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After Lyndon B. Johnson (Woody Harrelson) loses the 1960 Democratic presidential nomination to John F. Kennedy (Jeffrey Donovan), he agrees to be his young rivalโs running mate. Once they win the election, despite his extensive experience and shrewd instincts, Johnson finds himself sidelined in the role of vice president. But, that all changes on Nov. 22, 1963, when Kennedy is assassinated and Johnson is suddenly thrust into the presidency. As the nation mourns, Johnson must contend with adversaries as he seeks to honor JFKโs legacy by championing the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964. Review: Solid Movie - - Having lived through the time of the assassination and LBJ becoming President, I felt this movie captured that time very well. I thought Woody Harrelson, although not as tall as LBJ, gave a spot on performance and Jennifer Jason Leigh was frankly just like Lady Bird as I recall her. LBJ was crude. rude and brash and he considered himself someone who got things done even in his early career and this movie shows all of that to be true. He got legislation passed that JFK couldn't, he knew how to apply pressure and really didn't care at the moment he was doing it if he hurt anyone's feelings as he wanted to get his way. That was how he was. This movie portrayed that and my only issue was that this should have been longer. His accomplishments domestically were great. His downfall was his ego and his not wanting to be the first President to lose a war and that was Viet Nam. His nemesis. The movie doesn't touch that at all. You can only pack so much in with 90 minutes. The rivalry with RFK was epic and was shown as such. LBJ was the usurper yet he made it his mission to get the bills stuck in Congress passed without looking for praise for himself but in JFK's memory. A complicated man who did some truly great things that last until today. IMO this should have been a mini series so we could see the total legacy of LBJ as all of it was not so nice. All in all I liked this movie. Review: EXCELLENT FILM ON A MISUNDERSTOOD PRESIDENT - I had always thought of L.B.J. as a racist and a segregationist ~ however, he was not. Not only does this film show the human side of Lyndon Johnson, it totally dismisses his posture as a 'southern bigot'. I fist found out that L.B.J. was a civil rights advocate when I wrote a political science paper on the 'Freedom Riders' who went to Mississippi to sign up black voters in 1964. Three civil rights workers , James Cheney a black man from meridan, mississippi, and 2 while men Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner both from New York City,were killed by the Ku Klux Klan. No one in Mississippi -including the Governor, would investigate these murders. It took Lyndon Johnson, then President, to call Herbert Hoover, head of the F.B.I. and get the National Guard down there plus a team of F.B.I. men to find the KKK killers...and they did. L.B.J. was put in a horrible position of following one of the most popular Presidents we had had, was disliked by almost everyone who followed Kennedy, and yet asked many of them to stay on with him. L.B.J. was a beautifully done film, and Woody Harrelson was magnificent portraying L.B.J. and, I don't know why he didn't get an Academy Award for it.
| ASIN | B077SKJCWZ |
| Actors | Bill Pullman, Jeffrey Donovan, Michael Stahl-David, Richard Jenkins, Woody Harrelson |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.85:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #43,058 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #6,752 in Drama DVDs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (852) |
| Director | Rob Reiner |
| Dubbed: | English |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| MPAA rating | R (Restricted) |
| Media Format | Subtitled |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Producers | Liz Glotzer, Matthew George, Michael Williams, Rob Reiner, Timothy White |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces |
| Release date | February 6, 2018 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 37 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | French, Spanish |
B**B
Solid Movie -
Having lived through the time of the assassination and LBJ becoming President, I felt this movie captured that time very well. I thought Woody Harrelson, although not as tall as LBJ, gave a spot on performance and Jennifer Jason Leigh was frankly just like Lady Bird as I recall her. LBJ was crude. rude and brash and he considered himself someone who got things done even in his early career and this movie shows all of that to be true. He got legislation passed that JFK couldn't, he knew how to apply pressure and really didn't care at the moment he was doing it if he hurt anyone's feelings as he wanted to get his way. That was how he was. This movie portrayed that and my only issue was that this should have been longer. His accomplishments domestically were great. His downfall was his ego and his not wanting to be the first President to lose a war and that was Viet Nam. His nemesis. The movie doesn't touch that at all. You can only pack so much in with 90 minutes. The rivalry with RFK was epic and was shown as such. LBJ was the usurper yet he made it his mission to get the bills stuck in Congress passed without looking for praise for himself but in JFK's memory. A complicated man who did some truly great things that last until today. IMO this should have been a mini series so we could see the total legacy of LBJ as all of it was not so nice. All in all I liked this movie.
J**H
EXCELLENT FILM ON A MISUNDERSTOOD PRESIDENT
I had always thought of L.B.J. as a racist and a segregationist ~ however, he was not. Not only does this film show the human side of Lyndon Johnson, it totally dismisses his posture as a 'southern bigot'. I fist found out that L.B.J. was a civil rights advocate when I wrote a political science paper on the 'Freedom Riders' who went to Mississippi to sign up black voters in 1964. Three civil rights workers , James Cheney a black man from meridan, mississippi, and 2 while men Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner both from New York City,were killed by the Ku Klux Klan. No one in Mississippi -including the Governor, would investigate these murders. It took Lyndon Johnson, then President, to call Herbert Hoover, head of the F.B.I. and get the National Guard down there plus a team of F.B.I. men to find the KKK killers...and they did. L.B.J. was put in a horrible position of following one of the most popular Presidents we had had, was disliked by almost everyone who followed Kennedy, and yet asked many of them to stay on with him. L.B.J. was a beautifully done film, and Woody Harrelson was magnificent portraying L.B.J. and, I don't know why he didn't get an Academy Award for it.
J**O
A true hero of mine
I saw this movie last night. I like Woody Harrelson as an actor and he does the role of LBJ really well. I have an affinity for LBJ because I owe my freedom to this man. Apart from being one of the few southerners who had the courage to tackle segregation head on I also owe this man my freedom. My family and I were invited to America from Cuba by LBJ and were it not for him I probably would have been killed in the battle fields of Angola like many young Cubans who were forced to serve in the Army. In his youth LBJ spent time as a school teacher educating young Mexican children on the border with Texas. He had enough compassion to help educate those who were forsaken by the rest of society. For all these reasons I have a special affinity for this Texan and I hope to one day visit his estate in Texas and his presidential library.
S**N
Perfect!
Perfect! Purchased as a gift. No negative feedback.
K**T
Fun
Fun movie for everyone.
C**D
Meh, not bad, but not great either. ends as soon as it starts due to 90min runtime
It's weird how people are calling this revisionist leftist propaganda. There's no real revisionism here (the only real sense of revisionism being in the form of how LBJ expresses his racial philosophy[he was a noisy bigot IRL, but the movie paints a portrait of LBJ being 'woke'), just purposeful omission of peripheral facts to abide it's 90 minute run time--typical of Rob Reiner who lacks the directorial stamina to create a 3 hour mockumentary political biography like Oliver Stone. But when it comes to facts and events, nothing is changed. THAT'S true Revisionism, not cleaning up a guys language. But hey, people who dislike the left often pick nits and use the smallest thing to disparage and insult the left whenever they can. It's a rather entertaining film and it captures the dynamic between the Kennedy's and the Johnson's and all of their orbiting support staff pretty well. But it's not without it's flaws, mainly the horrible makeup and costuming that makes Harrelson look like Mickey Rourke from Sin City(not to mention, he doesn't sound like Johnson at all imo) and the sanitized dialogue in the script hat Rob Reiner is guilty of utilizing in his politically-oriented movies. Reiner never bothers with exploring the nuances of the inherent duality of good and evil when portraying characters, he just emphasizes one direction of their moral compass and keeps them headed on that path throughout the entirety of the film. A great example is with the civil Rights act and the clash it sets up between LBJ and his southern supporters: LBJ comes off as a liberal social progressive as if he was always that way while he tries to make other Southerners see the light, while in reality LBJ was a bigot who threw the N bomb around like a Californian throws around the word 'hella.' There's no depiction of his evolving progressivism and how it was inched along by his affiliation and work with Kennedy, and that is a travesty because it would have been magnificent character study that would have made the film much more interesting. On a side note, Jeffrey Donovan absolutely kills it as JFK. He gives one of the best Kennedy performances I've ever seen; his mannerisms, his look, and his speech/accent are all doppleganger-good. If I were to make a Kennedy movie, he'd be my first choice for the lead. 3/5, good to see once but not good enough to watch again. Lots of potential, but not well executed.
J**C
J'avoue je viens de regarder ce film que j'ai trouvรฉ agrรฉable et mรชme รฉmouvant ร la fin mais l'Histoire a mal ร ses chapitres ! Le portrait de Johnson est quand mรชme รฉdulcorรฉ au possible et ses vรฉritables agissements sont occultรฉs (alors qu'ils n'ont pas vraiment servis l'Amรฉrique). On aurait pu penser qu'un film intitulรฉ "LBJ" prรฉsenterait toutes les facettes d'un personnage, il n'en est rien, rien que le panรฉgyrique d'un texan devenu Prรฉsident. Sans doute faudra-t-il de la lecture plus sรฉrieuse pour rattraper un peu ces รฉlans cinรฉmatographiques...
D**N
Great movie
I**R
This film attempts to cover the early days of LBJ from his deal with the Kennedy's to become Vice-President, and then to the assassination of John F. Kennedy, onward through the beginning of his presidency and his struggle to pass Civil Rights legislation. His less-than-friendly relationship with Robert Kennedy is interesting to watch. The focus in the film is on Johnson himself, as a man, and on his relationship with Lady Bird and others close to him. Jennifer Jason Leigh is a gracious, very believable First Lady. Doug McKeon stands out as Hubert Humphrey, showing the man's true skills and compassion. The film is a careful look at an important period of history.
M**R
Loved this movie, great insight after the events of kennedy's assassination.
C**E
Well acted and enjoy able movie
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