-
Marques 2022-02-07 14:50:55
Nixon
In the film, Nixon's speech when he left after Watergate:
"There are many good professions, and this country needs good farmers, good businessmen, good plumbers, good carpenters...
I remember my father, I think People might think he's a little guy, a normal guy, but he doesn't think so himself. Do... -
Amos 2022-02-07 14:50:55
in the dark and the sun
After watching Oliver Stone's JFK, I was attracted by this so-called angry youth of the Vietnam War. Personally, I like the way it shoots this kind of film. Like JFK, the film is based on his personal thinking and uses a pseudo-documentary method to guide the audience. Enter the room he has...

Ted Kennedy
-
Holden 2022-03-16 09:01:08
The finishing touch When they look at you, they want to be you. When they look at me, they find themselves. JFK is really compact and wonderful, but it still restores Nixon to the maximum, a human. . . (There is no record for Mao Gang again)
-
Magnus 2022-02-07 14:50:55
Stone, who created the blowout period, is really speechless. The style of clipping like the wind and using 20 different ins filters in a row has been directly carried over from the natural born killer to here, although it does give people chaos and excessive force. I feel, but I have to sigh that this kind of controversial character should be filmed by him. From time to time, he will give some golden sentences to fill in some private goods, and make some conspiracy theories. Whether it is credible in a political movie is a matter of fact, and the effect is really not small. God Hopkins acting!
Related articles
-
Alexander Haig: I'm afraid we have another problem, Mr. President.
[He hands him a paper. Nixon glances at it]
Alexander Haig: June 23rd, '72, sir. The part that's underlined. Your instructions to Haldeman regarding the CIA and the FBI.
Richard M. Nixon: So?
Alexander Haig: Your lawyers feel it's the..."smoking gun".
Richard M. Nixon: It's totally out of context. I was protecting the national security. I never intended...
Alexander Haig: Sir, the deadline is today.
Richard M. Nixon: Can we get around this, Al?
Alexander Haig: It's the Supreme Court, sir. You don't get around it.
-
Richard M. Nixon: [on TV] ... because people have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I am not a crook.
Henry Kissinger: Oh, God, I think I'm going to throw up.