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IMDbPro

Frost/Nixon - La entrevista del escándalo

Título original: Frost/Nixon
  • 2008
  • R
  • 2h 2min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.6/10
115 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Kevin Bacon, Frank Langella, Oliver Platt, Sam Rockwell, Matthew Macfadyen, and Michael Sheen in Frost/Nixon - La entrevista del escándalo (2008)
This is the first theatrical trailer for Ron Howard's Frost/Nixon.
Reproducir trailer2:31
8 videos
99 fotos
BiografíaDocudramaDramaDrama políticoHistoria

Un recuento dramático de las entrevistas televisivas posteriores a Watergate entre el presentador británico David Frost y el ex presidente Richard Nixon.Un recuento dramático de las entrevistas televisivas posteriores a Watergate entre el presentador británico David Frost y el ex presidente Richard Nixon.Un recuento dramático de las entrevistas televisivas posteriores a Watergate entre el presentador británico David Frost y el ex presidente Richard Nixon.

  • Dirección
    • Ron Howard
  • Guionista
    • Peter Morgan
  • Elenco
    • Frank Langella
    • Michael Sheen
    • Kevin Bacon
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.6/10
    115 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ron Howard
    • Guionista
      • Peter Morgan
    • Elenco
      • Frank Langella
      • Michael Sheen
      • Kevin Bacon
    • 291Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 286Opiniones de los críticos
    • 80Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 5 premios Óscar
      • 23 premios ganados y 81 nominaciones en total

    Videos8

    Frost/Nixon: Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:31
    Frost/Nixon: Trailer #1
    Ron Howard - The Power of True Stories
    Clip 2:45
    Ron Howard - The Power of True Stories
    Ron Howard - The Power of True Stories
    Clip 2:45
    Ron Howard - The Power of True Stories
    Frost/Nixon: Reston Tells Frost What He Wants To Achieve With The Interview
    Clip 1:00
    Frost/Nixon: Reston Tells Frost What He Wants To Achieve With The Interview
    Frost/Nixon: Frost Tells Nixon That Only One Of Them Can Win
    Clip 0:52
    Frost/Nixon: Frost Tells Nixon That Only One Of Them Can Win
    Frost/Nixon: Nixon Tells Frost That Their Roles In Life Should Have Been Switched
    Clip 0:53
    Frost/Nixon: Nixon Tells Frost That Their Roles In Life Should Have Been Switched
    Frost/Nixon: Nixon Tells Frost That A President Does Not Committ Illegal Acts
    Clip 0:51
    Frost/Nixon: Nixon Tells Frost That A President Does Not Committ Illegal Acts

    Fotos99

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Frank Langella
    Frank Langella
    • Richard Nixon
    Michael Sheen
    Michael Sheen
    • David Frost
    Kevin Bacon
    Kevin Bacon
    • Jack Brennan
    Sam Rockwell
    Sam Rockwell
    • James Reston, Jr.
    Matthew Macfadyen
    Matthew Macfadyen
    • John Birt
    Oliver Platt
    Oliver Platt
    • Bob Zelnick
    Rebecca Hall
    Rebecca Hall
    • Caroline Cushing
    Toby Jones
    Toby Jones
    • Swifty Lazar
    Andy Milder
    Andy Milder
    • Frank Gannon
    Kate Jennings Grant
    Kate Jennings Grant
    • Diane Sawyer
    Gabriel Jarret
    Gabriel Jarret
    • Ken Khachigian
    Jim Meskimen
    Jim Meskimen
    • Ray Price
    Patty McCormack
    Patty McCormack
    • Pat Nixon
    Geoffrey Blake
    Geoffrey Blake
    • Interview Director
    Clint Howard
    Clint Howard
    • Lloyd Davis
    Rance Howard
    Rance Howard
    • Ollie
    Gavin Grazer
    Gavin Grazer
    • White House Director
    Simon James
    Simon James
    • Frost Show Director
    • Dirección
      • Ron Howard
    • Guionista
      • Peter Morgan
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios291

    7.6114.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8Chris Knipp

    Howard does not disgrace himself, and the play works better as a film.

    It didn't seem so in the run-up to the event, but British talk show host/interviewer David Frost's 1977 series of four on screen encounters with the disgraced ex-President Richard Nixon was great, historic television. This movie directed by Ron Howard successfully transfers the Peter Morgan play about the event to the big screen. Arguably, the story belonged here all along. The paraphernalia of a Hollywood production enables Howard to gussy up this claustrophobic event with such acoutrements as the luxury suite of a 747, Nixon's "smart" seaside villa La Casa Pacifica at San Clemente, and the impressive, downright menacing sight of a presidential motorcade. As the train of glittering, dark limos approach the Nixon friend's house where the interviews were shot it feels like a battalion of tanks; and Caroline Cushing (Rebecca Hall), the British socialite Frost chats up on the plane and makes his consort for the duration of the exploit seems the more slinky and glamorous for emerging from a posh airplane rather than a bare stage. Lighting tricks and artful camera angles help make Frank Langella morph more successfully into Nixon than his physicality would otherwise permit. Michael Sheen as Frost already seems to look and sound like his character, and the "monkey suit" blue blazer outfits add the final touch. His task is easier; we don't know so well or care so much what Frost was like. In the film version, both performances take on more nuance. Langella's performance on camera brims of with dyspeptic melancholy, aggression, and self-pity; Michael Sheen's as frost glitters with a muted, hysterical cheer mixing infantilism and fear. The extra visuals of a film also help to show Nixon's comfort and loneliness and Frost's sleazy playboy side.

    It's important that the fakery should work well, because the movie must provide lots of closeups that those in the balcony didn't see. So long as it works, the feeling of TV interviews is better achieved in the film, and the actors don't have to yell. The camera, sometimes annoyingly jerky, but in the best moments simply direct and relentless, does their yelling for them.

    So I'm saying this is a winner. Peter Morgan after all did the screenplay, and he's no stranger to such efforts--notable examples of his film writing are in The Last King of Scotland and The Queen; a rather less notable one is The Other Boleyn Girl. The flaws are simply in the events. For three of the interview parts, till it gets to Watergate in the fourth, Nixon seems to be winning. Despite a dramatic intervention by Nixon support staffer Col Jack Brennan (Kevin Bacon) to prevent an abject breakdown, Nixon does buckle under in part four. But his admissions still remain in the realm of generality, and there is the question: does anything said on TV really matter? The audience for a West End or Broadway play is a bit different from the popcorn crowd and how appealing this film will be to the mainstream is uncertain. Needless to say it's all talk and minimal action. For students of contemporary American history nonetheless the topic is thrilling. Frost used his own money for down payments. In need of cash and highly mercenary, Nixon used the celebrity agent Swiftie Lazar (Toby Jones) to get $600,000 for the interviews. Frost lost sponsors and the US networks refused to come aboard. He made down payments from his own funds and borrowed. He hired two journalists, Bob Zelnick (Oliver Platt) and James Reston (Sam Rockwell), to do support research. Reston was a firebrand opponent of Nixon. He refused to participate unless there was a commitment to shame Nixon and get him to admit he did wrong in Watergate and betrayed the country's trust.

    The issue was whether Frost had the depth to tackle a job like this. He wanted a Watergate confession too, but he let Nicon play him with small talk (despite the man's claim that he was no good at it) and temporize with lengthy self-serving reminiscences that blunted most of Frost's pointed questions. This is where Zelick and especially Reston come in to give a sense of urgency. Again the film excels where the play couldn't in showing Nixon's walk out to his car after each encounter, jubilant at first, pathetic at the end.

    Ultimately both in the play and the film, Frost's victory seems a hollow one, of little significance to morality or history. This is above all a story about television. In that arena, this was a coup. and there is great drama in how close Frost's project came to failing. As the encounters got under way, he was losing every sponsor, and later he lost his Australian show, having some time earlier lost his American one. The film tells us they all came back, and then some. Frost never really seems to have reentered the world of American television, but he has had many projects in England and is said now to be "worth £20 million," with a live weekly current affairs program on Al Jazeera English. Nixon is dead, and though he may have won three rounds out of four in the Frost interviews, his legacy is tainted.

    The show belongs to Sheen and Langella, but Bacon is excellent as the stiff, loyal Col. Brennan, and Sam Rockwell strong in an unusually serious role for him. As Nixon's somewhat lost wife Pat, the child star of The Bad Seed Patty McCormack is touching. There are lots of other actors, far more than in the stage production, and the best thing is they don't get in the way. San Clemente also plays a significant role. The brightness and beauty of Nixon's ocean-side estate helps dramatize his depression by contrast. There were doubts about putting Howard in charge of the screen version, but they were groundless.
    9Tony-Kiss-Castillo

    CINEMATIC RECREATION OF AN EPIC HISTORIC ENCOUNTER!

    FIRST: Let us FOCUS on the Title's Content and Context.....

    Truly... An Historic Encounter of 2 great personaliies... Presented with panache and gripping dramatic flare!

    The morning after the Watergate break-in, I brought the newspaper to my university, showing the brief article to everyone who would look. "Tricky Dick is at the bottom of this" I insisted..."NO! He wouldn't be that Stupid!" most of them replied.

    In Nixon/Frost we get an insightful look at a gifted, multi-faceted, conflicted personality in all its haunting glory. Nixon was many things. Stupid was not one of them. A Ron Howard Movie about a TV interview? I was very skeptical, to say the least. One single viewing made me a true believer.

    Ron Howard has crafted an instant Classic masterpiece. Ripe with couched metaphors and subtle tripwire dialogue, the film's power flows from Ron Howard's ability to present us with the cinematic equivalent of a 100 minute TV close-up of its title characters. Frost/Nixon turns a microscope on both Nixon's strengths and a shopping list of inner demons. Simultaneously vindictive, petty, rancorous, insecure and ever ready to play the victim, more than anything else, Frank Langella's uncanny performance evokes not any hatred, but great pathos.

    History is replete with flawed geniuses. But only during the past half century or so... has there been a media obsessed with exposing them for the entire world to see. Michael Sheen is inspired as David Frost, undergoing a great onscreen catharsis. And the re-creation of the interviews is sublime! Cleverly and convincingly Presented as two deftly talented sparring partners, Frost/Nixon is an immensely entertaining/informative slice of history that should satisfy even the most discerning cinematic gourmet.

    ENJOY! / DISFRUTELA! 9*********
    janos451

    'Frost/Nixon' - not what you think

    I almost skipped "Frost/Nixon," and I am glad I didn't. It's eminently worthwhile, one of the year's few films that deserves to be seen.

    My reluctance had to do with the expectation that it will offer nothing new to somebody who lived through the Watergate years and saw the Frost interviews (although remembering surprisingly little of them).

    Ron Howard's film is anything but ho-hum - if anything it's a bit too gussied up to be exciting. There is an element of discernible manipulation of the audience, but mostly it works, and you don't long resist it.

    The (relatively) unsung hero of the film besides Howard, Frank Langella's tremendous Nixon, and Michael Sheen's excellent Frost is the screenwriter: once again Peter Morgan (of "The Last King of Scotland" and "The Queen") engages mind and heart, and doesn't let go. Sam Rockwell's James Reston, Jr. and Oliver Platt's Bob Zelnick (Frost's two collaborators) are outstanding, and Kevin Bacon's Nixon-worshipping Jack Brennan is the actor's best work in a long time.

    Morgan and Howard manage to make the viewer think constantly of another criminal President without saying or showing anything overt - they just let history, past and present, speak.

    I had a strange, uncomfortable thought watching "Frost/Nixon": even if some future film "humanizes" (not excuses) Bush the way Nixon comes through this one, W. would still remain a malevolent midget against Nixon's accomplishments and actual *brain*. How far we have fallen.
    9IMDb-627

    Not to be missed! Vey rewarding

    I had the pleasure of watching this gripping movie at the opening night of the British Film festival. Ron Howard's direction and story telling ability are in top form with this effort. From the very first scene a carefully crafted and very credible 70s's atmosphere sets a solid stage for the superbly cast film and quickly transports the viewer into the political jungle that was "Tricky Dickey's" playground.

    The acting duo of Frank Langella & Micheal Sheen (Nixon & Frost) are set on a collision course that finds two deeply passionate personalities at the mercy of their insatiable desires. Both actor's portrayals are a study of affectation and body language, pleasurably accurate and yet not simply an impersonation. Indeed, the film never strays from the distinct Howard format that breathes so much life (read intimacy) into this familiar and yet mysterious relationship that exists for so many people who lived through the exceptional event.

    Make no mistake, this is by no means a two man show, quite the contrary. In fact, the wealth of supporting roles is perhaps the finest feature of this production. Bacon's devoted and stalwart marine practically glints of gun metal and polished shoe leather. The trio of Gould, Platt and Rockwell portray effortlessly the roles of the men who, brick by brick, constructed the platform from which Frost so successfully and serendipitously elicited one of the greatest unspoken confessions of all time. Rebecca Hall is delicious and demure, constantly filling scenes with her elegant presence.

    Perhaps the richest praise should be reserved for Peter Morgan, who has, without question, penned a truly captivating and insightful story that delivers not only a satisfying comprehension of a complex time in US history, but captures a generation's struggle to come to terms with the frailty of leadership that still echoes today.

    Not to be missed, this film can be enjoyed on multiple levels and will undoubtedly be regarded as seminal for it's engrossing insight and expert depiction.
    ametaphysicalshark

    Great cast, excellent screenplay

    The Frost/Nixon interviews are fascinating. Not every second of them, especially not when Nixon rambles on and on, avoiding questions by offering anecdotes in place of answers. Yet, they are an invaluable historical document, which allow us the rare privilege of seeing a major politician as a human being and nothing else. As interesting as the interviews themselves is the lead-up to them, the circumstances surrounding them, and the characters involved, particularly Frost and Nixon, of course. One could say that you only need to watch the actual footage, but there's ample room for a great dramatization, but it needed an even-handed approach, and certainly needed no political preaching.

    I have a personal dislike for Ron Howard as a director, a result of my sensibilities mainly, I suspect. Howard strikes me as a particularly heavy-handed, didactic director who has wasted many great concepts on mediocre films (out of 18 films I've seen by him, I only genuinely liked "Apollo 13". I was expecting the worst with "Frost/Nixon", but instead was met with one of the most entertaining films in a while, and a remarkably well-acted, even-handed, quality character study. I suppose I should have been prepared for a quality screenplay given the success of this Peter Morgan play in New York and London, but I was hardly expecting something this good. It's glib, funny, well-paced, expertly-structured, clever, observant, and intelligent. It creates a fascinating Nixon, played brilliantly by the great Frank Langella, though this is not quite up there with the likes of Oliver Stone's sadly under-appreciated "Nixon" or Robert Altman's endlessly fascinating "Secret Honor". The film is almost surprisingly well-directed, although there is a bit of the old TV trick of shaking the camera a bit, panning too often, to give the illusion of motion and energy when there's really just people in a room talking. The conversation's interesting enough, there's no need for that. Oh well, I suppose I am nitpicking.

    As far as Nixon movies go this is lightweight entertainment with plenty of comic moments largely leading up to two or three scenes of real human vulnerability. Aside from these scenes (which are truly, truly excellent), Peter Morgan conceives the meeting as something of a chess match with the unpredictability of a boxing match. To use J. Hoberman's words 'a prize fight between two comeback-hungry veterans, only one of whom could win'. On paper this could have been very heavy on amateur psychoanalysis and low on entertainment value but Morgan and I suppose Howard as well are clever enough to have some fun with the idea. This is not a criticism at all, the film has moments of surprisingly real depth and intellectualism, but overall the nature of the script works in its favor, makes those scenes more interesting, more ultimately rewarding.

    "Frost/Nixon" is an entertaining, exciting film, around as populist as I expected but in a very different way. This is the sort of writing we don't see enough of, particularly not in today's films. It's vaguely reminiscent of a particularly good BBC television drama. The cast is certainly good enough for that. Langella and Michael Sheen are outstanding, both manage to accurately portray the real-life men they are portraying while still adding some characterization and mannerisms of their own. Langella's Tony-award winning performance might be up for Oscar consideration soon, but Sheen's Frost almost upstages him at times. No heavy-handedness, no political 'messages', just a fun, clever script and a great cast in a well-made film.

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    • Trivia
      Frank Langella and Michael Sheen repeated the roles they created on stage. Ron Howard would only agree to direct if the studio would allow both actors to appear in the film version.
    • Errores
      Frost and Nixon behave as if they've never met before. In real life, Frost interviewed Nixon when he ran for president in 1968. Nixon enjoyed the interview so much that after he was elected, he met with Frost in the White House to discuss producing a television special.
    • Citas

      Richard Nixon: That's our tragedy, you and I Mr. Frost. No matter how high we get, they still look down at us.

      David Frost: I really don't know what you're talking about.

      Richard Nixon: Yes you do. Now come on. No matter how many awards or column inches are written about you, or how high the elected office is, it's still not enough. We still feel like the little man. The loser. They told us we were a hundred times, the smart asses in college, the high ups. The well-born. The people who's respect we really wanted. Really craved. And isn't that why we work so hard now, why we fight for every inch? Scrambling our way up in undignified fashion. If we're honest for a minute, if we reflect privately, just for a moment, if we allow ourselves a glimpse into that shadowy place we call our soul, isn't that why we're here? Now? The two of us. Looking for a way back into the sun. Into the limelight. Back onto the winner's podium. Because we can feel it slipping away. We were headed, both of us, for the dirt. The place the snobs always told us that we'd end up. Face in the dust, humiliated all the more for having tried. So pitifully hard. Well, to *hell with that*! We're not going to let that happen, either of us. We're going to show those bums, we're going to make 'em choke on our continued success. Our continued headlines! Our continued awards! And power! And glory! We are gonna make those mother fuckers *choke*!

    • Créditos curiosos
      Michael Sheen and Frank Langella are credited simultaneously before the title. Sheen's name is on a lower level, but further to the left; while Langella's is higher up, but pushed to the right. Therefore, depending on whether you read the card top-to-bottom or left-to-right, either actor can be seen as being credited first.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in At the Movies: Summer Special 2008/09 (2008)
    • Bandas sonoras
      By George It's David Frost
      Written by George Martin (as George Henry Martin)

      Performed by Atli Örvarsson

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 6 de febrero de 2009 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Reino Unido
      • Francia
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official Facebook
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Frost/Nixon
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Palos Verdes Estates, California, Estados Unidos(Nixon "San Clemente" Compound)
    • Productoras
      • Universal Pictures
      • Imagine Entertainment
      • Working Title Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 25,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 18,622,031
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 180,708
      • 7 dic 2008
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 27,426,335
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 2 minutos
    • Color
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    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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