It's as gripping as any thriller and as moving as any drama with the added fascination of the unfathomable relationship between John and Yoko.
The U.S. vs. John Lennon (2006)
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Reviews Counted:93
Fresh:71
Rotten:22
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: Though it glosses over anything negative about Lennon, this documentary offers a lot of fascinating archival footage, plus its political issues still have relevance for today.
Runtime: 1 hr 36 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
US Box Office: $1,002,528
Synopsis: David Leaf and John Scheinfeld struggled for over 15 years to produce this documentary, and it's emergence in the year 2006 is a testament to the film's timeliness. THE U.S. VS. JOHN LENNON focuses... David Leaf and John Scheinfeld struggled for over 15 years to produce this documentary, and it's emergence in the year 2006 is a testament to the film's timeliness. THE U.S. VS. JOHN LENNON focuses on a part of the music icon's life that is often overlooked: his politicization both during and after the Vietnam War. Towards the end of the Beatles' career, Lennon began taking the band in a new direction, using their popularity to circulate a message of peace in songs such as "Revolution." He became even more involved after the band broke up, and the film traces his growing awareness and dissent through both archival footage--much of which had lain forgotten in vaults for decades--and interviews with those close to him. This leads to the titular case, in which the U.S. government, which had already been monitoring his actions for some time, attempted to deport the star for fear of the threat he posed to the nation. The film also portrays Lennon's close relationship with Yoko Ono and the effect she had on his art, including an interview with the Japanese performance artist and muse that sheds much light on the couple's intimate history. Other interviews feature such luminaries as Mario Cuomo, Gore Vidal, Walter Cronkite, Angela Davis, and even G. Gordon Liddy, the former chief operative under Richard Nixon. The film avoids falling into the trap of one-dimensional idolatry, showing Lennon's politicization as reflective of his own spiritual path, a very personal, at times fallible, journey towards using his fame to make the world a better place. The constraints and depletion of civil liberties Lennon experienced at the hands of the U.S. government, then in the throws of a neo-McCarthyism, invite comparisons to contemporary politics. The creative ways he fought for expression and peace, meanwhile, expand upon the known brilliance of a remarkable figure. [More]
Starring: Yoko Ono, Walter Cronkite, Mario Cuomo, George McGovern
Starring: Yoko Ono, Walter Cronkite, Mario Cuomo, George McGovern, Richard Nixon, G. Gordon Liddy, Geraldo Rivera, Ron Kovic
Director: David Leaf, John Scheinfeld
Director: David Leaf, John Scheinfeld
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Reviews for The U.S. vs. John Lennon
In exploring a little-known story of political persecution, The U.S. vs. John Lennon also sheds some unexpected light on the uneven and still undigested career of one of the most paradoxical artists pop culture has yet produced.
Readers tempted to write off that episode as yet another paranoid fantasy of The Left should take heed: The U.S. vs. John Lennon includes the firsthand testimony of the spies themselves, from apostate FBI agents to the unapologetic G. Gordon Liddy.
The clips of Lennon and Ono (who appears as one of the present-day talking heads, and a most thoughtful one, at that) are every one of them fascinating.
Humanizing Lennon to those who might find the man a bit inaccessible, and adding the word 'courage' to his long list of positive attributes.
What is ultimately so special about this film is its handling of the relationship between Lennon and wife, Yoko Ono.
Rarely have we seen Lennon so unguarded, impassioned and thoughtful as we do again and again here.
Lennon's private battle with political giants is remarkable in many ways, and the world could still learn much from his legacy.
Looking back, the Nixon administration's muddling seems almost comically inept, except that, much like today, the costs are so unspeakably high.
It's full-up with footage that shows the hero of the Yoko Ono-sanctioned film to be as witty, entertaining and dependably charismatic as ever, and rarely as simple-minded as his detractors would have it.
It's well worth taking a look at how a fascist-like government operates in America.
[A] complete hagiography, a film that smoothes out every rough edge in Lennon's life to the point where he's made into someone who seems terribly uninteresting and naïve.
The movie creeps along at times with extraneous material, but it succeeds in doing something unique, by filtering a time of turmoil through the experience of one of the most fascinating artists of our time.
In addition to listening to Lennon's music, I discovered so many new angles to important events that helped to shape pop culture and political policies of the 1960s and 70s and some that may need to be revisited today.
Not only a telling indictment of what can happen when fear meets dissent; it is an affecting portrait of an artist at the height of his curiosity.
Due to Yoko Ono's initiative, docu may be too celebratory and narrowly focused for those wanting to see a critical film of the celeb musician but its conspiracy thesis feels relevant for our times, and Lennon's music, though out of sequence, is great.
Never fails to engage. It's well-paced and chock-full of interesting tidbits.
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