Movie
Review | The Assassination of Richard Nixon
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- After winning the Oscar for "Mystic
River," Sean Penn tackles yet another tortured character. This
time, he's Samuel Bicke, a frustrated, pathetic loser who watches his
own personal world unravel as the Watergate scandal exposes the
political corruption of President Richard Nixon.
It's 1974 when Sam enters the
Baltimore-Washington Airport. A tape-recorded message he's mailing to
musician Leonard Bernstein reveals the psychological torment that has
propelled him to the breaking point. As Sam puts it, "I consider
myself a grain of sand on this beach called America, yet even the
least grain of sand has the power to destroy (the most
powerful)."
At 44, Sam is a novice office-furniture
salesman whose boss (Jack Thompson) gives him "The Power of
Positive Thinking" and "How to Win Friends and Influence
People" in a vain attempt to improve his "people
skills." But dour Sam really wants to get back into the tire
business with his mechanic buddy (Don Cheadle) after being fired for
dishonesty by his brother (Michael Wincott). Meanwhile, his estranged
wife (Naomi Watts) wants nothing to do with him.
Inspired by a real incident,
writer/director Niels Mueller, co-writer Kevin Kennedy and
cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezski weave an emotionally sterile tale of
a frustrated, alienated man who eventually attempts to hijack Delta
flight #523 to crash into the White House. With little to recommend it
other than the awkward complexity of Sean Penn's subtle performance,
it's strictly a bizarre curiosity produced by Alexander Payne,
Leonardo DiCaprio and Alfonso Cuaron. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1
to 10, "The Assassination of Richard Nixon" is a tedious,
bleak 4, detailing the frustrations of a despicable, homicidal
sociopath.
Grade: 4/10
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