This is a fantastic film. If you don't get anything out of it, you're not watching carefully enough because there are scenes in the film which you won't find anywhere. For instance, nixon's complaining about 'all in the family' tv show is just hilarious. And the comments made about henry kissinger is equally gut wrenching and sad and embarrassing too. Kissinger was a media darling in the nixon era. The media always gave him a free pass on on watergate but this film shows him up as just as much of a buffoon as the rest of the nixon administration. Many people whine about the pettiness of nixon but that's what he did for a living. That's what got him in the white house so he was pretty good at it.
Ironically, 50 years later, the media is still focused on watergate and not much about anything else. Nothing about integration which was hugely unpopular or price controls or inflation or global competition. Nothing about trade with china. 1972, we had no trade deficit with china because we didn't trade with china and now our trade deficit has ballooned to over 500 billion dollars a year and the chinese hold most of the US debt. Nice going nixon.
Hitler made home movies too, along with his sycophants, but unfortunately many did not survive the war. Those that did are often repeated in documentary films not because they're particularly interesting or reveal a great deal of historical significance but because they show another side to the man. That is, the home movies show how ordinary he was. Yeah, ordinary. Weird, and dangerous but also ordinary. This is an interesting film but like hitler's home movies, you won't get very much context of the times or historical reference. And the constant home movies of nixon rallies is a bit over the top but most of the film, you're getting a short synopsis of the times and after watching, there's no need to travel to the national archives and listen to hours of the white house tapes.
It's just an amazing film with interviews of some of the participants who even years after the fact are glowing in the conservative embrace. No, conservatism is not bad, but cronyism, and boot licking is and this shows up these nits for who they really were. The end of the film is classic too because these boot lickers turned on their master, their master turned on them and still, after all the grilling and prison time, they all came up smelling of roses. They were all successful in later life. Probably, apart from nixon, some of the most successful felons of all time.
If you didn't live thru this period, it helps if you consider the context. No internet, no cables news 24/7, maybe two or three broadcast channels in your area, and maybe a couple of mexican bull fighting channels on UHF. No cell phones, no streaming, no changing what was published. Imagine if you will, reading a news paper article, then coming back two days later and it's all the same words. No editing, or deleting. Also, the home movies in this film were shot with film. Yeah so, you shoot on film, then you have to send it off for processing and wait for it to come back and then you needed relatively expensive equipment to watch it and a certain amount of skill to operate the projector without destroying the film. Guaranteed, most of these movies were shot, stored somewhere and then years later someone dug them out and watched and edited. If watergate never happened, they's still be in shoe boxes somewhere. Nobody in those days had the time to deal with film.
Oddly though, and maybe this was missed, there's no mention of chuck colson. Why's that? He was up there with the rest of the musketeers.