Recount |  | Actor: Kevin Spacey Studio: HBO Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $7.25 as of 3/16/2010 22:14 EDT details You Save: $12.73 (64%)
New (36) Used (13) from $2.99
Seller: grannysjellyjar Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 15926
Format: Color, DVD, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 116 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 0.9 x 0.5 x 0.5
MPN: 883929026104 UPC: 883929026104 EAN: 0883929026104 ASIN: B001AMHNKW
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 Release Date: August 19, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | HBO Films presents Recount, the true story chronicling the turbulent weeks in Florida after the 2000 presidential election. The film explores one of the most dramatic and controversial events in recent U.S. election history that shook a nation?s faith in the ability to stage a fair and open election. Recount takes a look at the ordinary people caught up in the extraordinary events that would ultim |
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Product Description RECOUNT (DVD/4:3 TRANSFER)
Amazon.com At the height of the 2000 election season, CBS anchor Dan Rather quipped, "The presidential race is crackling like a hickory fire." Director Jay Roach (Austin Powers) recaptures that blaze in his smart HBO docudrama about the thriller in Palm Beach County. Written by actor Danny Strong, Recount bounces between the Sunshine State, Gore's Tennessee headquarters, and Bush's Texas stomping grounds. Gore adviser Ron Klain (an excellent Kevin Spacey) provides a privileged window into those weeks when the American public first became familiar with obscure terms like "hanging chad." (Since Klain has an ax to grind with the vice president, neither he nor Gore appear completely heroic.) First, the Democratic candidate pulls ahead; then he falls behind. Just as he prepares to concede, Klain's colleague, Michael Whouley (Denis Leary), spots an anomaly in the vote count, and the race continues. Enter eccentric Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris (Laura Dern, a certain Emmy nominee), who orders a recount, and former Secretaries of State Warren Christopher (John Hurt) and James Baker III (Tom Wilkinson), who oversee a process that ends up in the Supreme Court (where Ed Begley Jr.'s David Boies represents Gore). Produced by the late Sydney Pollack, who originally intended to direct, Recount skillfully integrates news footage with dark comedy, most provided by the foul-mouthed Whouley and Bush adviser Ben Ginsberg (Bob Balaban), who's still livid about JFK's victory over Nixon. If the Democrats come across as more sympathetic, the Republicans come across as more colorful--and strategically effective. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 32
Bush Gets Bush-whacked by Pregnant Chad February 21, 2010 Rev. E. Antonio Hernandez This film is one of the most riveting I've seen, and not for anything other than the pure simple truth.
Here we have the story of the Gore campaign for the presidency in 2000...the Republican strategy to throw Gore off his feet...the hullabaloo over the stupid voting machines and incredibly, it lessens the idea that the voters were the stupid ones.
This film actually teaches us what happened in the presidential race of 2000--which wasn't actually settled until March, when the Supreme Court gave Bush the presidency. Finely cast, though no attempt is made to render good portrayals except for John Hurt's rather flawed Warren Cristopher and Tom Wilkinson's brilliant Jim Baker. I found the chemistry raging between Dennis Leary and Kevin Spacey to be the best on film, and the tension this film manages to generate gives the viewer a clue about what it was like participating and voting in that election.
One of the most chilling scenes (I was cheering because I knew the truth at the time) was when crowds of people stormed in to protest the original hand recount. It turns out they were Republican go-fers, flown in by the Republican leadership to disrupt--and stop--the hand recount. My wife and I saw this activity live at the time and we knew immediately that those people were NOT ordinary citizens. It wasn't until this movie that the truth was brutally stated. It's worth it for that sequence in our history alone, because as the film stated, this was the first time in our history that Congress hired out a mob to take direct action in public.
This film MUST be shown at schools everywhere, even if it's only to understand where the term "chad" originated! (Spacey to Leary: :The plural of chad is CHAD?!) ;)
Taking the count... November 3, 2009 anonymous 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
GOP members of Amazon wave an imperial hand and call this film "fair," on balance. That is missing the point. This was a catclysmic national tragedy the result of which many people are dead today -- leaders do matter. If 20,000 African-Americans were not thrown off the rolls, if punch card machines were not counted, bizzarely enough, by automated machines which tended to push the chads back in, if thousands of people were not confused by a ballot into voting for a candidate they despised (Pat Buchanan, who took their side), the world would be a very different one today. As usual, the tragedy was enabled by the dithering of stupid Democrats, who scared away at the first band of staged protesters, or first critical article in The New York Times.
I will say that the mimicry of the Florida atmosphere, the media circus, the direct excerpts from the opinions of the court, and the dead on impressions of Christopher, Boies, Harris (from scene one a nincompoop) and Baker are eerie. Even if a few scenes have been thrown in for dramatic effect, no one is a monster and all are scrambling for self-interested political gain. It happens that right was on the Democratic side. They had no clue how to use it. (Change, much?)
Taking the longer view, the very narrow establishmentarian means and methods flashed by both parties (corporate media, politicized courts, hired protesters, some vague abstraction called the hoi polloi out there, for which this is all being done for), go a long way toward explaining the mess we are in. Find a decent 3rd party, because the parties who brought us this, the Iraq/Afganistan wars, the bailout and the meager "recovery" will not do...much longer.
should be rated R October 5, 2009 deb smith Recount was an interesting movie, however, there should have been a rating on it as the "f" word was used repeatedly in it. The movie itself helps one to see that justice can still be manipulated even at its highest level where one would think that fair treatment would be more likely to happen.
Very entertaining, well done film - the controversy is overblown. September 29, 2009 Ronald Brackney (Santa Clara, CA USA) The basics of this election are this: There were "three" votes by the U.S. Supreme Court in this matter that totaled in sum 21-6 in favor of Mr. Bush as follows: First, the Court voted 9-0 to "reverse" the Florida S.C.'s November 21 ruling to
extend the deadline to submit votes from November 14 to November 26 - thus the whole vote counting fiasco was moot; Second, the Court voted 7-2 to reverse on an "equal protection" basis the Florida S.C.'s December 8th ruling ordering a statewide hand recount of undervotes; Third, the 5-4 ruling was the outcome of the first two rulings. The Florida Supreme Court had changed the "election rules" after the election. It is the Florida legislature that determines the election
rules not the Court after the election was already held. All post election media
studies determined that Bush would have won anyway. In fact, the Palm Beach Post
reported that in Miami-Dade County, Bush would have picked up 6 votes over Gore and this is one of four heavily Democrat counties Gore chose to have a recount in saying "that result would have been a hard blow to Al Gore's hopes of claiming the presidency in a recount."
Florida Voters Revisted September 19, 2009 Jeffrey S. Stuart (Gaithersburg, Maryland United States) Outstanding performances by Kevin Spacey and Tom Wilkinson. The story of the 2000 presidential election vote count in the State of Florida with all the problems and resulting political maneuvers and legal battles makes for a compelling drama.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 32
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