Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBiography of the 1961-1963 Presidency of John F. Kennedy with Martin Sheen and Blair Brown. Covers the momentous presidential years and the lives, loves, and triumphs of one of the most cont... Ler tudoBiography of the 1961-1963 Presidency of John F. Kennedy with Martin Sheen and Blair Brown. Covers the momentous presidential years and the lives, loves, and triumphs of one of the most controversial families of the twentieth-century.Biography of the 1961-1963 Presidency of John F. Kennedy with Martin Sheen and Blair Brown. Covers the momentous presidential years and the lives, loves, and triumphs of one of the most controversial families of the twentieth-century.
- Ganhou 2 prêmios BAFTA
- 2 vitórias e 7 indicações no total
Explorar episódios
Avaliações em destaque
This three part, six hour mini series was originally released in November of 1983, which was the 20th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Martin Sheen plays JFK and Blair Brown plays Jackie, both do great jobs. I remember seeing the entire film many, many years ago; it use to come on every November, but I have not honestly seen it from start to finish in a couple years on TV. As I recall, the series starts out on November 22, 1963, showing Rose Kennedy sitting in her living room and hearing about the assassination of her son on the news, then it cuts into 1960 when JFK was running for the presidency. The series then covers the very important personal and historical events of Kennedy's life and administration in the two years he was in the White House. Of course it ends with that dark day in Dallas. The scene of the assassination is very brutal but also very real and shows how quick it really happened and how fast history changed.
Luxurious American-British TV miniseries produced in 1983, written by Reg Gadney, who spent almost twenty years researching the Kennedys, and directed by the veteran English film and TV director, Jim Goddard, "Kennedy" was broadcast in the 20th anniversary year of the assassination of JFK and became one of the most successful miniseries ever aired, being sold to over 50 countries, including my homeland, Portugal.
It covers all the most important parts and decisions of the Kennedys' Administration from the Bay of Pigs' failed invasion, the Civil Rights Movement and their support to Martin Luther King, the Cuba missile crisis, to the early stages of the Vietnam war, and also their own personal lifes, including JFK close relationship with his father, the dominant Joseph P. Kennedy & his younger brother, the incorruptible 'boy scout', Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and his beautiful wife and iconic First Lady, Jacqueline, which became a model to the Modern Woman of the 60's. Some facts were put aside, like the Mob help on the JFK's rise to power, which he abandoned after his election and his several extra-marital affairs, including the legendary blonde bombshell Marilyn Monroe, whose name is never mentioned here, but a clever viewer knows it's her.
"Kennedy" is well paced (where the 311 minutes went?) and dramatically well staged, especially during the family gatherings and their relationships and the tension in the cabinet during the crisis. Some sloppy editing here and there and cheaply looking directed exterior scenes (such as the racial brawls which looked a bit flimsy and poorly staged) were redeeming by the power of the narrative and the attention to details, the well written dialogues perfectly delivered by an all-star cast and the haunting sequence of the assassination itself which ressonates into a viewer's mind long time after.
Long life democrat, Martin Sheen as JFK, captured his voice, accent and mannerisms to perfection, even if they weren't exactly look-a-likes. Sheen smiles a lot thoroughly and even his teeth were pristine as Kennedy's. Other curious fact is that Sheen was exactly the same age at the time of filming as Jack Kennedy's was during the events depicted in the film.
Great support from John Shea as Bobby Kennedy (even less look-a-like to his real life counterpart than Sheen, but equally memorable in his acting); Geraldine Fitzgerald & E. G. Marshall as Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy and a special kudos to Blair Brown, whose uncanny resemblance to the real Jackie Bouvier Kennedy was only surpassed by the brilliance of her exuberant performance. Vincent Gardenia is also very good and a scene-stealer as the sinister head of the F.B.I., J. Edgar Hoover. Catch up for early screen appearances from John Glover, Kelsey Grammer and Trey Wilson, among others.
This miniseries makes a perfect raining Sunday afternoon at the movies, followed by the earlier TV movie, "The Missiles of October" ('74), starring William Devane as JFK and also with a younger Martin Sheen playing Bobby Kennedy; Roger Donaldson's "Thirteen Days" ('00), which covered the same missiles' crisis, starring Bruce Greenwood as JFK, Steven Culp as Bobby Kennedy and Kevin Costner as the Administration's consultant, Kenny O'Donnell; Oliver Stone's own conspiracy theory opus, "JFK" ('91) starring Kevin Costner as the District Attorney Jim Garrison, leading a star studded ensemble cast and Emilio Estevez's "Bobby" ('06) about Robert Kennedy's assassination in 1968 in which his father Martin Sheen also had a minor role.
It covers all the most important parts and decisions of the Kennedys' Administration from the Bay of Pigs' failed invasion, the Civil Rights Movement and their support to Martin Luther King, the Cuba missile crisis, to the early stages of the Vietnam war, and also their own personal lifes, including JFK close relationship with his father, the dominant Joseph P. Kennedy & his younger brother, the incorruptible 'boy scout', Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and his beautiful wife and iconic First Lady, Jacqueline, which became a model to the Modern Woman of the 60's. Some facts were put aside, like the Mob help on the JFK's rise to power, which he abandoned after his election and his several extra-marital affairs, including the legendary blonde bombshell Marilyn Monroe, whose name is never mentioned here, but a clever viewer knows it's her.
"Kennedy" is well paced (where the 311 minutes went?) and dramatically well staged, especially during the family gatherings and their relationships and the tension in the cabinet during the crisis. Some sloppy editing here and there and cheaply looking directed exterior scenes (such as the racial brawls which looked a bit flimsy and poorly staged) were redeeming by the power of the narrative and the attention to details, the well written dialogues perfectly delivered by an all-star cast and the haunting sequence of the assassination itself which ressonates into a viewer's mind long time after.
Long life democrat, Martin Sheen as JFK, captured his voice, accent and mannerisms to perfection, even if they weren't exactly look-a-likes. Sheen smiles a lot thoroughly and even his teeth were pristine as Kennedy's. Other curious fact is that Sheen was exactly the same age at the time of filming as Jack Kennedy's was during the events depicted in the film.
Great support from John Shea as Bobby Kennedy (even less look-a-like to his real life counterpart than Sheen, but equally memorable in his acting); Geraldine Fitzgerald & E. G. Marshall as Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy and a special kudos to Blair Brown, whose uncanny resemblance to the real Jackie Bouvier Kennedy was only surpassed by the brilliance of her exuberant performance. Vincent Gardenia is also very good and a scene-stealer as the sinister head of the F.B.I., J. Edgar Hoover. Catch up for early screen appearances from John Glover, Kelsey Grammer and Trey Wilson, among others.
This miniseries makes a perfect raining Sunday afternoon at the movies, followed by the earlier TV movie, "The Missiles of October" ('74), starring William Devane as JFK and also with a younger Martin Sheen playing Bobby Kennedy; Roger Donaldson's "Thirteen Days" ('00), which covered the same missiles' crisis, starring Bruce Greenwood as JFK, Steven Culp as Bobby Kennedy and Kevin Costner as the Administration's consultant, Kenny O'Donnell; Oliver Stone's own conspiracy theory opus, "JFK" ('91) starring Kevin Costner as the District Attorney Jim Garrison, leading a star studded ensemble cast and Emilio Estevez's "Bobby" ('06) about Robert Kennedy's assassination in 1968 in which his father Martin Sheen also had a minor role.
I remember when this movie was first aired in 1983 on the 20th anniversary of JFK's assassination. I was fed-up with all the Kennedy-mania at that time and I normally don't care for Martin Sheen. I remember seeing the ads for this movie on TV and I recalled that Martin Sheen had portrayed Bobby Kennedy in The Missiles of October, which was a very dry, 1974 TV movie that I couldn't sit through. Based on those factors, I decided not to watch this one when it originally aired. A few years later it was rerun on the 25th Anniversary of the JFK assassination. Between the time it first aired, and the 1988 rerun, I had seen a TV movie called Hoover Versus The Kennedys the Second Civil War with Jack Warden and was very intrigued by it so when this one aired in 1988, I decided to watch it, and tape it, and I was not disappointed. As I pointed out, Martin Sheen is not my favorite actor but he is absolutely superb in this mini-series. This mini-series was very well done and has some big name actors in it which you do not normally see in made for TV movies. Historically and objectively, the movie is pretty good. As one reviewer stated, it shows "their warts" as well as their triumphs. A couple of historical mistakes there are cars from the 1980s seen on the street as Jackie is conversing during a car ride. Also, Ethel Kennedy makes a reference to Marilyn Monroe singing Happy Birthday to JFK during a family event that takes place in 1963. I do not recall which event it was in the movie but Monroe actually died in August 1962 so it could not have happened the way that it is portrayed. Perhaps the writers just had to fit it in where they could. E.G. Marshall was stunning as Joseph Kennedy Sr. and Geraldine Fitzgerald was excellent too. The entire supporting cast was great and I really liked Vincent Gardenia's J. Edgar Hoover. The fact that Hoover's scenes were usually done in low light perhaps portrayed him as more sinister than he was but hey, it's a TV movie. I agree with the other reviewer who calls it "The Best Kennedy movie ever." It is very good. I believe the History Channel now owns it. Definitely worth taking the time to watch.
This may well be the definitive "Kennedy" film in terms of historical accuracy and honesty, positing forth the best and less-than-best of this so-called Camelot administration. Martin Sheen is, as usual, outstanding in the title role, and his Kennedy not only bares his fallacies but impresses an honest sense of public service. As the former first lady, Blair Brown is nothing less than superb, and her Jacqueline Kennedy is eerily touching, especially with her voiced-over prophecy of her "appointment with death." Together, Sheen and Blair actually generate the sense of youth and glamour that distinquished the real administration. They are more than aptly backed up by a stellar supporting cast headed by John Shea (RKF), E.G. Marshall (Joe Sr.) and the late Vincent Gardenia (as a sinister, throughly unlikeable J. Edgar Hoover). There are apparently two versions on the market: the edited and the unedited. Go for the latter; the former is so badly chopped up that the historical value is lost. My only question: where the heck can I get the original five-hour cassette (and I've looked!)? My other one's worn out! From the scholarship standpoint, this film is an important historical resource.
I watched the Kennedy Miniseries last Saturday on the History Channel. Blair Brown made a perfect Jackie Kennedy in very way but voice. She recreated that presence. I also loved watching Ellen Parker, a New York Stage actress and Guiding Light Emmy Winner as Mrs. Bobby Kennedy. Geraldine Fitzgerald made the perfect choice to play Rose Kennedy in every way. She should have won an Emmy for it. Martin Sheen really perfected the Boston accent and was the perfect choice to play a President many years later on the West Wing. Even Kelsey Grammar had a bit part. I enjoyed Vincent Gardenia's performance as J. Edgar Hoover (They should change the name of the FBI building because of him). I now really believe that he had something to do with the Kennedy assassinations. Overall, the seven hours flew by. Everything appeared near perfect. I am giving it a 9 because I think it could have used some editing but it is still worth watching any day. I also give it a 9 because I think they left out some scandalous activity in the Kennedy family. I think the world loves the Kennedys because they America's unofficial royal family. Now that they are so few of them, it makes us miss them ever more.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesKevin Conroy who plays Edward 'Ted' Kennedy in this series later became the voice of Batman on Batman: A Série Animada (1992). JFK's real-life press secretary, Pierre Salinger (portrayed in this series by Peter Boyden) played a villain on Batman (1966).
- Erros de gravaçãoThe helicopter shown right before the scene with the baby Patrick is a Bell Jet Ranger. They did not exist in the Military until the Johnson Administration.
- ConexõesFeatured in All American High (1986)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How many seasons does Kennedy have?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente