The bulldozer ambition of infernally perky Tracy Flick (Reese Witherspoon), an oooh-oooh-I-know-the-answer overachiever running unchallenged for student-council president, unleashes the wounded resentments of high school teacher and student-council adviser Jim McAllister (Matthew Broderick) in this inspired satire. ''Mr. M.'' realizes he has had enough teenage go-getterness to last a lifetime and gets busy doing what he can to thwart Tracy's bright-eyed rise. Alexander Payne's scathing, subtle, and complexly funny tragicomedy builds a perfect, off-kilter universe it's a first cousin to Rushmore. And like Payne's 1996 gem Citizen Ruth, Election is a sophisticated morality tale. The production benefits terrifically from Witherspoon's great, steely performance, which inspires Broderick's striking, career-deepening turn as a sneaky adult. The supporting characters are vital and vivid: Tracy's tightly plotted game plan is jostled by 11th-hour competition from a sweet football player (newcomer Chris Klein) and his far more complicated lesbian sister (another newcomer, Jessica Campbell), who is, truly, way too cool for school. A


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