‘My Son Hunter’ Movie Shows Biden Actor Passed Out On Prostitute With Cocaine On His Nose

By Center for Strategic & International Studies - Panel 3: Our Shared Opportunity: A Vision for Global Prosperity at 15:02, cropped, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=82559463

Art imitates life in the upcoming film that aims to “tell the truth” about Hunter Biden’s hard partying lifestyle and questionable business dealings.

In a first look of the movie, still images depict Hunter Biden passed out on the breast of a sex worker with cocaine on his nostrils. Other photos show him smoking a cigarette in deep contemplation and creating art with a straw.  

Irish documentarians Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer will purportedly mirror the details of Biden’s memoir “Beautiful Things” about his substance abuse problems, and delve into the reports about his shady business dealings and infamous laptop scandal, which were largely ignored by mainstream media prior to the 2020 election.    

Hunter will be portrayed by British actor Laurence Fox, who recently lost a mayoral bid in London, when he billed himself as an “anti-woke” candidate and received less than 2% of the vote. 

“The Hunter story fascinates me so much,” Fox said about the film, “especially the vigour with which the mainstream media continue to try and suppress it.”

Fox noted that he “couldn’t resist the offer to enter [Biden’s] world and tell his truth. So on one level we are both being uncancelled: Hunter’s story and Hunter’s truth can finally be told.”

On Wednesday he tweeted that filming was wrapping up and he’ll be sad to go back to his “cancellation.” The actor added that “there is much work to be done to put an end to #CancelCulture and the monochromatic boredom of political correctness.”

President Joe Biden will be played by “Dynasty” actor John James, who said the concept reminded him of the soap opera he starred in. “The script has it all. Money, power, greed, sex, drugs, and alcohol,” he said. “This is a common tale of a father’s ultimate love for his son, despite his major shortcomings.”

Filmmaker McAleer claimed that the President and Hunter have a “strange King Lear style relationship,” explaining that “Hunter can never live up to his fathers’ expectations. And although Joe loves Hunter, he sees him both as an addict who needs help and a business opportunity to be exploited. This conflict is what makes for the great drama.”


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