| Our Nixon | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster. | |
| Directed by | Penny Lane |
| Produced by | Brian L. Frye Penny Lane |
| Starring | Richard Nixon H.R. Haldeman John Ehrlichman Dwight Chapin Henry Kissinger Ron Ziegler Larry Higby |
| Cinematography | H.R. Haldeman,John Ehrlichman,Dwight Chapin |
| Edited by | Francisco Bello |
| Music by | Hrishikesh Hirway |
Production company | Dipper Films |
| Distributed by | CNN Films andCinedigm |
Release dates |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Our Nixon is an all-archivaldocumentary providing a view of theNixon presidency through the use of Super-8 formathome movies filmed by top Nixon aides H.R. Haldeman, Dwight Chapin and John Ehrlichman, combined with other historical material such as interviews, oral histories and news clips. It was directed byPenny Lane.[1]
Throughout theRichard Nixon presidency (1969–1974) three of his top White House aides—chief of staffH. R. Haldeman, domestic affairs adviserJohn Ehrlichman, and special assistantDwight Chapin—extensively documented their experiences withSuper 8 home movie cameras, creating a visual record of over 500 reels. These films were seized by theFBI during theWatergate investigation, then filed away for almost 40 years.Our Nixon is an all-archival documentary presenting these home movies together with other material, including excerpts from the secretly recordedNixon White House tapes, contemporary news reports, and later interviews with the three staffers.
Our Nixon appeared at the 42ndInternational Film Festival Rotterdam.[2] The film has subsequently screened at notable film festivals, including, among others, AFI DOCS in Washington, DC, theLos Angeles Film Festival,[3] the 39th AnnualSeattle International Film Festival, whereOur Nixon won the 2013 Grand Jury award for Best Documentary Film,[4] the 51stAnn Arbor Film Festival, where it won the Ken Burns Award for Best of the Festival,[5] the 11th AnnualIndependent Film Festival of Boston, where it won the Karen Schmeer Award for Excellence in Documentary Editing,[6] the 19th AnnualNantucket Film Festival, where it won the Adrienne Shelly Award for Excellence in Filmmaking,[7] and the 9th AnnualTraverse City Film Festival, where it won the Founders Prize for Best Documentary.[8]
Our Nixon was also chosen as the closing night film for theFilm Society of Lincoln Center andMuseum of Modern ArtNew Directors/New Films Festival inNew York City.[9][10]
Our Nixon made its United States television premiere onCNN on August 1, 2013, and was released theatrically byCinedigm on August 30, 2013.[11][12]
The film received positive reviews from critics. Onreview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 91% based on 43 reviews, with an average rating of 7.5/10. The site's critics' consensus reads: "Our Nixon offers a privileged personal perspective on a White House soon to be derailed by scandal, giving viewers an intimate look at the people behind the political legend."[13] OnMetacritic, the film holds an aggregated score of 72 out of 100 based on 14 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[14]
Stanley Kauffmann ofThe New Republic wrote that "[Penny Lane] states that the film was produced entirely from previously extant material, which makes it especially interesting", and concluded: "So we have here a capably done account of a presidential career that was wrecked by a crime that was unnecessary."[15] John Hartl, writing forThe Seattle Times, gave the film a score of 3 stars out of 4, and said that "The result is maudlin beyond belief, especially Nixon’s farewell to the aides he’s in the process of firing, but other moments simply register as shockingly out of touch."[16]
Matt Zoller Seitz ofRogerEbert.com gave the film a score of 3 stars out of 4, writing that the film "often plays like a mortifying companion to the Nixon-period sitcom "The Wonder Years"", and said that the film's best quality was "its willingness to paint its key players as people, not villains or types. Rather than excuse or soft-pedal their bad deeds, this approach makes them seem more comprehensible and real—like people we might know, but with power." He concluded that the film "charts changing times and generational attitudes simply by showing us particular moments."[17]
David Hinckley, writing for theNew York Daily News, was more critical in his review of the film, writing: "For a while, it looks like "Our Nixon" will give us a different perspective on one of the most documented men in modern history, the late President Richard M. Nixon. Right around the time it hits Watergate, though, it falls onto a familiar path, concluding he planted the seeds of his presidency's own doom. We sort of knew that."[18] Peter Howell of theToronto Star wrote: "Our Nixon shows that while the stooges were good at scheming (up until Watergate, at least) they sucked as filmmakers."[19]