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Mit aller Macht

Originaltitel: Primary Colors
  • 1998
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 23 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
31.021
IHRE BEWERTUNG
John Travolta, Emma Thompson, and Adrian Lester in Mit aller Macht (1998)
Theatrical Trailer from Universal Pictures
trailer wiedergeben1:18
1 Video
94 Fotos
Politisches DramaDramaKomödie

Ein Mann beteiligt sich an der politischen Kampagne eines Glatzkopfkandidaten für das Präsidentenamt der USA.Ein Mann beteiligt sich an der politischen Kampagne eines Glatzkopfkandidaten für das Präsidentenamt der USA.Ein Mann beteiligt sich an der politischen Kampagne eines Glatzkopfkandidaten für das Präsidentenamt der USA.

  • Regie
    • Mike Nichols
  • Drehbuch
    • Joe Klein
    • Elaine May
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • John Travolta
    • Emma Thompson
    • Kathy Bates
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    31.021
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Mike Nichols
    • Drehbuch
      • Joe Klein
      • Elaine May
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • John Travolta
      • Emma Thompson
      • Kathy Bates
    • 173Benutzerrezensionen
    • 92Kritische Rezensionen
    • 70Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 10 Gewinne & 31 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Primary Colors
    Trailer 1:18
    Primary Colors

    Fotos94

    Poster ansehen
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    + 88
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    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    John Travolta
    John Travolta
    • Governor Jack Stanton
    Emma Thompson
    Emma Thompson
    • Susan Stanton
    Kathy Bates
    Kathy Bates
    • Libby Holden
    Larry Hagman
    Larry Hagman
    • Gov. Fred Picker
    Billy Bob Thornton
    Billy Bob Thornton
    • Richard Jemmons
    Adrian Lester
    Adrian Lester
    • Henry Burton
    Maura Tierney
    Maura Tierney
    • Daisy
    Diane Ladd
    Diane Ladd
    • Mamma Stanton
    Paul Guilfoyle
    Paul Guilfoyle
    • Howard Ferguson
    Rebecca Walker
    • March
    Caroline Aaron
    Caroline Aaron
    • Lucille Kaufman
    Tommy Hollis
    Tommy Hollis
    • Fat Willie
    Rob Reiner
    Rob Reiner
    • Izzy Rosenblatt
    Ben Jones
    Ben Jones
    • Arlen Sporken
    J.C. Quinn
    • Uncle Charlie
    Allison Janney
    Allison Janney
    • Miss Walsh
    Robert Klein
    Robert Klein
    • Norman Asher
    Mykelti Williamson
    Mykelti Williamson
    • Dewayne Smith
    • Regie
      • Mike Nichols
    • Drehbuch
      • Joe Klein
      • Elaine May
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen173

    6,731K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    broadfoot

    A political movie for people who don't like political movies

    This movie and the book upon which it was based caused a major stir when first released because President Bill Clinton felt the movie was based too much on his own life, even though the author denied that Clinton served as the model for the book's lead character.

    It's kind of hard to believe the author, since John Travolta's character has a haircut and a Southern accent identical to Clinton's. Also, the scandals Travolta suffers in the film, such as adulterous affairs and having children out of wedlock, also plagued Clinton during his presidency.

    Whoever you believe, Primary Colors is a very enjoyable film, even if you don't like political movies. The entire cast is great, especially Larry Hagman as an aging Florida senator who fills in for one of Travolta's opponents after he has a heart attack. It's a good step away from his J.R. Ewing character, even if his accent sounds the same.

    Primary Colors is rated R for profanity and sexual references, but I think a PG-13 would have been more appropriate.

    Krispy Kreme dougnuts, anyone?
    chicklet-2

    Great Movie

    This was a truly great commentary on politics in the modern world. John Travolta pulls off one of the best Bill Clinton impressions I've been priveleged enough to witness. Emma Thompson is witty, and real, a true testament to her skill and brilliance in her craft. But my favorite performances were delivered by the supporting characters in the film. To begin, the oft ignored Maura Tierney. She's charming, versatile, talented, and downright adorable. Daisy is horribly underwritten for an actress of her talent, but nevertheless a great and appealing character. Billy Bob Thornton's Richard Jemmons is hilarious and brilliant. He represents the truest example of the hardened believer. Finally came the eloquent and insane Libby Holden given breath in this mortal coil by the infallible Kathy Bates. I couldn't even begin to describe the beauty of this character's idealism. I would love to see more of it in our government. Good movie. Lots of fun, and lots of heart.
    10philblyghton

    An excellent political satire.

    The much under-rated Primary Colors represents the zenith of its genre: a consistently excellent political satire armed with a stellar cast, an involving, intricate plot, and some of the finest direction in recent times from the sporadic (yet always reliable) Mike Nichols. John Travolta's portrayal of a Clinton-esquire Southern governor with a weakness for women and doughnuts is note perfect, encapsulating the flawed yet undoubtedly brilliant Jack Stanton with effortless flair and charisma. Travolta is ably supported by English character actors Emma Thompson and big screen debutant Adrian Lester, as well as an Oscar nominated Kathy Bates, Billy Bob Thornton and a resurgent Larry Hagman.

    The film is, in essence, a chronology of Stanton's rise of the political ladder and the struggles encountered by his vibrant team in keeping their man in the race, despite numerous setbacks and tragedies along the way. The script gives Travolta a perfect platform to express the very human emotions that both constrain and encourage us: his early speeches (particularly at an adult literacy centre) are punctuated by salient (yet entirely falsified) anecdotes, and were are given equal insight into Stanton the man and Stanton the politician. Thus the film's fundamental paradox arises: the audience is clearly conditioned to sympathise with Stanton as a result of his remarkable eloquence, yet we are frequently undercut by revelations of sex scandals, endless untruths and the often heartless pragmatism he embarks upon. This conflict for the audience is superbly manipulated so that, at the film's conclusion, we are unsure as to what our own emotions should be. Few films manage to pull this off: fewer with the nuanced skill of Nichols' political odyssey.

    I want to add a few words about the female performances in the film. Emma Thompson, as the Hilary Clinton of the the cast, nails both the accent and mannerisms of her model with a convincing determination. Her character is often the mediator among the campaign team, yet there is a ruthlessness about her, a quiet conviction in her actions that her husband is clearly sustained by. Kathy Bates is the unhinged lesbian media consultant who is drafted in to nullify the potent threat of negative media reporting. She clearly gets all the best lines (a prize shared with the equally crazy Billy Bob Thornton character) including a memorable reference to Stanton's string of lovers as "sorry trash bins": scrupulous editing on my part here. At the film's conclusion, Bates comes to the fore, spelling out the impossible conflict between what is politically right and what is humanly right with an intensity that few actors could accomplish. Her subsequent Oscar nomination was well deserved and she was unlucky to be pitted against a triumphant Judi Dench in the Best Supporting Actress category.

    That said, this is Travolta's movie. This is a career-defining performance from an actor unfortunately sullied by a series of mind-numbing duds (Battlefield Earth, anyone?), yet had he chosen his roles more wisely (as, say, Pacino has done) a more creditable media image would most certainly have been forthcoming.

    Don't be put off by its subject matter: this is film making at its best and is a credit to its highly talented cast and crew.

    10/10
    7JamesHitchcock

    More than a Satire on Clinton

    "Primary Colors" is about a fictional American politician named Jack Stanton and his attempt to obtain the Democratic Party's nomination for the Presidency. At least, it's ostensibly about a fictional politician. On another level, it is a film a clef about a real American politician named Bill Clinton and his attempt to obtain the Democratic Party's nomination for the Presidency in 1992. The parallels between Clinton and Stanton go much deeper than the deliberate similarity of their surnames. Like Clinton, Stanton is the Governor of a small Southern state. Like Clinton, he has an idealistic streak in his nature and a talent for putting his ideas across in a relaxed, folksy way. (Clinton should have inherited Reagan's title of "The Great Communicator"). And, like Clinton, he also has a talent for getting himself enmeshed in scandal, particularly of a sexual nature.

    Other players in the Clinton drama have their equivalents in the film. The Hillary-figure is Stanton's wife Susan, ever supportive and forgiving in public but in private much less ready to pardon her husband's misdemeanours. Stanton's campaign chief Richard Jemmons is presumably based upon James Carville, who fulfilled the same role for Clinton. Stanton's early rival Lawrence Harris parallels Paul Tsongas, who initially led the race for the Democratic nomination but later faded. There is a Gennifer Flowers (or Paula Jones) equivalent in the shape of Cashmere McCarthy, who claims that she had an affair with Stanton.

    Although Stanton is, in one sense, the pivotal character (if he were not running for President there would be no film), in another sense the main character is one of his campaign team, Henry Burton, the grandson of a noted black civil rights activist, as the action is seen though his eyes. Henry is an idealistic young man who is caught in two minds about his boss. On the one hand he admires Stanton for his drive and energy and his sincere determination to improve the lot of ordinary people. On the other hand, he is disillusioned with the corruption involved in politics and with the dirty tricks played both against Stanton and on his behalf. The audience are often in two minds about Stanton as well, as he seems to be a fifty-fifty mixture of sincerity and sleaze.

    I have never read the novel (originally credited to "Anonymous", but now known to have been written by Joe Klein) on which the film is based, but from what I have heard Stanton was considerably less sympathetic in the book than he appears in the film. (Perhaps traditionally liberal Hollywood did not want to give the Democratic Party too rough a ride). As portrayed by John Travolta, Stanton is in many ways a likable figure, whose flaws are outweighed by his good qualities. Besides his sincere idealism he also shows courage (he tells an audience of unemployed New England shipyard workers that there are no easy answers to their economic problems). In the first half of the film, in particular, it seemed that the film-makers wanted to acquit Stanton (and by implication Clinton) of any serious wrongdoing. Cashmere McCarthy, for example, is exposed as a liar (her surname is presumably borrowed from the notorious Senator who specialised in smearing his opponents) and a supposedly incriminating tape as a fake. Clinton must have wished that the Flowers, Jones and Lewinsky affairs could have been explained away as easily. There is a reference to Whitewater in the shape of the "Freshwater affair", but this is attributed not to Stanton but to one of his opponents.

    In the second half of the film, the plot starts to diverge more from real events. Stanton is hit by a second sex scandal, potentially more damaging than any of those Clinton faced, as it involves allegations that he fathered a child by an under-aged girl. In reality, Clinton had a fairly easy ride to the Democratic nomination, but the film-makers obviously wanted to introduce a greater element of drama, as Stanton faces a tough challenge from a late entrant in the race, Fred Picker, the Governor of Florida. (Picker is not based on any actual politician). The climax of the story comes when the Stanton camp discover evidence that Picker, hitherto regarded as scandal-free, has been involved in cocaine-taking and a gay relationship. This presents Stanton and his aides with a moral dilemma; do they use this information to discredit Picker or do they bury it (with the attendant risk that the Republicans might discover it if Picker becomes the Democratic candidate)?

    The film is helped by some excellent acting. Travolta is an actor who seems constantly to be re-inventing himself, particularly since "Pulp Fiction" took his career in a new direction, and Stanton is one of his best performances, clearly based upon Clinton but different enough to emerge as a character in his own right. Larry Hagman makes a plausibly charismatic Picker, proving that there is more to him than JR and "I Dream of Jeannie". Special mentions must also go to Emma Thompson's long-suffering Susan, Billy Bob Thornton's Jemmons, a hard-bitten, cynical practitioner of Realpolitik, and, above all, Kathy Bates as Libby, another Stanton aide. Some actresses would have struggled to make Libby- a tough, foul-mouthed lesbian recently released from a mental hospital who at one point threatens to shoot a man in the genitals- anything more than an over-the-top caricature, but Bates manages the difficult task of making her a believable character. Her "Best Supporting Actress" nomination was well deserved.

    One reviewer complains that "Travolta does a poor Clinton impression", but despite its obvious relation to real events, "Primary Colors" is more than just a satire on Bill Clinton and his associates. It is a wider satire on American politics in general and a drama that asks some difficult questions about political morality. 7/10
    cinemel

    Insightful, entertaining political drama

    Now that the Monica Lewinsky/Bill Clinton circus has played itself out, I finally saw Elaine May's excellent, under-appreciated rendering of the tale of a thinly disguised American politician and his campaign to become President of the United States. The performances in "Primary Colors" are remarkable. John Travolta does an astonishing impersonation of Clinton without being a Saturday Night Live caricature. Emma Thompson is perfect as his long-suffering wife, always waiting for the other shoe to drop revealing his indiscretions. Kathy Bates deserved her Academy Award nomination as his public relations trouble-shooter. Her not quite over-the-top performance is the heart of this opus. Last, but not least, Adrian Lester is the idealist young African American in charge of his campaign. This impassioned portrayal bodes well to a successful future in films. Mike Nichols has directed Miss May's script with intelligence and humor. See it now, after all the gossiping has died down, for an insightful, entertaining glimpse into the world of politics.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Then-President Bill Clinton enjoyed this movie so much that he even invited John Travolta to a party, on one condition, he must come as Governor Jack Stanton. Travolta declined.
    • Patzer
      When watching the New Hampshire returns, one TV station says that Governor Stanton is still out campaigning on the street until the polls close while the other simultaneously says 15 percent of the vote has already been counted. Votes aren't counted until after the polls close.
    • Zitate

      [with a gun in her enemy's crotch]

      Libby Holden: I am a gay lesbian woman! I do not mythologize the male sexual organ!

    • Verbindungen
      Edited from Air Bud - Champion auf vier Pfoten (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Primrose Lane
      Written by Wayne Shanklin and George 'Red' Callender (as George Callender)

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 3. September 1998 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Frankreich
      • Deutschland
      • Japan
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Hebräisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • El escándalo
    • Drehorte
      • New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Universal Pictures
      • Mutual Film Company
      • Award Entertainment
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 65.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 39.001.187 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 12.045.395 $
      • 22. März 1998
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 52.090.187 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 23 Min.(143 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
      • DTS-Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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