Em 1974, uma transcritora da Casa Branca fica envolvida no escândalo Watergate quando obtém a única cópia do infame intervalo de 18 minutos e meio nas fitas de Nixon.Em 1974, uma transcritora da Casa Branca fica envolvida no escândalo Watergate quando obtém a única cópia do infame intervalo de 18 minutos e meio nas fitas de Nixon.Em 1974, uma transcritora da Casa Branca fica envolvida no escândalo Watergate quando obtém a única cópia do infame intervalo de 18 minutos e meio nas fitas de Nixon.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 4 vitórias e 14 indicações no total
- Cheryl
- (as Marija Abney)
- H.R. 'Bob' Haldeman
- (narração)
- General Al Haig
- (narração)
- Samuel
- (as Vondie Curtis Hall)
- Radio Announcer
- (narração)
- OMB Harry
- (narração)
Avaliações em destaque
Meandering away from Watergate, most of the film explores and revels in eccentric characters and their interactions. Subtle humor and satire abound if you pay attention and let down your hair: conspiracy theories involving Wonder Bread and ITT; Bossa nova music; broken tape machines; mysterious fishermen; one-eyed desk clerks.
Smatterings of the missing 18½ minute recording are revealed and they are nothing more than what we expect although amplified through a filter of ridiculousness and cartoonish caricatures. It really helps to be a student of Watergate and recognize the various characters like Mark Felt (who is referenced hilariously), H. R. Haldeman, Al Haig and Rosemary Woods in order to "get" all the jokes.
This film is an unexpected surprise. Wry, intelligent humor, a brisk pace and wonderful characters make for winning combination. Worth a second viewing to catch all those subtle cues and clues. Bravo, Mr. Mirvish.
Connie (Willa Fitzgerald) is a white house stenographer who accidentally discovers a recording of Nixon (Bruce Campbell) and his aides listening to and discussing the missing 18 1/2 minutes from the Watergate tapes. She meets journalist Paul (John Magaro) and they decide to head to a waterfront motel complex to listen to the tape. Posing as husband and wife, the pair meet some interesting characters at the venue, and are forced to turn to another couple for help, when their reel to reel tape player doesn't work.
I like the pairing of Fitzgerald and Magaro and I thought they had good chemistry together. Whilst they're getting to play really broad characters, I liked Vondie Curtis-Hall and Catherine Curtin as the married couple that the central pair approach too. I also liked that there were a lot of subtler moments in the film, plot hidden in dialogue and there was a genuine surprise at the end that I didn't see coming.
I really didn't like the film though. I think movies can go awry for any number of reasons, budgetary, application, conflict on set. Here though, I feel like this is exactly the movie that Dan Mirvish wants it to be. It is quirky and off beat and they aren't things that I usually dislike, but it didn't feel in service of anything here. There are ideas in the second half of the film that take it too far outside of the realms of reality and that eccentric approach to the story feels forced. Quirk for quirks sake, rather than trying to find an original take.
Happy to read that several reviewers found more in this than I did, but for me it gave me a sword and I stuck it in, I'm not twisting it with relish though.
It spins off direction so much that you lose interest in what should have been an interesting subject.
The extra characters are ridiculous left wing stereotypes that are just annoying and wish weren't in the film. It hard to tell whether this was aimed at discrediting left wing politics or if the director actually believes this.
Such a waste of a good idea.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAccording to the DVD commentary track, during the final scenes of the movie, writer/producer Daniel Moya was hiding under a blanket, behind the TV. He was there, listening in one ear to a scratch recording of the Nixon tape made earlier by him, the director and the script supervisor. Moya then shouted out audible cues to Willa Fitzgerald and John Magaro so that they could react and recite their lines at the right times during the scene while they were otherwise listening to a silent reel-to-reel tape. This way, the sound recordist, David Rosenberg, could record mostly clean tracks of production audio of the tape player and the actors moving around the room.
- Erros de gravação@ around 15 minutes when Paul & Connie are talking in the dinner a camera operator can be seen reflected in the mirror behind Connie. The camera operator is visible on the left side of the mirror before slowly moving to the right out of shot.
- Citações
President Richard M. Nixon: Bob, I don't know anything about that.
H.R. 'Bob' Haldeman: No. Of course not. Sir. Uh, my mistake.
President Richard M. Nixon: I won't stand for anyone looking into Colson.
H.R. 'Bob' Haldeman: Right now it's just some flat-foots at DC Metro.
President Richard M. Nixon: Yeah, by tomorrow it'll be the FBI. Colson will fold like testicles in a nutcracker. I don't trust the Bureau.
H.R. 'Bob' Haldeman: Uh, I assure you with Pat Gray acting as... .
President Richard M. Nixon: Acting like a balloon maybe. Ever since Hoover died they're pissed off that we didn't promote from the ranks. Who's that one, uh... Mark something... satin, uh... velvet, uh... .
H.R. 'Bob' Haldeman: Felt.
President Richard M. Nixon: Felt like a weasel when I shook his hand.
- ConexõesReferences Museu de Cera (1953)
Principais escolhas
- How long is 18½?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 28 min(88 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1