Elvis & Nixon (2016)

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Elvis u0026 Nixon: Directed by Liza Johnson. With Michael Shannon, Kevin Spacey, Alex Pettyfer, Johnny Knoxville. The untold true story behind the meeting between Elvis Presley, the King of Rock ‘n Roll, and President Richard Nixon, resulting in this revealing, yet humorous moment immortalized in the most requested photograph in the National Archives.

“Greetings again from the darkness. The tagline nails the tone of the film: u0026quot;On August 21, 1970 two of Americau0026#39;s greatest recording artists met for the first time.u0026quot; Director Liza Johnson proceeds to tell the story of worlds colliding – an Oval Office meeting with President Richard Nixon and Elvis Presley. Of course, this is a fictionalized and satirical accounting, since Nixon didnu0026#39;t kickoff his recording passion until the following year.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIt would be pretty easy to bash the film as heavy on cheese and light on historical accuracy, but that would be missing the point. These two public figures couldnu0026#39;t have been much different from each other, but the script (Joey and Hanala Sagal, and Cary Elwes) finds a way to have these two icons hold a conversation … bonding over their mutual hatred of The Beatles.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe terrific opening credit sequence perfectly captures the time period and is a work of art unto itself. We first see Elvis shooting out the picture tubes in the TV room at Graceland. Heu0026#39;s disgusted with the news reports of Woodstock and drug use among Americau0026#39;s youth. Constructing a loose plot to meet with President Nixon and offer his service as a Federal Agent-at-large, Elvis is mostly interested in adding a federal badge to his collection.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMichael Shannon plays Elvis and Kevin Spacey takes on the Nixon role. Rather than a finely tuned impersonation, Shannon goes after more of an impression or re-imagining of The King. Itu0026#39;s a perfect fit for this setting, and there is nothing like watching Shannon give an impromptu karate demonstration for the leader of the free world in the most famous room in America. Spacey, on the other hand, is spot on in capturing the posture, mannerisms, sound and essence of a man who carried much personal baggage with his political power.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe chain of events leading up to the meeting plays a bit like a farcical comedy. Nixonu0026#39;s staff of Bud Krough (Colin Hanks), Dwight Chapin (Evan Peters) and HR Haldeman (Tate Donovan) is equal parts incredulous and opportunistic. We get two members of Elvisu0026#39; u0026quot;Memphis Maphiau0026quot; with Alex Pettyfer playing Jerry Schilling and Johnny Knoxville adding even more humor as Sonny West. There is a nice blend of u0026quot;littleu0026quot; comedy moments and outright laughers – Elvis impersonators confronting him in an airport, the Secret Service reaction to Elvisu0026#39; gift to Nixon of collectible WWII pistols, and Elvis meeting with a DEA official played by Tracy Letts.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI found myself smiling throughout, with full understanding that this satirical look at a meeting between two famous men with little common ground has no real historical importance … other than resulting in the all-time most requested photograph from the National Archives. But for 86 minutes of smiling, I say to the filmmakers and actors … Thank you. Thank you very much.”

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