Will: The Autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy
- Filme para televisão
- 1982
- 2 h
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
149
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBased on the autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy, who spent four years and six months in prison following the Watergate scandal.Based on the autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy, who spent four years and six months in prison following the Watergate scandal.Based on the autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy, who spent four years and six months in prison following the Watergate scandal.
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Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesDanny Lloyd's last acting job. He later became a school teacher.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe Catholic school classroom in Liddy's childhood scenes had the Pledge of Alligiance said with the students' right hands held out palms up instead of on their chests and no mention of "under God", very strange for a religious school. [Note: The phrase "under God" was not incorporated into the pledge until 1954, well after Liddy's childhood. Also, the pledge was offered with an outstretched arm until World War II, when the gesture was deemed too similar too the Nazi salute].
- ConexõesReferenced in Saturday Night Live: Robert Conrad/The Allman Brothers Band (1982)
Avaliação em destaque
(Very Minor Spoilers) Even though G.Gordon Liddy, Robert Conrad, is mostly known for his involvement in the Watergate break in on the evening of June 16/17, 1972 the movie "Will:G Gordon Liddy" concentrates more on his steadfastness and loyalty to those whom he was working, and in agreement. That bull-bullheadedness like loyalty in the end put him in a number of brutal federal prisons for almost five years,longer then the US was involved in WWII as Liddy always likes to say.
To it's and Liddy's credit, who's book the movie is based on,the film does in no way make any excuses for Liddy's actions during the Watergate scandal as well as his actions before that when he was an FBI man and Nixon campaign worker. It does, and somewhat rightfully so, complain of the severe sentence handed down to Liddy and his fellow Watergate conspirator who received between 20 to 40 years behind bars for a crime where nothing of any monetary value was taken or anybody was hurt.
In prison Liddy is shown to take his punishment, from prisoners and guards alike, without any complaints and the only time he loses it is when he wife Fran, Katherine Cannon, is made to feel that he's having an affair, through the mail,with another woman by the prison officials. This is underhanded tactic done to brake him down psychologically and make him talk against his fellow Watergate conspirators.
Liddy earns the grudging respect of both prisoners and prison officials alike who at first had nothing but disdain and revulsion for him. Allying himself with his fellow prisoners most of them being black and Hispanic, whom he had no use for before he entered prison, Liddy's skills as a lawyer won them their rights and privileges that the corrupt Prison Warden took away from them. Toward the end of the film we see his fellow prisoners cheering and applauding Liddy as he's driven around the prison yard on a lift giving them, what seem to me to be, the Fascist Salute.
Liddy's strength seemed to come from his German background and his fascination with German 19th century writer and philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and historic German militarism that dated back to the Germanic tribes who defeated the Roman Legions in the first century A.D. Even at the end of the film we hear Liddy as his being released from prison answer the reporters, who are asking him questions, in German.
Again the film "Will:G. Gordon Liddy" doesn't excuse his actions during the Watergate era it only tries to show us a history lesson about that interesting man and those turbulent times that he lived and participated in.
To it's and Liddy's credit, who's book the movie is based on,the film does in no way make any excuses for Liddy's actions during the Watergate scandal as well as his actions before that when he was an FBI man and Nixon campaign worker. It does, and somewhat rightfully so, complain of the severe sentence handed down to Liddy and his fellow Watergate conspirator who received between 20 to 40 years behind bars for a crime where nothing of any monetary value was taken or anybody was hurt.
In prison Liddy is shown to take his punishment, from prisoners and guards alike, without any complaints and the only time he loses it is when he wife Fran, Katherine Cannon, is made to feel that he's having an affair, through the mail,with another woman by the prison officials. This is underhanded tactic done to brake him down psychologically and make him talk against his fellow Watergate conspirators.
Liddy earns the grudging respect of both prisoners and prison officials alike who at first had nothing but disdain and revulsion for him. Allying himself with his fellow prisoners most of them being black and Hispanic, whom he had no use for before he entered prison, Liddy's skills as a lawyer won them their rights and privileges that the corrupt Prison Warden took away from them. Toward the end of the film we see his fellow prisoners cheering and applauding Liddy as he's driven around the prison yard on a lift giving them, what seem to me to be, the Fascist Salute.
Liddy's strength seemed to come from his German background and his fascination with German 19th century writer and philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and historic German militarism that dated back to the Germanic tribes who defeated the Roman Legions in the first century A.D. Even at the end of the film we hear Liddy as his being released from prison answer the reporters, who are asking him questions, in German.
Again the film "Will:G. Gordon Liddy" doesn't excuse his actions during the Watergate era it only tries to show us a history lesson about that interesting man and those turbulent times that he lived and participated in.
- sol1218
- 9 de mar. de 2005
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- Também conhecido como
- Nixons rechte Hand - Der Fall G. Gordon Liddy
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By what name was Will: The Autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy (1982) officially released in Canada in English?
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