If you're a history-politics buff, you're gonna want to seize this Moment.
One Bright Shining Moment (2005)
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Reviews Counted:18
Fresh:15
Rotten:3
Average Rating:6.6/10
Theatrical Release:Sep 16, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: The little known and much maligned 1972 campaign of South Dakota Senator George McGovern was, as this documentary by Stephen Vittoria (BLACK AND WHITE, HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD) points out, a high point... The little known and much maligned 1972 campaign of South Dakota Senator George McGovern was, as this documentary by Stephen Vittoria (BLACK AND WHITE, HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD) points out, a high point in American politics. Moreover, its ultimate failure was indicative of the problems in the electoral process as a whole, highlighting the impossibility of success for an honest, idealistic candidate. The film is partly a biography of a truly remarkable politician, and partly a political essay, full of analysis and historical information. Unabashedly partisan, Vittoria provides an alternative history of the events leading up to the election in which Nixon was running for his second term. The civil rights movement, the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy, the student killings at Kent State, and the police riots at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago, are all addressed with extensive archive footage and commentary by an assortment of luminaries. Warren Beatty, Gloria Steinem, Dick Gregory, and Gore Vidal are among those assembled to share their memories and experiences, and McGovern himself reflects without bitterness or regret. The hugely eventful four-year period from 1968 to 1972 forms the crux of the film, with McGovern a galvanizing force in politics, using grassroots tactics to become a formidable opponent despite his lack of funds. A staunch antiwar candidate, McGovern was vocal on many social issues, and demonstrated his willingness to stand up for his unpopular beliefs many times over in the Senate. Perched on the verge of success, however, McGovern made the fatal error that cost him the presidency and determined how history would remember him. In this film, drawing parallels between the Vietnam era and the Iraq war of the early 21st century, McGovern inevitably brings to mind candidates like Howard Dean and John Kerry, who have also been accused of being too decent and not charismatic enough. It is the man's grace, and the enduring strength of his idealism, that carry the film, which is narrated by Amy Goodman of Democracy Now. [More]
Director: Stephen Vittoria, Francis Mankiewicz
Director: Stephen Vittoria
Story: Ron Kovic
Director: Francis Mankiewicz
Producer: Michael Donaldson
Studio: First Run Features
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Reviews for One Bright Shining Moment
It's a deeply flawed film but also an important one; if it does nothing else it should bring this decent and courageous prairie populist, whose very name has become a patently unfair term of abuse, before at least a few members of a new generation.
“The Establishment... has led us into the stupidest and cruelest war in all history. That war is political disaster - a terrible cancer eating away at the soul of our nation.”
An effort to secure former Sen. George McGovern's place in history, and it does a pretty good job.
The film builds a strong argument in favor of his quixotic idealism and the compassionate optimism that propels him against seemingly invincible social ills even today at age 83.
A Politics 101 view of a presidential candidate whose victory might have made America an object lesson in decency.
What the film aims to show -- and does well ... is that McGovern's grassroots, anti-establishment tactics and ultimate victory at the Democratic convention was, and remains, an example of what U.S. politics strive, and generally fail, to achieve.
This is an excellent time to remind ourselves of this story. Another McGovern would have been a good thing to have the last five years.
[Goes] a long way to rehabilitating this unfairly maligned candidate.
The documentary will appeal to those who like their political commentary with unbridled bite.
In terms of recapturing the time that was, One Bright Shining Moment is rather effective -- although it feels to be revealing that time from certain distance.
A wan but well-researched apotheosis of the former senator from South Dakota.
Parallels to the current day are plain to see, so Vittoria's insistence on juxtaposing images of contemporary politicians and an angry narration only undercut the power of his otherwise absorbing presentation.
Just too hagiographic to engage anyone but the most nostalgic follower of the 1972 campaign.
Exactly the sort of starry-eyed, bullet-spraying hyperbole that drains credibility from any brand of political discourse.
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