American Presidents and Oliver Stone
Kennedy, Nixon, and Bush between History and Cinema
Distributed for Intellect Ltd
American Presidents and Oliver Stone
Kennedy, Nixon, and Bush between History and Cinema
Perhaps no current filmmaker has made more provocative films about American history than Oliver Stone. In this book, Carl Freedman gives a detailed and nuanced account of the presidencies of John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and George W. Bush as fictionalized in Stone’s biographical films JFK, Nixon, and W. Synthesizing film criticism with political and historical analysis, American Presidents and Oliver Stone transcends the limitations of formalism and empiricism, reflecting on both Stone’s achievements as a filmmaker and American politics of the past sixty years.
Offering detailed historical perspectives alongside careful aesthetic criticism, Freedman explores how Stone uses melodrama, tragedy, and farce to transform politics into national mythology. Wide-ranging, accessible, and highly original, American Presidents is sure to engage anyone interested in the intersection of American politics and cinema.
Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction
I. KENNEDY: ICON
To Assassinate a Movie
JFK: American Melbourne
Precursor-Texts: Rashomon and Citizen Kane
JFK: Conspiracy
JFK: Father-Leader
JFK: Son-Avenger
II. NIXON: TRAGIC HERO-VILLAIN
From Kennedy to Nixon
From Melodrama to Tragedy
From JFK to Nixon
Nixon: Personal Tragedy
Nixon: National Tragedy
Nixon: American Tragedy
Conclusion
III. BUSH: (UN)FORTUNATE SON
From Tragedy to Farce
W.: The Man
W.: The War
Finale
Be the first to know
Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!