ReMastered: Tricky Dick and the Man in Black
- TV Movie
- 2018
- 59m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Concerned by a rising rock-n-roll influence on a growing liberal fanbase, President Nixon invited Johnny Cash to the White House to solidify his base in the traditionally more conservative g... Read allConcerned by a rising rock-n-roll influence on a growing liberal fanbase, President Nixon invited Johnny Cash to the White House to solidify his base in the traditionally more conservative genre of country music. What Cash did instead was subversive and surprised everyone.Concerned by a rising rock-n-roll influence on a growing liberal fanbase, President Nixon invited Johnny Cash to the White House to solidify his base in the traditionally more conservative genre of country music. What Cash did instead was subversive and surprised everyone.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Johnny Cash
- Self
- (archive footage)
Richard Nixon
- Self
- (archive footage)
Jimmie Snow
- Self
- (as Jimmy Snow)
Bill Anderson
- Self
- (archive footage)
David Brinkley
- Self
- (archive footage)
Bill Brock
- Self
- (archive footage)
June Carter Cash
- Self
- (archive footage)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It's 1970. Johnny Cash is one of the most popular artists in America and Richard Nixon is in the White House. In order to shore up Southern votes Nixon invites Johnny Cash to perform at the White House. Cash seems a safe bet for Nixon as he seems to support the government and its policies. Nixon even goes so far as to make requests for two particular songs. Will Cash bend to the President's demands?
A documentary that's more interesting for its background information than the coverage of the central topic. The history of Johnny Cash, in particular his political and social stances is well done. How his poor, battling agricultural upbringing and his tragedies and tribulations shaped his life are also well explored.
Ditto how President Nixon's past and his current political struggles inform his actions are also well explored.
However, the main event - Cash performing at the White House - ultimately feels quite low-key. There's a degree of rebelliousness and individuality about Johnny Cash's actions but nothing extreme. It all feels a bit click-baity in the end.
A documentary that's more interesting for its background information than the coverage of the central topic. The history of Johnny Cash, in particular his political and social stances is well done. How his poor, battling agricultural upbringing and his tragedies and tribulations shaped his life are also well explored.
Ditto how President Nixon's past and his current political struggles inform his actions are also well explored.
However, the main event - Cash performing at the White House - ultimately feels quite low-key. There's a degree of rebelliousness and individuality about Johnny Cash's actions but nothing extreme. It all feels a bit click-baity in the end.
Interesting documentary about Johnny cash and president Nixon. The doc is short but very noncommittal on subject matter. Ranges from following Johnny cash and his political activism and his journey growing up, but also takes time to cover Nixon's presidency and the Vietnam war. Tries to establish a timeline on cash's performance at the White House and the state of the nation and how Cash impacts the social climate.
Not a bad way to spend an hour, but felt it could have done better to establish a clearer intention.
Not a bad way to spend an hour, but felt it could have done better to establish a clearer intention.
For my money, of those I've seen, this was the best to date of the Netflix "Remastered" musical documentaries and all the more unlikely down to being about a country artist, which is about my least-favoured type of popular music. But then again, even I can see that Johnny Cash isn't your average country artist. I prefer to think of him as "rebel country", sure he could do the Grand Old Opry, God-fearing stuff if he was of a mind to, but he definitely appeared to be his own man and you have to admire him for that.
This well-made programme focused on a concert Cash was invited to play at the White House for the then sitting president Richard Nixon, who thought he could play to the what he believed to be the inherently conservative, i.e. Republican, country and western-loving "silent majority", by having Johnny sing and play for him. Not long before, after Nixon had made his televised broadcast to the nation promising an honourable end to the Vietnamese War, Cash had impulsively concluded his live network TV show with a ringing endorsement of the president's lofty aim.
Sensing an opportunity to lead the narrative with Cash as his unwitting agent, Nixon, himself more a classical than country music fan and his aides set up the gig in front of an exclusive, hand-picked audience. All Cash had to do was effectively roll up and roll over with the administration even trying to have him sing, by presidential request, two hoary Conservative anthems "Okie From Muskogie" and "Welfare Cadillac". Would Johnny play ball?
Let's just say I was delighted with the outcome and that my admiration for the man in black rose immeasurably as a consequence, especially when you think that only a couple of years later, Elvis himself famously (or infamously, depending on your point of view) docilely shook Nixon's hand in a further attempt by the Pres to ingratiate himself with a well-known singer's fan-base.
You've got to wonder how many artists would have displayed the integrity Cash did when it would have been so easy to comply. Sometimes the documentary over-reaches itself when it seeks to meaningfully juxtapose the fall-out from the White House show with bigger events happening elsewhere, especially the Kent State killings, but with this one act, Mr Cash reportedly made Nixon squirm in his privileged seat and I for one, having recently completed a weighty Nixon biography and listened to a podcast on his presidency, both of which attempt to reclaim his political legacy by minimising his obvious faults and almost airbrushing Watergate out of his history as if it was to coin a phrase, "a little local difficulty" was pleased to see that Cash could see through the whitewash and was enough of his own man to ask the president the telling question "What is Truth?".
You'll not be surprised to learn that this episode doesn't rate a mention in either the book or podcast referred to above.
This well-made programme focused on a concert Cash was invited to play at the White House for the then sitting president Richard Nixon, who thought he could play to the what he believed to be the inherently conservative, i.e. Republican, country and western-loving "silent majority", by having Johnny sing and play for him. Not long before, after Nixon had made his televised broadcast to the nation promising an honourable end to the Vietnamese War, Cash had impulsively concluded his live network TV show with a ringing endorsement of the president's lofty aim.
Sensing an opportunity to lead the narrative with Cash as his unwitting agent, Nixon, himself more a classical than country music fan and his aides set up the gig in front of an exclusive, hand-picked audience. All Cash had to do was effectively roll up and roll over with the administration even trying to have him sing, by presidential request, two hoary Conservative anthems "Okie From Muskogie" and "Welfare Cadillac". Would Johnny play ball?
Let's just say I was delighted with the outcome and that my admiration for the man in black rose immeasurably as a consequence, especially when you think that only a couple of years later, Elvis himself famously (or infamously, depending on your point of view) docilely shook Nixon's hand in a further attempt by the Pres to ingratiate himself with a well-known singer's fan-base.
You've got to wonder how many artists would have displayed the integrity Cash did when it would have been so easy to comply. Sometimes the documentary over-reaches itself when it seeks to meaningfully juxtapose the fall-out from the White House show with bigger events happening elsewhere, especially the Kent State killings, but with this one act, Mr Cash reportedly made Nixon squirm in his privileged seat and I for one, having recently completed a weighty Nixon biography and listened to a podcast on his presidency, both of which attempt to reclaim his political legacy by minimising his obvious faults and almost airbrushing Watergate out of his history as if it was to coin a phrase, "a little local difficulty" was pleased to see that Cash could see through the whitewash and was enough of his own man to ask the president the telling question "What is Truth?".
You'll not be surprised to learn that this episode doesn't rate a mention in either the book or podcast referred to above.
Footage used in the show wasn't actually as it happened, the performance isn't the one Nixon saw, and witness accounts are fuzzy. Warm story but have to ask what is truth?
From the existing reviews of this documentary, I wasn't expecting much, but ended up giving it 10/10 and am writing this quick justification for that high score here.
This could be described as the story behind Johnny Cash's song "What is truth?" which at least one other reviewer picked up on, pointing out the documentary makers implied some footage of Cash performing was from his White House show when apparently it was filmed elsewhere.
Nitpicking over the veracity of some details aside, this is a great story told well. I've mainly listened to the last albums Johnny Cash made produced by Rick Rubin, dismissing his earlier work as too generic country & western.
This documentary was a huge eye opener for someone who's never heard the song "What is truth?" before, along with weaving in the stories behind "Route #1, Box 144", "The Ballad of Ira Hayes", and other Cash songs which I never realised were controversial, blacklisted from midwest radio stations in their day.
Even if you're not a Johnny Cash fan, this is a great slice of modern history, leading to interesting thoughts of Nixon's America vs Trump's America without being preachy or didactic.
This could be described as the story behind Johnny Cash's song "What is truth?" which at least one other reviewer picked up on, pointing out the documentary makers implied some footage of Cash performing was from his White House show when apparently it was filmed elsewhere.
Nitpicking over the veracity of some details aside, this is a great story told well. I've mainly listened to the last albums Johnny Cash made produced by Rick Rubin, dismissing his earlier work as too generic country & western.
This documentary was a huge eye opener for someone who's never heard the song "What is truth?" before, along with weaving in the stories behind "Route #1, Box 144", "The Ballad of Ira Hayes", and other Cash songs which I never realised were controversial, blacklisted from midwest radio stations in their day.
Even if you're not a Johnny Cash fan, this is a great slice of modern history, leading to interesting thoughts of Nixon's America vs Trump's America without being preachy or didactic.
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- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Tái Hiện: Nixon và Người Đàn Ông Áo Đen
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime59 minutes
- Color
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By what name was ReMastered: Tricky Dick and the Man in Black (2018) officially released in Canada in English?
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