A collection of home movies so pathetic and shocking that the viewer
cannot help but feel at least temporary sympathy for Richard M. Nixon.
Screened
at the 39th Seattle International Film Festival, this amazing film
ranks as one of the greatest assemblies of home movies ever made. As the
story goes, presidential insiders H.R. "Bob" Haldeman, John Erlichman,
and/or Dwight Chapin were Super 8 video nuts. They loved to make home
movies, they loved to make home movies of famous people, and they had
total access to the most famous person in the world; Richard Milhous
Nixon. The film is comprised entirely of archival TV news footage, press
interviews and the Super 8 home movies of the three aids, who were
probably the closest political operatives in the world to the most
powerful president in the world. And, boy, were they dumb.
Also
known as “Tricky Dick,” President Nixon also went down in history as the
most vilified president of the 20th century as a result of his assumed
responsibility for the Watergate break-in. This break in was executed to
gather information to further his aim of re-election, although there is
little reason to believe he would not have won, anyway, even without
the information he broke the law to obtain.
Most of this is
common knowledge to Americans in their 50s to 80s and is known at least
through history books to younger generations. Even so, there is
something eerily spooky about this film that puts an entirely new light
on the facts that we thought we knew, and the people we thought we knew.
The tapes were seized by the FBI during the Watergate investigation and
locked up for forty years. When Lane and her co-producer Brian L. Frye
learned of their release, they seized on the chance to plow through
endless hours of material to cull the priceless makings of this film.
Part
of the effect is due to the telling of this heart breaking and tragic
story through a medium that many Americans grew up associating with a
loving, protective and secure family. Although the Nixon administration
started that way, it ended on a completely different note. Super 8 is
the medium of the child’s birthday party,BOPP tape,
the first Christmas, the christening, the summer vacation at the lake,
and the trip to see Grandma. That is exactly the way the film starts
out; Super 8 videos of the happiest of times. The White House was
exquisitely simple and spacious compared to today’s tightly synched
staff army of the Obama administration.
In fact, to this day
nobody can tell exactly why Nixon hired the gravely inexperienced
Haldeman to head his staff. Perhaps he found badly needed ego strokes in
being surrounded by people who did not, and could not, make him look
bad. This dreadful lack of experience, wisdom and just plain common
sense would eventually turn the halcyon days of grinning, grainy videos
into the final tragic recordings of betrayal.
There is a tendency
to see this film as engineered by Haldeman, Erlichman, Chapin, and/or
their heirs and supporters, if not to rewrite history then, at least, to
blunt its edge. Since Haldeman died in 1993 and Erlichman in 1999
enough water has flowed under the bridge to soften the hurt. Or perhaps
director Penny Lane wanted to set the record straight, at least the way
she saw it, by confirming that much of the blame for the failed
administration should be attributed to Nixon, himself. In the end, the
recording we hear seems to echo the conscious stricken, humiliated and
disgraced president confirming that he knew everything but would force
his staff to take the blame.
Considering that most Americans
alive at the time, who were old enough to consider the evidence, had
already come to that conclusion, this film has an awesome impact anyway.
There is something about the way that the story nails the lid on the
coffin that is truly remarkable. Again, perhaps it is the innocence of
the completely amateurish and squeaky clean home movies contrasted with
the disgrace of the president of the greatest democracy in the world
intentionally breaking the law to gain re-election.
The film
includes priceless clips of Henry Kissinger, complete with statements by
insiders that Kissinger always claimed, though never to Nixon’s face,
that as Secretary of State he was solely responsible for the historic
rapprochement with China. Apparently he told anybody who would listen
that the President had little to do with it, in either conception or
execution. Maybe this explains why Nixon was averse to being surrounded
by smart people. With smart friends like Kissinger, who needs enemies?
All-in-all,
a very entertaining film and a “must-see" for anybody with an ounce of
political pundit in them or an ounce of appreciation for watching the
unfolding of dreadful disasters. The wonder of the Kodak moment makes
the fall from grace only the more painful.
Read the full story at www.sdktapegroup.com/BOPP-tape_c556!
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