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Elvis & Nixon

  • 2016
  • T
  • 1h 26min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
15.437
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Kevin Spacey and Michael Shannon in Elvis & Nixon (2016)
The untold true story behind the meeting between the King of Rock 'n Roll and President Nixon, resulting in this revealing, yet humorous moment immortalized in the most requested photograph in the National Archives.
Riproduci trailer2:28
16 video
99+ foto
SatiraCommediaStoria

La storia dietro l'incontro tra Elvis Presley, il re del rock'n'roll, e il presidente Richard Nixon, che ha portato a questo momento rivelatore ma divertente immortalato nella fotografia più... Leggi tuttoLa storia dietro l'incontro tra Elvis Presley, il re del rock'n'roll, e il presidente Richard Nixon, che ha portato a questo momento rivelatore ma divertente immortalato nella fotografia più richiesta negli archivi nazionali americani.La storia dietro l'incontro tra Elvis Presley, il re del rock'n'roll, e il presidente Richard Nixon, che ha portato a questo momento rivelatore ma divertente immortalato nella fotografia più richiesta negli archivi nazionali americani.

  • Regia
    • Liza Johnson
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Joey Sagal
    • Hanala Sagal
    • Cary Elwes
  • Star
    • Michael Shannon
    • Kevin Spacey
    • Alex Pettyfer
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,3/10
    15.437
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Liza Johnson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Joey Sagal
      • Hanala Sagal
      • Cary Elwes
    • Star
      • Michael Shannon
      • Kevin Spacey
      • Alex Pettyfer
    • 107Recensioni degli utenti
    • 138Recensioni della critica
    • 59Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie e 4 candidature totali

    Video16

    Exclusive Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
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    House
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    Clip 1:04
    Parking Garage
    Open Hour Censored
    Clip 1:01
    Open Hour Censored
    Elvis & Nixon: House
    Clip 0:47
    Elvis & Nixon: House
    Elvis & Nixon: Parking Garage
    Clip 1:03
    Elvis & Nixon: Parking Garage

    Foto113

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    + 107
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    Interpreti principali49

    Modifica
    Michael Shannon
    Michael Shannon
    • Elvis
    Kevin Spacey
    Kevin Spacey
    • Nixon
    Alex Pettyfer
    Alex Pettyfer
    • Jerry
    Johnny Knoxville
    Johnny Knoxville
    • Sonny
    Colin Hanks
    Colin Hanks
    • Krogh
    Evan Peters
    Evan Peters
    • Chapin
    Sky Ferreira
    Sky Ferreira
    • Charlotte
    Tracy Letts
    Tracy Letts
    • John Finlator
    Tate Donovan
    Tate Donovan
    • Haldeman
    Ashley Benson
    Ashley Benson
    • Margaret (Ticket Agent)
    Kamal Angelo Bolden
    Kamal Angelo Bolden
    • Mack
    Ahna O'Reilly
    Ahna O'Reilly
    • Mary Anne Peterson
    Ian Hoch
    Ian Hoch
    • Donald
    Ritchie Montgomery
    Ritchie Montgomery
    • Grady (Airport Security)
    Nathalie Love
    Nathalie Love
    • Stewardess #1
    Atlanta De Cadenet Taylor
    Atlanta De Cadenet Taylor
    • Stewardess #2
    Skye Peters
    • Stewardess #3
    • (as Skye Forsyth-Peters)
    Joey Sagal
    Joey Sagal
    • Elvis Impersonator
    • Regia
      • Liza Johnson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Joey Sagal
      • Hanala Sagal
      • Cary Elwes
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti107

    6,315.4K
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    Riepilogo

    Reviewers say 'Elvis & Nixon' is a historical comedy-drama highlighting the unique meeting of Elvis Presley and President Richard Nixon. Praised for performances, especially Michael Shannon and Kevin Spacey, though some find Shannon's portrayal less convincing. The film blends humor with poignancy, though critics debate its depth and ambition. The supporting cast is well-received, making it an entertaining, albeit minor, biopic.
    Generato dall’IA a partire dal testo delle recensioni degli utenti

    Recensioni in evidenza

    7sammyboo21-999-252517

    MIchael Shannon owns this movie

    Kevin Spacey is good as Nixon.Don't get me wrong, he is one of my favorite actors. Michael Shannon though just kills it. I absolutely love everything Michael Shannon is in. I admit I would have loved to have seen Kevin Spacey as Nixon a bit more but this is mostly Shannons movie. There are two scenes, one where he's talking to his best friend and another where he's talking to himself in the mirror, these two scenes blew me away.So deep and moving.In a better movie I believe just these two scenes would have gained Shannon an Oscar nomination. Years from now when they are finding Shannons best scenes I hope they pick up the two in Elvis and Nixon. The supporting cast are fine here. The movie runs at 86 minutes which is really like 81 minutes without the credits at the end. It could have been an hour long movie though. At times it drags especially the scenes of Alex Pettyfer's character but other than that Elvis and Nixon is a delightful little movie with a great performance from Michael Shannon. You will have the giggles throughout and you will be entertained for sure by the ridiculousness of the whole movie. I really enjoyed it. ***1/2 out of stars.
    6trevor-82944

    What Happens When Kingdoms Collide

    One is the king of rock and roll, one is the king of the United States. Whoever would have thought these two very different minds of two very different backgrounds would ever be seen in the same photo together? No transcript exists on these events, just a photograph that now has become the most requested photo from the US National Archives. Now here, in Elvis & Nixon, director Liza Johnson gives her interpretation of these events. ​ It opens with the president receiving notification that the King has planned a visit, then this rather funny scene transitions immediately into a fun opening credits sequence full of 70's pop art against historical photographs of the two figures. From here, you learn some engaging facts that encourage further research, which sadly is supported by little excitement and little drama.

    This historical documentation surveys an entirely separate side of Elvis from what the millennials may know about him. Did you know that he had a deputy's badge from Memphis? I sure didn't. It also turns out that he went to meet Nixon so that he could become a Federal Agent At Large in order to influence the American youth that tainted the country's image with the Hippie movement. Being America's most famous icon of the time, he decided to take advantage of his image by proposing possible anti-drug initiatives to the White House, including some drug-themed songs with other singers. The politicians all found it absurd to let someone like Elvis Presley meet the president of the United States, but since he's won the heart of all the voters in the south, the meeting gets the approval seal.

    Revolutionary Road's Michael Shannon plays the King of Rock, and he talks as smooth, calm and collected as you'd think Elvis would be while not in front of a crowd. Unfortunately, he's not quite the right fit for the role, as he doesn't carry the project as well as he could. It's not that he's bad, he just doesn't put enough soul into the part.

    It's otherwise intriguing to see what details are used to illustrate Mr. Presley. He still has all his little quirks that you expect from the King: he orders a maple bar from a donut shop, he calls the Beatles anti-American, and he says "thank you, thank you very much" right before sending people off with "sayonara." He watches three different television screens simultaneously and carries an assortment of diamond-studded pistols. There's more: he also had a twin brother who was born thirty-five minutes before him, only to die minutes later, and it makes him question how things would have gone if he was born first. It's stimulating and almost inspiring to see this unknown side to Elvis that actually cared about the American image and took the initiative for his beliefs.

    However, this fascinating approach is supported by a rather clumsy first half. Elvis & Nixon was intended to generate laughter, but the laughs are far and few in-between, with dull scenes that either go nowhere or are composed of odd pauses between sentences. There are great additions such as fangirls working at the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs obsessing over Elvis's visit; the issue is that it's just too underplayed for what it had potential for. ​ In fact, Elvis's interaction with Nixon should have started right from the get-go without an hour-long setup, because that is where the real funny begins. These moments express some beautifully uncomfortable humor between a celebrity and the president, made all the better by the naturally flowing chemistry between Michael Shannon and Kevin Spacey. I will admit, Spacey probably wasn't the right fit for the part: his mouth looks just like Nixon's but not his eyes. But that's more a bash on the casting director than the actor himself. Spacey still talks just as raspy as Mr. Nixon, and it's easy to tell that he took the character as seriously as if on House of Cards.

    This is not the most spectacular piece of work you will ever see, you may not even remember it a week after seeing it, but it still gives a thought-provoking perspective on the influence that our celebrities have on our politics. Think of the artists of today. Consider how Taylor Swift's 1989 album influenced everyone's relationship expectations. Think back on the influence that John Lennon's Imagine shaped the hope everyone felt on the world. And don't get me started on all that Justin Bieber's went through. If you aren't dying to see Elvis & Nixon a second or even a first time, you can still bear in mind how our American icons influence far more than what we listen to in our spare time; the actions they take define what makes America the great nation we see it as.

    Overall Grade: C+
    5mountaingal1978

    Disappointing

    I've been waiting to see this movie for a year or longer. Eric Bana was originally supposed to play Elvis, and he would have been a much better fit than Michael Shannon. Michael doesn't look anything like Elvis, and he didn't show any charisma in his performance. Elvis is one of the best looking and most charismatic men to ever live, so it was painful to see this casting train wreck. There are several scenes in the original Elvis Meets Nixon that were left out of this remake: the beginning airport scene where the airline clerk asked Elvis for payment of his ticket and he says "can you send the bill to the Colonel as he has no cash or check book, the scene where he was taken off the plane for carrying a pistol, and the taxicab scene when a Michael Jackson song was playing on the radio. Those were just 3 missed opportunities to spice the movie up. The only redeeming thing about this movie was the convincing performance that Kevin Spacey gave. He looked and played that part to the hilt. I really wanted to love this movie, and I am so disappointed that I could not do so.
    8g-hbe

    Spacey steals it.

    This film almost passed me by until I stumbled across it on Amazon Prime. From the 'in period' opening credits to the bad wigs to the bro's in the coffee shop the cheese is strong and thick, but it's a very enjoyable film whichever way you approach it. Michael Shannon (who was completely new to me) neither looks nor sounds like Elvis but somehow fills the role very well, exposing a rather sad, isolated individual who just wants to be noticed for something other than being 'The King'. But the film is stolen IMO by Kevin Spacey, who captures ol' Tricky Dicky perfectly - the growling voice, the stoop, the hand gestures. Not only that, but he injects a wry wit to his part which goes a long way toward lifting this movie out of a dullness which threatened to engulf it at several points. I could easily watch it again.
    6JohnnyWeissmuller

    Elvis & Nixon

    Elvis & Nixon very much relies on the performances of Kevin Spacey and Michael Shannon, and thrives on what they bring to the eventual meeting between Elvis Presley and Richard Nixon. The movie is based on a true story that's better documented than is suggested here. Making Elvis & Nixon fanciful and fabricated in spite of how unusual this event actually was. Which is fine, because most biopics and fact-based dramas exist on creative licence. Although this is a movie that could have been equally successful had more of the facts been more closely adhered to in the script.

    What matters, however, is how interesting and appealing Spacey and Shannon make the film's central characters. Although we find a way into their respective worlds by way of Colin Hanks' "Bud Krogh" and Alex Pettyfer's "Jerry Schilling." Schilling in particular, whose fingerprints are evident throughout the movie ("me and a guy named Elvis" is a line of dialogue at one point," this being the title of Schilling's autobiography) and who acts almost like an audience surrogate.

    Schilling, who we first encounter working at Paramount Studios, is encouraged back "in" with Elvis as we are taken on a journey to the White House that's foreshadowed in our first glimpse of the man, himself. Watching Dr. Strangelove on one of his three televisions in a nicely recreated Graceland television room. But this isn't just a reference to one of Elvis's favourite movies, the scene from Kubrick's film that's used here foreshadows the nature and tone of his meeting with Nixon. No fighting in the War Room? How about karate in the Oval Office?!

    Along the way, Shannon, who doesn't resemble Elvis but embodies the role with gestures small and grand, speech patterns, glances and a physicality that's undoubtedly been studied, becomes believable as Elvis. This isn't a caricature. The caricature is what Elvis actually became. Which is appreciated in the way he expresses concerns about his identity to Schilling, and in a touching monologue about his stillborn brother, Jessie Garon.

    Shannon finds genuine nuance and pathos in Elvis. Although Liza Johnson's direction doesn't quite allow the excitement and elation of meeting Nixon to be juxtaposed with crushing lows or an indication of how such ultimately manifested itself in Elvis over subsequent years. We see him disappointed when things aren't going his way and when meeting Nixon seems lost at one point, but standing slumped and resigned isn't enough to encourage deeper sympathy for Elvis. Whilst the ultimate irony was missed in failing to depict his own problems with drugs.

    As Nixon, Spacey also finds nuance and manages to make the former President larger than life from behind a desk and despite his reservations about meeting Elvis, and just about everything else. He has less to work with than Shannon, but Spacey gets Nixon just right and manages to refrain from caricature whilst exploring amusing traits and mannerisms. Both physical and psychological.

    Beyond the two central characters, the screenplay and some variable stock footage encourages political and cultural touch-points that aren't dwelled upon. Although it's clear that Nixon isn't adverse to finding good PR opportunities or impressing his daughters. A trend that crops up throughout the movie, with Elvis using such as a free pass at his convenience. For him, good PR opportunities are also valuable.

    In many ways, however, Elvis and Nixon suffer the same issues with loneliness, isolation and concerns about their image. Which is something Elvis is portrayed as being more in touch with than Nixon, who laments about not looking like a Kennedy and tries to boost his ego by asking Krogh if he could take Elvis in a fight. Elvis, on the other hand, is aware of his image and the performance that's required just to be Elvis Presley. Which is something that was also expressed by Michelle Williams' Marilyn Monroe in Simon Curtis' 2011 film, My Week With Marilyn.

    By the time Elvis and Nixon eventually meet, both characters have been fully established, and whilst the vignettes along the way are both funny and geared towards comedy, some miss the mark completely. Such as a clandestine meeting between Elvis and Nixon's aides, that hints towards All the Presidents Men but plays more like a parents' meeting. Although Elvis's visit to a doughnut shop that's populated by a streetwise and vocal black clientele shows him comfortable with all walks of life and able to keep his ego in check.

    This is in stark contrast to his meeting with Nixon, where Elvis is far from humbled and tries to impress upon the President with bizarre notions and one-upmanship. In one shot, Elvis seems to dwarf Nixon in the way both men are framed. But Spacey plays the President with quick wit and more than a little bemusement at what's in front of him. He sees what see in Elvis. But can't see that he's playing him for his own gain.

    Unfortunately, the pacing and editing falters during the final act, with Schilling's personal dilemma of getting home to his girlfriend breaking the meeting up at one point. Whilst Evan Peters and Johnny Knoxville's Dwight Chapin and Sonny West, respectively, linger in thankless roles.

    What's also noticeable is a lack of Elvis's music in the film's soundtrack, which is quite good regardless. Although Ed Shearmur's score is transparent and obtrusive at times. But Elvis & Nixon isn't about Elvis and his music. It's about a quest to find something fulfilling in his life. Which is expressed with profound sincerity in the way Michael Shannon plays Elvis. Getting under his skin and contrasting charisma and personality with a pensive nature and moments of uncertainty. It's a warm, affectionate and earnest performance in a movie that's skewed towards comedy, but has an acute understating of not only Elvis and Nixon, but celebrity and politics.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Based on a true story. In December 1970, Elvis Presley met President Richard Nixon, who appointed Presley as an honorary DEA agent.
    • Blooper
      In the Oval Office: The Dr Pepper bottles logos are ten years ahead of their time.
    • Citazioni

      Elvis: That's how I learned to develop these knuckles of steel. Now, slap them. Come on, harder! Harder! Let it out! Let it out! Those are the steel claws of a tiger, Mr. President.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Večernij Urgant: Olga Pogodina/Andrey Chernyshov (2016)
    • Colonne sonore
      Hold On I'm Coming
      Written by Isaac Hayes & David Porter (as Dave Porter)

      Performed by Sam & Dave

      Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.

      By Arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 22 settembre 2016 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Stati Uniti
      • Canada
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Facebook Page
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Elvis and Nixon
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Amazon Studios
      • Autumn Productions
      • Benaroya Pictures
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 1.055.287 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 466.447 USD
      • 24 apr 2016
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 1.798.432 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 26min(86 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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