Power (film)

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Power is a 1986 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet. The original screenplay by David Himmelstein focuses on political corruption and how power affects both those who wield it and the people they try to control.

Pete St. John, a ruthless and highly successful media consultant, is asked to join the campaign of little-known Ohio businessman Jerome Cade, who hopes to win the Senate seat vacated by St. John's friend Sam Hastings. He comes in conflict with Arnold Billings, a public relations expert whose firm has been hired by Cade. St. John's investigation into Billings' background prompts Billings to retaliate by bugging St. John's office phones, flooding the basement of his headquarters, tampering with his private jet, and interfering with his other clients. His actions force St. John to take a hard look at himself and what he has become and to decide if his ex-wife Ellen and ex-partner Wilfred Buckley are right in believing his success is due primarily to the exploitation of others.

The Twentieth Century-Fox release was filmed in Armonk, New York; the Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens, New York City; Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico; Durango, Mexico; Seattle, Washington; Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park in Agua Dulce, California; and Washington, DC.

Denzel Washington won the Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture.

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[edit] Principal cast

[edit] Principal production credits

[edit] Critical reception

In his review in the New York Times, Vincent Canby described the film as "a well-meaning, witless, insufferably smug movie that . . . suffers from the total lack of a comic imagination." [1]

In the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert observed, "It's smart, it's knowledgeable, sometimes it's funny, occasionally it is very touching, and I learned something from it . . . The movie builds up considerable momentum during its first hour. There's a sense of excitement, of identification with this man who is being driven by his own energy, ambition and cynicism . . . During the second half of the movie, however, a growing disappointment sets in. Power is too episodic. It doesn't really declare itself to be about any particular story, any single clear-cut issue . . . the movie itself seems to sense that it's going nowhere. The climax is a pointless, frustrating montage of images. It's a good montage, but it belongs somewhere in the middle of the movie; it states the problem, but not the solution or even the lack of a solution. The movie seems to be asking us to walk out of the theater shaking our heads in disillusionment, but I was more puzzled than disillusioned." [2]

[edit] References

[edit] External link

Power at the Internet Movie Database

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