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Nixon on DVD (1995)

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Average rating: 64%
1225520131524
3.0
from 754 members
 
Starring: Anthony Hopkins, Joan Allen, James Woods, Paul Sorvino, Bob Hoskins, Powers Boothe, Ed Harris, E.G. Marshall, Mary Steenburgen, J.T. Walsh, David Paymer, Madeline Kahn, David Hyde Pierce
Director: Oliver Stone
Studio: ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO
Run time: 190 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: great political films
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 21/01/2002

Brief synopsis of Nixon

A surprisingly sympathetic account of the life of Richard Nixon from Oliver Stone, NIXON stars Anthony Hopkins as the former American president. Told out of chronological order, the film traces Nixon's life from his strict Quaker upbringing, through his rise in the Republican party, to his wounding defeats in the early 1960s, and finally to the triumph of the presidency and the disgrace of Watergate. Viewing Nixon as a tragic figure, Stone finds the answer to the man's debilitating flaws in the hobbling insecurities fostered by his rigid youth. The film's supporting cast includes Joan Allen, James Woods, Ed Harris, and Bob Hoskins.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Near the end of this biographical drama, the disgraced President gazes at a painting of John Kennedy and says, “When people look at you, they see what they want to be. When they look at me, they see what they are.” That's a great line, the key to Oliver Stone's movie, which, like his earlier JFK, is three hours of brilliance, provocation and information overload. Stone sees Nixon as a man suffering from paranoia, haunted by the spectre of two dead Kennedys and by his own dead brothers, yet devoted to his wife, a role beautifully played by Joan Allen. The movie makes great demands on the viewer and on Anthony Hopkins, whose brave performance is more an impression than an impersonation. At one point, Paul Sorvino's sinister Henry Kissinger says, “He had greatness within his grasp but he had the defects of his qualities.” Much the same can be said of this mesmerising, infuriating movie.

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

A boldly conceived film on the corruption of power. It attempts to cast Nixon as the protagonist of a tragedy in a Shakespearean mould Ð like Macbeth, he clambers over the dead bodies of others to seize power and to retain it. While the film fails to show

USA Today

"...NIXON is a behind-closed-doors portrayal....Stone's casting prowess is paramount, and there are pungent performances even in the cameos..." -- 3 out of 4 stars

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 2 starsOkay, but you'll want to know more

scribeoflight from Monmouthshire , 30/08/2004

Anyone considering renting 'Nixon' presumably wants to know more about Richard Nixon; and most people, even those in the UK, will go into the film already knowing something about him.

Most people will be familiar with Watergate; some people will know about Nixon's diplomatic involvement with China; and others may be aware of his very narrow defeat to JFK in the 1960 presidential election. So, the question is: does the audience know Nixon any better after having watched 'Nixon'? The probable answer is that they'll know more about his life, but will be left slightly in the dark about his soul, his personality, and his place in history.

Oliver Stone tries very hard to make a film that serves as both an historical analysis and a gripping drama. In part, he succeeds; in part, he fails. There is much, historically speaking, that is interesting here, the Cuban facet in particular; but there is also a feeling that much has been left out. Where, for instance, is Nixon's life after Watergate? And while 'Nixon' is, as a drama, initially very compelling (not least because Hopkins is excellent in the part), it is also far, far too long.

The vertiginous camera-angles and shifting film-stocks look great for the first hour or so, but eventually they become another aspect of the film that seems to be masking the truth rather than helping to reveal it.

Rent it, but rent a classic like 'Patton' at the same time, just in case 'Nixon' disappoints.

  5 out of 5 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsAnthony Hopkins was a pleasure to watch

S J Langley from Leeds, England , 02/11/2005

An outstanding performance from Anthony Hopkins, who only four years earlier was chewing peoples flesh as Hannibal Lector. He completely transformed himself into Richard Nixon and gave the performance of a lifetime. It is the story of the 37th American President who ended the war in Southeast Asia and made peace with both China and the Soviet Union. Unfortunately though, Richard Nixon was mostly hated. He was his own worst enemy and was finally brought down by a series of blunders including; the illegal bombing of Cambodia, lying to the American public, defying popular opinion to end the war, taping every conversation he had in the White House (including conversations with his own family) and hating the Kennedy’s with a passion. Nixon came from a poor family who struggled through life where as the Kennedy’s where well off and able to send the future president JFK off to Harvard etc. Nixon felt that because of his upbringing the American people looked at him very differently. Also, there is the Watergate Scandal to consider, which is the film’s centrepiece and eventually unfolds. I thought this was a remarkable film with great performances by all. Slow at times and very long, this is not a film for the impatient.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsOk

A customer from London, UK , 04/07/2006

Not bad film. Worth watching. Not historical but the way oliver stone saw things

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsLEMON TREE'S AND ALL

peterson from Belfast, Ireland [Highly rated reviewer] , 28/03/2007

Bravura, first rate filmmaking from a now diminished talent, Nixon was the tilting point in Oliver Stone's career.

Hackdum beckoned, but not before creating this impassioned, occasionally clumsy, yet moving epic.

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsOk

A customer from London, UK , 04/07/2006

Not bad film. Worth watching. Not historical but the way oliver stone saw things

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsGood history lesson

SeanValen from ESSEX , 15/12/2004

For those who don't know much about Nixon, this film covers quite a bit, the performances are very good, while it may not be entertaining in the suspense way, I don't think it was meant to be sold that way, it does it's job well, serving your curiousity of what people think of Nixon and his place in history.

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