ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,0/10
1,9 k
MA NOTE
Basé sur des fichiers récemment découverts, le long métrage de Sam Pollard explore le harcèlement et la surveillance exercée par le gouvernement étasunien sur Martin Luther King, Jr.Basé sur des fichiers récemment découverts, le long métrage de Sam Pollard explore le harcèlement et la surveillance exercée par le gouvernement étasunien sur Martin Luther King, Jr.Basé sur des fichiers récemment découverts, le long métrage de Sam Pollard explore le harcèlement et la surveillance exercée par le gouvernement étasunien sur Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Prix
- 6 victoires et 17 nominations au total
Martin Luther King
- Self
- (archive footage)
J. Edgar Hoover
- Self - FBI Director
- (archive footage)
David Garrow
- Self - Author, Bearing the Cross
- (as David J. Garrow)
Clarence B. Jones
- Self - Attorney, Speechwriter for Martin Luther King, Jr
- (as Clarence Jones)
H. Rap Brown
- Self - Civil Rights Activist
- (archive footage)
Arthur Goldberg
- Self - Former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.
- (archive footage)
Merv Griffin
- Self - TV Host
- (archive footage)
Lyndon B. Johnson
- Self - 36th President of the United States
- (archive footage)
Kenneth Keating
- Self - U.S. Senator from New York
- (archive footage)
John F. Kennedy
- Self - 35th President of the United States
- (archive footage)
Robert F. Kennedy
- Self - Former United States Attorney General
- (archive footage)
Avis en vedette
This is a must see documentary which chronicles a vital period in American history.
Don't miss it!
The FBI begins spying on MLK on suspicion of communist activities and ends up spying on his sex life. It is the disease of the moral watchers. The documentary accurately narrates these espionage activities that move against the defense of human rights. Through well selected archival material, it is a necessary film to show the moral baseness of those who considered themselves protectors of moral integrity. It is the danger of a policy based on constant suspicion.
This documentary tackles a very interesting part of history. It is a story I don't often see taught in school. It features a lot of big figures is U. S. History. It is the 1960's, we have J. Edgar Hoover, Lydon Johnson and of course, Martin Luther King Jr. Take those characters and put them in the U. S. 1960's setting, with the Civil Rights, Cold and Red Scare. Put all these ingredients together and you have your self a fascinating recipie.
Looking at the situation from the lense of today, it is easy to see that Hoover is acting selfishly and irrationally, but this documentary does a good job of rationalizing his actions, without justifying them.
It is also quaint to remember a time when the FBI needed wiretaps in order to listen in to American's phone calls.
Not much to say, the film does its job well. It informs its audience of an interesting story in an interesting matter.
Looking at the situation from the lense of today, it is easy to see that Hoover is acting selfishly and irrationally, but this documentary does a good job of rationalizing his actions, without justifying them.
It is also quaint to remember a time when the FBI needed wiretaps in order to listen in to American's phone calls.
Not much to say, the film does its job well. It informs its audience of an interesting story in an interesting matter.
Very good documentary that goes depth inside USA undemocratic and racist state, far away from widespread shallow speech and self-image of a country of freedom and democracy. As usual in dictatorahips, FBI not only inbestigated but also harassed Martin Luther King in order to dampen anti-racist struggle in the country. Lots of good information, footage and interviews are found in this important documentary on the Black question and on the serious discussion of what democracy is.
"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy." MLK
It's shocking to hear in the eye-opening documentary MLK/FBI William Sullivan, the FBI's director of domestic intelligence, encourage Martin Luther King, Jr. to commit suicide. The theme of the doc is that the agency, under J Edgar Hoover's direction, from 1955.was dedicated to bringing down King and the Civil Rights Movement.
Although the animosity was known even in the 60's, the doc does a credible job showing this aggressiveness was a part of the mid-century paranoia dominated by the fear of communism and perhaps mirrored it. In this case, the agency, like Joe McCarthy, had little evidence of the subjects' undemocratic tactics but probably was motivated more by the fear of losing influence to liberal protestors or lonely anarchists.
Mixing archival footage of King parading and snippets from his famous speeches, director Sam Pollard gives a fluid narrative to otherwise discursive material. To his credit, talking heads are at a minimum as he emphasizes the growing concern that King was being targeted to go down.
That plot was notoriously supported by ample evidence of King's philandering, mainly in hours of tapes with his women, not his wife, from wiretapping to photos. The actual auditory evidence will be released in 2027, and the ballyhoo will probably be disappointing because he did his good while he was doing his bad, and the good he did for civil rights and Black people far outweighs infidelities to his estimable wife and puritanical white folk.
MLK/FBI could have profited from discussion of his influence and flaws and how the latter might have been better served by expert analysis about their importance. That he was an appetitive man, at least in regards to women, was known before this documentary; that he was a powerful player in the freedom of his own people and other repressed minorities, will redound through history.
MLK/FBI will remind you in important evidence that like JFK, MLK was destined to change a nation and lose a young life in return. I never tire of remembering true heroes.
It's shocking to hear in the eye-opening documentary MLK/FBI William Sullivan, the FBI's director of domestic intelligence, encourage Martin Luther King, Jr. to commit suicide. The theme of the doc is that the agency, under J Edgar Hoover's direction, from 1955.was dedicated to bringing down King and the Civil Rights Movement.
Although the animosity was known even in the 60's, the doc does a credible job showing this aggressiveness was a part of the mid-century paranoia dominated by the fear of communism and perhaps mirrored it. In this case, the agency, like Joe McCarthy, had little evidence of the subjects' undemocratic tactics but probably was motivated more by the fear of losing influence to liberal protestors or lonely anarchists.
Mixing archival footage of King parading and snippets from his famous speeches, director Sam Pollard gives a fluid narrative to otherwise discursive material. To his credit, talking heads are at a minimum as he emphasizes the growing concern that King was being targeted to go down.
That plot was notoriously supported by ample evidence of King's philandering, mainly in hours of tapes with his women, not his wife, from wiretapping to photos. The actual auditory evidence will be released in 2027, and the ballyhoo will probably be disappointing because he did his good while he was doing his bad, and the good he did for civil rights and Black people far outweighs infidelities to his estimable wife and puritanical white folk.
MLK/FBI could have profited from discussion of his influence and flaws and how the latter might have been better served by expert analysis about their importance. That he was an appetitive man, at least in regards to women, was known before this documentary; that he was a powerful player in the freedom of his own people and other repressed minorities, will redound through history.
MLK/FBI will remind you in important evidence that like JFK, MLK was destined to change a nation and lose a young life in return. I never tire of remembering true heroes.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOfficially released on what would have been the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s 92nd birthday.
- Citations
Self - Author, Bearing the Cross: The FBI was not a renegade agency. It was fundamentally a part, a core part of the existing mainstream American political order.
- ConnexionsFeatures I Was a Communist for the F.B.I. (1951)
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 45 200 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 21 603 $ US
- 17 janv. 2021
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 91 833 $ US
- Durée1 heure 44 minutes
- Couleur
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