Agrega una trama en tu idiomaCinéma vérité feature that follows presidential hopefuls John F. Kennedy and Hubert H. Humphrey during the 1960 Wisconsin primary.Cinéma vérité feature that follows presidential hopefuls John F. Kennedy and Hubert H. Humphrey during the 1960 Wisconsin primary.Cinéma vérité feature that follows presidential hopefuls John F. Kennedy and Hubert H. Humphrey during the 1960 Wisconsin primary.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
As for Humphrey all his efforts to convince the local population that he was, being a former farm boy,the man for them fizzled away as the vote tally started to come in late in the evening. Kennedy also has in his corner his beautiful and classy wife Jakie or Jacqueine compered to Humphrey's plain Jane looking old lady Muriel that cut into his vote of the male population of the state, who were just crazy about Jackie, that in the end did him in and stopped him cold.
In the end in a race that was supposed to be neck and neck between Kennedy & Humphrey it soon turned out to by a route for Kennedy in him winning 56% of the vote and leaving Humphrey far behind and crying in his beer. This all but set up Kennedy for his next and most important primary victory in West Virginia where his catholic faith was to be a fatal hindrance to him in the almost 100% Protestant state. But with Kennedy's good looks and the beautiful Jackie by his side as well as his dad's-Popa Joe-money, that he used to pay off the local mine workers to vote for John, it had JFK there like in Wisconsin easily be able to get over the "Hump" and win without as much as breaking a sweat.
Well, 1960 sure was a different time and place. But it's clear the left media fix was already in 50 years ago.
The most interesting thing in this not so interesting documentary is the scene of real people and how we lived back in a simpler time. It was truly when America was great.
Most of the cars in this movie appear to be from the '40s. And Humphrey rides around in a bus. It looks like a regular bus that you'd ride to work. Everybody seems to be wearing suits and hats and it was civil.
Why did the left ruin our country?
Politics at the crossroads. Before the media age had turned political
campaigns into impersonal commercials, even the stars (in this case,
Kennedy and Humphrey) had to go out and press the flesh, hard.
While Kennedy is slicker and seems to have the more organized
machine behind him, he is still a saint of apprachability compared to
today's most folksie candidate. That's just how it was done before T.V.
had compleatly eaten us alive.
Some of the stuff with the affable, tireless Humphrey is
particuairly memorable. Speaking to a bunch of stone faced Wisconson
Farmers, his giddy style takes on a real comic poniency, he's like a
comic trying to loosen up Ed Gein.
Yet, you get from both candidates, yes, corny as it may sound,
they actually give a curse about the people they are talking to. If you
think that has all but vanished, as I do, you may find this film as
striking as I do. Some of the camera crew went on to "Don't Look Back"
and "Gimmie Shelter". 8 out of 10.
The documentary is not very deep on the actual issues or the differences between the candidates, maybe because much of the platitudes they speak in were vague, but what certainly comes through is how voters tend to back the person they perceive as best serving their own interest. Kennedy's Catholicism helps him in a Polish Catholic district in Milwaukee, but hurts him in some other places, with some voters frankly stating that's the reason they can't support him (reminding me of voters in 2020 who said they couldn't support Buttigieg because he was gay). Humphrey does well in farm country, especially those close to his home state, and he understands he must amplify this point to guys in overalls who look rather skeptical. There aren't a lot of hard-hitting questions about the intricacies of foreign policy (or any policy for that matter), but one guy shaking Humphrey's hand at the outset complains about how high his taxes have gotten.
Not to idealize it, but in light of today's politics, one can't help but observe how civilized the campaigning is, and the overall sense of decorum. The singalongs from both camps, sung to ditties like "High Hopes" get a little tiring, but are reflective of the period, and the sense of innocence that would gradually erode through Vietnam and Watergate. Meanwhile, it's hard not to smile in little moments like Humphrey coaching his wife on what to say when the camera turns on her, Jackie speaking a line of Polish she'd learned, or Bobby, initially introduced as Jack's brother, getting up to make a self-deprecating remark. For its content this is probably 7 stars, interesting but fragmentary, but I bumped it up because of the film style, and how novel that was for the time.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn the beginning when John F. Kennedy is smoking a cigar and the poll results are told to him, the audio picks up Kennedy uttering "well, fuck." The only reason this was captured on audio is because Robert Drew hid a microphone in Kennedy's ashtray.
- ErroresWhen Jacqueline Kennedy is singing along with supporters at a campaign rally, her lips are not in sync.
- Citas
Self - Narrator: The big handshake. The big rally. The wild race across the landscape - searching out voters. All repeated endlessly for days and weeks and months. These are the ordeal and the exhilaration of the US Presidential candidate. In the entire campaign, nothing is wilder than the battle of an important state primary - fought in every town and precinct. With the prospect that the candidate might be knocked out of the nomination if he loses. That even if he wins, his victory might count for nothing at the convention.
- ConexionesEdited into ABC Close-Up!: Adventures on the New Frontier (1961)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Primary?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Vorwahlkampf
- Locaciones de filmación
- Darlington, Wisconsin, Estados Unidos(Kennedy's motorcade passes the Lafayette County Courthouse)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 200,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1