Frost/Nixon (2008) - Northern Illinois University

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Frost/Nixon
(2008)
Artemus Ward
Dept. of Political Science
Northern Illinois University
Importance
• What if Conan O’Brien landed a series of interviews
with former President George W. Bush? And what if,
towards the end of HOURS of slightly interesting
political banter, the president admitted that there had
been no real evidence to go to war with Iraq?
• That’s what the Frost-Nixon interviews were and that
is the premise of Ron Howard’s 2008’s academyaward nominated film.
Original
Interviews
• The original Frost/Nixon interviews were broadcast in 1977 and
are available on DVD.
• Once Nixon had received a presidential pardon from his
successor there was no chance he would ever stand trial for the
crimes he was accused of. The interviews were a chance for the
nation to have the kind of catharsis a trial can provide.
• Why did Nixon agree to these interviews?
• He saw Frost as hardly possessing the experience and gravitas
to conduct the interview on his terms. Nixon, on the other hand,
saw himself as a savvy, veteran of the intersection of media and
politics and he could use the forum to help shape the judgment
of history and reinvent, if not exonerate himself – plus the
money wasn’t bad!
Checkbook Journalism
• Should a journalist pay money to
a subject for the right to publish
his or her story?
• Nixon’s agent Irving “Swifty” Lazar
had already negotiated a deal for
Nixon’s memoirs but felt that a
television interview would reach
more people.
• When the networks found out that
Frost paid $600,000 for the
interviews, they refused to
participate forcing Frost to
syndicate the programs himself by
purchasing air-time on individual
stations.
Origins and
Structure
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•
•
The film is derived from the stage play of the same name and stars both actors
from the London and Broadway productions: Michael Sheen and Frank Langella.
The filmmakers convert the play into a boxing match as David Edelstein noted in
his review of the film:
“[They] frame the whole spectacle as a championship boxing match with coaches
in each man’s corner (Kevin Bacon as Nixon man Jack Brennan, Sam Rockwell
and Oliver Platt as Team Frost’s James Reston Jr. and Bob Zelnick). Frost and
Nixon have one huge thing in common: They each need a showbiz comeback.
But Nixon’s object is to redeem himself (or, failing that, run out the clock), Frost’s
is to get Nixon to admit that he was what he’d assured the American people he
wasn’t (and would never, thanks to Gerald Ford, be convicted of being): a crook.
There’s also a Rocky element: Will the playboy and gadabout Frost (played by
Michael Sheen) cram for the final interview on Watergate and score a knockout, or
will he let Nixon continue to talk circles around him and win on points?”
Watergate
Revelations
•
•
•
•
•
•
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After a series segments on Vietnam and other foreign policy areas, the final interviews
focused on Watergate.
Both Frost and Nixon knew that the Watergate interviews would be crucial for achieving their
disparate goals.
Frost was especially prepared and his research assistants had uncovered new information
regarding Nixon White House Special Counsel Charles Colson.
Nixon admitted that he did unethical things, but "defended" himself with the statement,
"When the President does it, it's not illegal!“
Frost was shocked by this statement, and asked if the president took part in a cover-up, at
which point the film shows Nixon’s aide stopping the recording as Nixon was visibly unable
to answer. After Nixon and his aide confer in a side room, Nixon returns to the interview, and
admits that he participated in a cover-up and that he "let the American people down.“
Yet Nixon biographer Jonathan Aitken recalled that "Frost did not ambush Nixon during the
final interview into a damaging admission of guilt. What the former president 'confessed'
about Watergate was carefully pre-planned. It was only with considerable help and advice
from his adversary's team that Frost managed to get much more out of Nixon, in the closing
sequences, by reining in his fierce attitude and adopting a gentler approach.“
So the question is did Frost get the better of Nixon or did Nixon get the better of Frost?
Inaccuracies
• Film imperatives such as structure, story, and time often give
rise to factual inaccuracies in historical films.
• For example, the late-night phone call from a drunk Nixon to
Frost was deemed by Aitken, “from start to finish, an artistic
invention by the scriptwriter Peter Morgan.”
• David Edelstein in the New York Magazine explained that the
film overstated the importance of the Frost-Nixon interviews: “
[the film] elevates the 1977 interviews Nixon gave (or, rather,
sold, for an unheard-of $600,000) to English TV personality
David Frost into a momentous event in the history of politics
and media." Edelstein also noted that "with selective editing,
Morgan makes it seem as if Frost got Nixon to admit more
than he actually did."
Public Reaction
• A Gallup poll conducted
after the interviews aired
showed that 69% of the
public thought that Nixon
was still trying to cover up
• 72% still thought he was
guilty of obstruction of
justice.
• 75% thought he deserved
no further role in public
life.
Conclusion: Judgment of History
• What can we learn from Frost-Nixon?
• The film is important because it demonstrates
how public officials are concerned about how
history will treat them after their service
concludes.
• They write book, do media appearances, and
agree to interviews in order to paint their service
in a positive light.
• At the same time we learn about how journalism
is a business and how careers can be made and
undone by historical events.
Sources
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Aitken, Jonathan, “Nixon v. Frost: The True Story of What Really Happened When a British
Journalist Bullied a TV Confession Out of a Disgraced Ex-President,” Daily Mail, January 24,
2009. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1127039/Nixon-v-Frost-The-true-story-reallyhappened-British-journalist-bullied-TV-confession-disgraced-ex-President.html
Edelstein, David, “Unholy Alliance: Frost/Nixon’s iconic TV moment seems quaint after
Couric/Palin,” New York Magazine, November 30, 2008. http://nymag.com/movies/reviews/52586/
King, Susan, “The Many Faces of Nixon,” Los Angeles Times, December 12, 2008.
http://articles.latimes.com/2008/dec/12/entertainment/et-nixon12
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