In Act III, Augie is hired by a small-town school board being torn apart by social media over a banned book. Instead of taking a side, he live-streams a 90-minute monologue where he steelmans both the parent demanding the ban and the student defending the book—so perfectly, so charitably, that both sides end up agreeing with his version of their own argument. The twist? The town unites. But not to compromise. To run him out of town. Because they realize: He understands them better than they understand themselves, and that feels like a violation. steelman movie

Augie (let’s cast a grizzled, sharp Adam Driver or a cold, precise Viola Davis) doesn’t believe anything he argues. He has no ideology. This makes him repulsive… and magnetic. His superpower is intellectual empathy . He can inhabit any worldview so completely that he argues it better than its own believers. The movie’s dark thesis: The person who can argue both sides better than either side isn’t wise. They’re dangerous.

“You think I’m dangerous because I can argue for what I hate. No. You’re dangerous because you can’t argue for what you love.” Would you watch this? Or would you walk out? 👇 Augie runs a shadow consulting firm

The Steelman Movie: An Uncomfortable Masterpiece We Need Right Now

If their idea survives Augie, they execute it. If not, they pay him millions and go back to the drawing board. When a billionaire, a non-profit, or a government

Imagine The Social Network meets Thank You for Smoking , directed by Michael Mann. Steelman is not a superhero movie. It is a 140-minute, R-rated legal and rhetorical thriller about a professional devil’s advocate named August “Augie” Cross.