This
week we watched the Oliver Stone movie Born
on the Fourth of July. To me this movie captures America through the eyes
of Ron Kovic, a Vietnam vet who once would have done anything for his country
but now back from the war feels differently and attempts to do his part to get
America out of the war and Nixon out of office. The Oliver Stone movie from
this era that I prefer is Nixon.
While Born on the Fourth of July is
very believable, Nixon is like Natural Born Killers meets JFK, going over the top in every
category to make a point about how bad
Nixon was. While researching the movie Nixon,
I found out something rather interesting about Richard Nixon that I never knew.
We
are all aware of Watergate and Nixon’s secret tapes but did you know that his
top aides H.R. Haldeman, John
Ehrlichman, and Dwight Chapin all videotaped events with small home movie
cameras? The event has already expired but in October of last year, MoMA had a
screening of the movie Our Nixon. The
film is all of the archival footage put together to create a 90 minute video
consisting of “Official banquets, parades, ceremonial balls, campaign rallies,
and world-historic state visits “become mere episodes in one man’s life, rather
than political events.” This special—dare we say, historic?—program includes a
selection of raw camera rolls, several restored sequences (among them Nixon’s
1972 trip to China)” (Museum of Modern Art 2012)
I’m sure Our Nixon is nothing like Oliver Stone’s
Nixon, but it would be interesting nonetheless.
A man so disliked, even hated, during his time in office and nearly caused a
revolution but to this day people find fascinating.
Bibliography
Museum of
Modern Art. The White House Movies: Nixon on Super 8. October 2012.
www.moma.org/visit/calendar/screening/16477 (accessed March 2013).
Our Nixon
Nixon
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