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Sebastian Stan suggests viewers catch The Apprentice for a genuine "experience" of Donald Trump as the US election unfolds. The 42-year-old, who portrays the polarizing businessman-turned-politician in an upcoming drama, insists that seeing the film is crucial to understanding the true nature of the man vying for the presidency again in the election. On The Hollywood Reporter's Awards Chatter podcast, he remarked: "I can sit here and tell you things you’ve heard already for, like, 30,000 hours, and it’s not really going to make a difference.

Apprentice director quips Trump film has 'more views than his rallies' in slam Trump slams 'classless' Apprentice movie over 'disgusting' depiction of himself "You hear facts, we all hear information, but you don’t experience it. It’s the experience of being with this person for two hours, and seeing where he’s coming from, and really asking yourself at the end of this film, 'Do you trust this person?' "Do you really trust that this guy is going to make a decision that’s going to be good for you or good for him?" He also shared a candid insight: "And let me tell you something: There is one paranoid, scared little man that's still out there fighting the good fight to get into the membership club of Manhattan and be put on a plaque on a wall." Adding: "He ain't caring about your situation.



It's that he‘s got to get there first. And that’s just what the film is." 'The Apprentice,' featuring Maria Bakalova and Jeremy Strong, p.

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