Video Crossroads: VHS Tape: Elvis Meets Nixon

Movie Locator

 Home Page
 Contact Us
 Search Page
 Links Page

Movies - DVD

 Top DVDs
 Action
 Adam Sandler
 Anne Bancroft
 Arnold
 Schwarzenegger

 Cary Grant
 Christian
 Classics
 Comedy
 Cult Movies
 Disney Animated
 Documentary
 Drama
 Fitness, Yoga
 Horror
 Jackie Chan
 Jim Carrey
 John Wayne
 Kids, Family
 Mel Gibson
 Music Video
 Mystery
 New Age
 Sandra Bullock
 Science Fiction
 Sports
 Steve McQueen
 Sylvester Stallone
 Television
 Tom Cruise
 Twilight Zone
 Westerns

Movies - Video

 Top Videos
 Action
 Christian
 Classics
 Comedy
 Cult Movies
 Documentary
 Drama
 Fitness, Yoga
 Horror
 Kids, Family
 Music Video
 Mystery
 Peter Cushing
 Science Fiction
 Sports
 Television
 Westerns

Elvis Meets Nixon - VHS Tape

Buy Used/3rdParty

More product information

Find DVD version

Find Movie Posters

Elvis Meets Nixon

List Price: $89.98    Our Price:

You Save: 100%

VHS Tape - 02 April, 2002
Avalanche
PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Availability: This item is currently not available.

Director: Allan Arkush

Number of Media: 1
Features:

  • Color
  • NTSC

Related Areas: Comedies, Feature Film Comedy, Feature Film-comedy, Movie

Similar Products

                      


Customer Reviews

GRRRRRRRRRRRRREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I am not a big Elvis fan however this is a great movie! A must see for everyone, Elvis fan or not, you will love this movie!


"If (it) didn't happen exactly this way, it should have."

Another "made-for-Showtime" original movie that wildly exceeded expectatations (see also my review of the Patrick Stewart vehicle "Safe House"), "Elvis Meets Nixon" details the two days in December of 1970 when Elvis Presley, for reasons known but to himself, left his home in home in Memphis, Tennessee on his own for the first time in his adult life, criss-crossing the country to Washington, DC, then to Los Angeles, CA, and finally back to DC for a meeting with...President Richard Nixon.

Of course it's all a dramatization of events, and perhaps more than just a bit of artistic license has been taken with the two main characters' personalities. But as an Elvis fan who holds the artist and the man with reverence, I found this to be one of the funniest movies I have ever watched. The almost child-like detachment from reality with which Elvis and Nixon lived their lives at the time is incomprhensible at times. Bob Gunton's portrayal of President Nixon rivals that of Dan Hedaya in "Dick" (also made by Canadians, by the way) for sheer genius of comedic timing, and Rick Peters is so amazing as Elvis (the "doughnut shop in DC" scene is one of the most amazingly surreal moments I've ever seen on film...and I own "Bubba Ho-tep", as well) that it took my about six viewings of this movie to realize that he has brown eyes rather than the King's royal blue (how did that detail get overlooked in pre-production?).

Everything that occurs in this movie takes place from a slightly skewed angle; of course it could not possibly happen today (could it?), but to the amazement of everyone, Elvis was able to pull it off some 35 years ago ("Watch and learn, son...watch and learn"). The "interviews" with contemporary artists Wayne Newton, Tony Curtis, and Stephen Stills(?) as well as Dick Cavett and the surviving "characters" associated with Elvis and Nixon at the time are hilarious, as well. The documentary angle is well-played, but the individual performances of Peters and Gunton (try to keep a straight face whenever Nixon swears in this movie, I dare you) are really what carry this movie.

For better or worse, Elvis and Nixon did more to shape the culture of the second half of the 20th Century than practically anyone else; it is natural that they seem somehow inevitably drawn together, and this movie tells the story the way I truly and dearly wish it had actually happened. I'll be watching it tonight (16 August, "Ascension Day", as I call it) eating doughnuts and cheeseburgers. You'd do well to check this one out, as well.


Fun for Elvis lovers and nonlovers alike.

I just recently saw this movie with a group of friends, some die-hard fans like myself, and others who know very little about Elvis. This movie was great! Everyone enjoyed and laughed out loud at the absurdity of the reality these two men lived in. Both were so out of touch with everyday life... they were destined to find each other in this truly ironic way.

As a life-long fan, and someone who has seen virtually every incarnation of Elvis, real or unreal or surreal, on film - I can truly say this is informative inspite of it's inevitable truth and silliness. You really can't make this stuff up. If you can find this one, pick it up immediately!

 

Amazon.Com prices and availability subject to change.