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8,1/10
2185
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThis four-part documentary series weaves together rare and exclusive footage of attorney general, U.S. senator, and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in the 1960s.This four-part documentary series weaves together rare and exclusive footage of attorney general, U.S. senator, and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in the 1960s.This four-part documentary series weaves together rare and exclusive footage of attorney general, U.S. senator, and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in the 1960s.
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"If Lincoln didn't get us there, and Dr. King didn't get us there, and Bobby Kennedy didn't get us there, what the hell is left to say, that's going to have a rude awakening, to make a nation alive, and to greet the better part of itself? But we have to keep trying. And that's what Bobby Kennedy was really about. He was trying to find a solution."
-- Harry Belafonte
fwiw, this netflix documentary was better than wormwood in that there were zero re-enactments.
many times throughout this 4-part documentary, bias was shown in the form of choice of music, narration, and sequence. it did linger on some moments and ultra-compress others. what remains is a moving and largely factual account.
-- Harry Belafonte
fwiw, this netflix documentary was better than wormwood in that there were zero re-enactments.
many times throughout this 4-part documentary, bias was shown in the form of choice of music, narration, and sequence. it did linger on some moments and ultra-compress others. what remains is a moving and largely factual account.
I knew little about Bobby Kennedy and this four part documentary series was extremely insightful on who Bobby was. This itself is something great as you can dive into the man and almost feel what goes inside is head. The footage is incredible beautiful and nostalgic. I highly recommend this limited series.
This four part mini-series did an excellent job portraying the awful year of 1968 in our country's history. The historical footage of Bobby Kennedy's late entry and ultimately tragic run for the Democratic presidential was riveting, especially for those of us who lived through it. Just watching the footage you got a real feeling how Kennedy was connecting with a large portion of the electorate, especially minority groups. Certainly we had seen nothing like this before on the presidential level. Would it have been enough to win the nomination and the presidency? Of course, we'll never know. The first three one-hour episodes were excellent in showing all this. Unfortunately the fourth-and-final hour spoils much of what went before. Tendentious and polemical, it is filled with far-left personages applying 21st century themes and conjecture to a man who has been dead for over 50 years. A second gunman? Please... All bullets fired came from Sirhan's gun. Period. No conspiracy. Etc. And the last hour might have been called The Paul Schade Hour. A labor leader who was close to Bobby Kennedy, the last hour is filled with his opinions, gripes and views. Inconsequential and definitely not why you watch the series. So, in the end, flawed. But do watch the first three hours for some excellent footage about a key time in our nation's history, and a special man, Bobby Kennedy.
Watching this series atm. Really brilliant. I knew he developed great relationships with many African & Latino Americans in very dark times. I had not really understood how much he was the direction against the Vietnam war. Great interviews with the late great John Lewis.
Watching it now, you have a sense of how more statesmanlike all leaders were at that time. We currently live in an era with a President so opposite to those values.
The anguish through the nation at his death especially for minority communities was significant & he helped to encourage new leadership.
For three episodes I was completely enthralled by this four-part documentary on the life and times of Robert F Kennedy. Coincidentally, I'm currently reading the Larry Tye biography on Kennedy so this series couldn't have come to my notice at a better time.
Let me say straight away that I am a keen supporter of what Kennedy stood for and was striving to achieve before his assassination in June 1968 and do believe that both America and the world would have turned out better if he'd lived. He sure wasn't perfect - you.need only witness him baiting witnesses on the shoulder of Joe McCarthy during the early 1950's. However, I'm willing to grant that a person, especially through maturity and experience can change their views and from where I'm standing, Kennedy's seemed to change for the better as he became more involved with campaigns promoting civil rights, supporting the Latin and Native American causes, the war on poverty and of course the war in Vietnam.
It was fascinating to see so much verité footage of Kennedy's progress from being JFK's campaign manager in 1960, to being appointed Attorney General, then running for the Senate in Nrw York and finally his fateful bid to run for the presidency in 1968.
I was constantly struck by his graciousness and humility in meeting and helping people with problem, especially considering he came from such a privileged personal background. His story is told here in chronological order with extensive use of TV footage of the time, with interjections made by surviving family, friends and colleagues. I appreciate they may have been hand-picked but it's still remarkable how, forty years after he was slain, those around him revered him so highly
If this programme had ended with the third episode, I think I'd have rated it as high as I could but the fourth and final unnecessarily feeds into events after his death, including the trial of his convicted killer Sirhan Sirhan (and of course the conspiracy theories surrounding the murder), the chaotic Democratic Convention of 1968, the election and re-election of Nixon, bizarrely the Woodstock Music Festival of 1969, Teddy Kennedy's Chappaquiddick incident which saw an innocent young woman, Mary Jo Kopechne die, the Kent State shootings of 1970, ending up unsurprisingly with Watergate and Nixon's resignation.
Still, I came away from these four hours knowing a whole lot more about Bobby Kennedy and from where I'm sitting, most of it good. He came across as a listener and a doer, a rare thing in politics then, as now. Indees, my biggest takeaway from it was a perception of how much higher the standard of political candidacy at the highest level appeared to be then as opposed to now, especially in America.
Let me say straight away that I am a keen supporter of what Kennedy stood for and was striving to achieve before his assassination in June 1968 and do believe that both America and the world would have turned out better if he'd lived. He sure wasn't perfect - you.need only witness him baiting witnesses on the shoulder of Joe McCarthy during the early 1950's. However, I'm willing to grant that a person, especially through maturity and experience can change their views and from where I'm standing, Kennedy's seemed to change for the better as he became more involved with campaigns promoting civil rights, supporting the Latin and Native American causes, the war on poverty and of course the war in Vietnam.
It was fascinating to see so much verité footage of Kennedy's progress from being JFK's campaign manager in 1960, to being appointed Attorney General, then running for the Senate in Nrw York and finally his fateful bid to run for the presidency in 1968.
I was constantly struck by his graciousness and humility in meeting and helping people with problem, especially considering he came from such a privileged personal background. His story is told here in chronological order with extensive use of TV footage of the time, with interjections made by surviving family, friends and colleagues. I appreciate they may have been hand-picked but it's still remarkable how, forty years after he was slain, those around him revered him so highly
If this programme had ended with the third episode, I think I'd have rated it as high as I could but the fourth and final unnecessarily feeds into events after his death, including the trial of his convicted killer Sirhan Sirhan (and of course the conspiracy theories surrounding the murder), the chaotic Democratic Convention of 1968, the election and re-election of Nixon, bizarrely the Woodstock Music Festival of 1969, Teddy Kennedy's Chappaquiddick incident which saw an innocent young woman, Mary Jo Kopechne die, the Kent State shootings of 1970, ending up unsurprisingly with Watergate and Nixon's resignation.
Still, I came away from these four hours knowing a whole lot more about Bobby Kennedy and from where I'm sitting, most of it good. He came across as a listener and a doer, a rare thing in politics then, as now. Indees, my biggest takeaway from it was a perception of how much higher the standard of political candidacy at the highest level appeared to be then as opposed to now, especially in America.
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- ConnessioniReferenced in WatchMojo: Top 10 Must See Trailers of April 2018 (2018)
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