Don’t spend your money on this. Amazon calculates a product’s star ratings based on a machine learned model instead of a raw data average. Fresh interviews with many of the key players including Ellsberg, Pat Buchanan, Dan Rather, John Dean (who becomes a sort of bete noir in Ferguson's eyes) and politicians on both sides of the aisle like Elizabeth Holtzman, John McCain and Lowell Weicker are supplemented with archival ones with many of those intimately involved (although, perhaps surprisingly, not Nixon). You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. The model takes into account factors including the age of a rating, whether the ratings are from verified purchasers, and factors that establish reviewer trustworthiness.Included with HISTORY Vault on Amazon for $4.99/month after trialQuickly browse titles in our catalog based on the ones you have picked. Oct. 11, 2018 The word “bombshell” pops up a lot in “Watergate,” Charles Ferguson’s comprehensive documentary about … well, you know.

Patient compendium drawing from 3400 hours of audio tapes, archival footage, declassified documents, et al, weaves a rich texture of understanding, particularly effective in flashbacks from their current day selves to their Watergate-era roles for such stalwarts as Carl Bernstein, Bob Woodward and John Dean. I knew NOTHING. As an educational look back at Watergate, it feels like a relatively efficient streamlining of something most of us know well enough. "Ferguson (who also narrates the film) closes with the not-so-subtle reminder that those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. Nixon, Ferguson makes sure to remind us, was fiercely loyal to his friends, and heartbroken when they had to pay the price for his actions. With so much to cover, Ferguson hasn't much time to give the viewer much of a background to the events during that (just over) two year period, but there are mentions of Vietnam, the Pentagon Papers and the robbery of Daniel Ellsberg's … I feel like it would have been more powerful to actual hear Nixon’s voice speaking but overall it’s definitely worth watching. Hodge, in particular, wanting as Nixon, evoking none of his cunning, oily calculation. President Richard Nixon is reelected in 1972, but attacks from the media and the antiwar movement goad him to take the dark path to the Watergate burglary. In the United States, the series premiered on August 7, … In the summer of 1974, Congressional impeachment votes, Supreme Court rulings, and further revelations seal Richard Nixon's fate, leading to his resignation.As the coverup cracks, White House counsel John Dean turns on President Richard Nixon, a Senate committee is formed, and a special prosecutor is appointed.In 1974, the Senate Watergate Committee and the Watergate Special Prosecutor confront Nixon in a deepening Constitutional crisis.The Watergate arrests lead to a vast coverup; but after Nixon's landslide re-election in 1972, the coverup starts to unravel, leaving the presidency exposed.In the summer of 1974, Congressional impeachment votes, Supreme Court rulings, and further revelations seal Richard Nixon's fate, leading to his resignation. This Mini series gives insight on Richard M. Nixon and the scandal he was involved in that eventually led to his resignation as America's president. Chronicle of Nixon's last months in the White House.

It has less value as a dusty mirror that reflects back on our current national crisis, as we poor souls have the misfortune of having to live through this nightmare every day, and the idea that “this too shall pass” is small consolation to those who are suffering the worst of it and waiting for someone to do the right thing.But even if Ferguson made “Watergate” with Trump in mind, his smartest decision was not to make it identify Trump by name. Charles Ferguson's extensive Documentary (4 1/2 hours) sets out to detail the history of Watergate from the break-in through Nixon's resignation. Getty. Watergate" is a special series from Academy Award®-winning director Charles Ferguson that chronicles one of the biggest criminal conspiracies in modern politics and features a roster of some of the most important media, legal and political figures from the scandal. But if the hybrid approach he employs by weaving in the dramatized scenes isn't quite a cancer on his documentary, it's a drag on an otherwise first-rate account.In terms of an insider's guide go what transpired, one could hardly ask for a better cast of characters, including reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, Dan Rather, Nixon White House aides John Dean and Pat Buchanan, Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Elsberg, the late John McCain, and former members of the Senate Watergate Committee, like Lowell Weicker, to name a few.But then Ferguson mucks that up by having actors perform the taped Oval Office meetings, with Douglas Hodge as Nixon, complete with sweaty upper lip and at-times slurred, drunken delivery.The problem is that we've seen plenty of dramatic portrayals of this period, from "All the President's Men" to "Nixon" to "The Final Days" to, most recently, "The Post."

How has Watergate changed the Presidency?