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The U.S. vs. John Lennon

 Rating 4
enlarged image: The U.S. vs. John Lennon
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80% Recommended by our customers.
Studio: Lions Gate
Catalog: DVD
Release date: 2007-02-13
Media: DVD
released in theatres: 2006
Running time in minutes: 96
DVD aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
DVD Region code: 1
released in theatres: 2006
Ean: 0031398209119
Upc: 031398209119
tip Tip: compare prices with similar DVDs

Director:
David Leafsee more Dvds by David Leaf
John Scheinfeldsee more Dvds by John Scheinfeld
Actors:
John Lennonsee more Dvds with John Lennon
Pat Nixonsee more Dvds with Pat Nixon
Chris Charlesworthsee more Dvds with Chris Charlesworth
Everett Dirksensee more Dvds with Everett Dirksen
Gloria Emersonsee more Dvds with Gloria Emerson

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User Reviews:
 Rating 1   Written on November 14, 2007
   Summary: A Gross Misrepresentation of an Artist.
The U.S. vs. John Lennon

I have nothing but problems with this documentary. Firstly, this is a manipulated version of the events. The seal of `Authorized' has cost this documentary its impartiality and honesty.

This documentary has all the hallmarks of a Yoko Ono production. She is portrayed as a sympathetic talented artist with a heart of gold and inseparable if not the catalyst of John Lennon's emerging talent. So the message of this poor documentary is that `John would have been nothing without Yoko!'

Not once is Julian Lennon mentioned in this perversion of History. Julian suffered all his young life with the pain of being ignored and rejected by his own Father. Yet when Yoko's son is born it is reported as if this experience is revelatory and the only one of significance.

John and Yoko were having relationship problems before he died. In fact John was sleeping with another Asian girl introduced to him by Yoko. When John started to fall for her, Yoko terminated the relationship.

It is a crime that John Lennon's legacy and fortune are in the hands of Yoko Ono who has proved on numerous occasions how morally malleable she is. Julian Lennon on the other hand is forced to go to auctions to bid for articles that once belonged to his dad. He still to this day not received a penny of John Lennon's wealth.

The final insult to John's memory is having a sell-out like Geraldo Rivera comment on his life.


 Rating 5   Written on October 29, 2007
   Summary: The Past Haunts the Present
George Santayana wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Much is made, particularly in the Bonus Features on this disc, of the parallels between the obsessively-secretive and vindictive administration of Richard Nixon and our present administration. Whether or not you agree with these parallels, the facts of what Haldeman, Erlichman, Hoover, Thurman and others in power did to a humble rock & roll singer cannot be denied. From the perspective of 35 years on, it's hard to remember the urgency that drove both sides to such acts of desperation.

If we are to head off a similar cataclysmic division in society today, we must heed the lessons of history, we must acknowledge and discuss the trends and currents which draw us into the same whirlpools.

This documentary is valuable as history, whichever side of the debate you're on.


 Rating 5   Written on October 19, 2007
   Summary: More important now than ever
The younger you are, the more important it is that you see this movie. You've heard of John Lennon. You are maybe even familiar with his songs, and you know that he was murdered. But this movie is about more than the man - it is about his times, his legacy, and the U.S. Government's paranoia and involvement in his life. You will be amazed, if not outraged, that such things can happen in this country; and frankly, compared to today, what happned to John Lennon was tame.

See this movie. Share it with your friends, and your brothers and sisters. And never forget his talent, his spirit, and the beauty of what he was trying to do.

Woodstock - 3 Days of Peace & Music (The Director's Cut)


 Rating 1   Written on October 12, 2007
   Summary: Hippie Nostalgia- Dawdling, Tiresome, Vapid; Don't Waste Your Time
In a final hurrah for publicity, the aging peace activists of the dire 60's decade bare their dusty rainbow flags and dove-shrouded guitars and tambourines once more in beguiling the infamous Lion Gates Films (Fahrenheit 9/11) into believing after all these years they'll finally deliver a new, worthy message to be heard.

Unfortunately, as is always the story with this dying breed of time-warped zealots, it is always the same old malcontent sour meal that bangs the drums of conspiracy while yearning for the days of centered-staged publicity. With ambitious hopes of spreading their tainted, jaded message of always distrust authority or "the establishment" while proselytizing others into their nihilistic lifestyle, the remnants of the 60's era whose former glory days of ceaseless narcotic usage and promiscuity under the auspices of love and peace were abandoned for authentic careers and families, have mounted a forceful effort to expunge any infamy of their memory.

In a circus-like parade of invidious junkies, tie-dye bohemians, and snarling leftwing extremists, "The US vs. John Lennon" digs deep to amass 99 minutes of archival footage of former friends, associates, and journalists interviews to puzzle together a colorless, diluted "documentary" film in memoriam of former Beatles star turned headlining drug-addict, peacenik, and New Left radical, John Lennon. An assemblage of now nostalgic gray-haired "cultural revolution" veterans and admirers gather from afar to reminisce about the fanatic's applauded lifetime and legacy now celebrated by media stiffs and Hollywood elitists circles.

The film's cast of characters abounds with prominent leftists and starch anti-Americanists that could seemingly only be concocted in the Sulzberger family's wet dreams. Once reputable journalist figures, Walter Cronkite and Geraldo, join the dramatis personae of Marxist fanatic Tariq Ali, Black Panther/Communist Angela Davis, the ever-provocative George Liddy, indicted-murderer Bobby Seale, and the always-amusing George McGovern; along with the priceless input of gay playwright Gore Vidal and extremist professor Noam Chomsky.

With the notable titans of the era amassed, struggling documentarian/director David Leaf, trills audiences with retrospection of solely John Lennon's political movements, and exploits his many fans' appreciation of the musician with vacuous adoration of his beliefs as opposed to his talent which is most likely why you chose to watch in the first place. If you're a fan of the Lennon's music you'll most likely be disappointed; it was never Leaf's intention to commemorate a prominent musician of the era but rather adore a morally-superior political martyr of their radical agenda.

In addition to being veraciously cloying, the film is inappreciable to anyone without fond memories of Woodstock and a cordial reverence of marches on Washington with Viet-Cong banners alongside Black Panther terrorists, and needless to say, apolitical Lennon-admirers/music fans. In the same fashion of most Lion`s Gate propaganda films, storyline direction is scarce and the jumbled shorts of interviews digress from a central point that they hope to offer viewers, presenting only exclusive input from fellow conforming ideologues eulogizing his eccentric political antics.

The film opens with Lennon and his cohorts wailing at a concert with sardine-packed hippies for their marijuana-martyr John Sinclair. Ardent music follows over stills of Lennon's childhood, cutting in and out of disordered interviews with the star-studded cast of former cronies while the monotonous rhyme of their "righteous" cause tickles the air. Theories of Soviet-styled purges the "vile" Nixon Administration is contriving begins to flow through the film's veins reaching a climax when the INS deportation proceedings commence.

With further archival footage of "Bed-Ins" and sappy, pretentious pacifist tunes, our concealed story's moral shine through: this atrocious, murderous president abuses his power in conspiring to assassinate the message of a Utopian, harmonious world by our renown leftist demigod, John Lennon.

After Lennon's murder, a frayed viewer leaves to the note of Gore Vidal: "..and Mr. Bush represents death." How the current president ties into the John Lennon expurgation conspiracy is still unclear but with a cast like this lucidity is often scarce.


 Rating 4   Written on October 8, 2007
   Summary: Behaving Like a Child....of the Blitz
Writers/directors David Leaf and John Scheinfeld present us with an engaging documentary about the Nixon Administration's attempt to deport actor/singer John Lennon in the wake of the former Beatle's anti- war protest.
The personal stake I would have on this issue is that my Dad was on the first of two voluntary Air Force tours of duty with the Disaster Preparadeness Unit (the military's answer to the Red Cross) in Vietnam around the time John Lennon and Yoko Ono stepped up public denunciations of the war. Dad hasn't objected to Lennon's stance in retrospect because the 1964 deathbed plea of General Douglas MacArthur (a personal hero of his, and more interestingly since the early '90s, a native of former President Clinton's home state, which has a strong military tradition), made after a lifetime of observations and direct involvement in Asian affairs, was that America stay out of the conflict in Vietnam because Westerners should not fight land wars in Asia, nor should they fight in the jungle, nor should one country fight in another's civil war. All three strategies have proven to be historically disastrous.
I feel, however that Leaf and Scheinfeld could have taken this documentary in a different direction, however, placing a bit more emphasis on the early-life issues that were the most likely influence on his later behavior.
Americans could give more thought to the fact that 9 times out of 10, when the British in general advise us that certain military strategies are a mistake, chances are it's because they made those mistakes first. They once had history's mightiest Empire because they fought with everyone with whom there could possible be to fight on this planet during the whole millenium of their existance, and consequently should know bad military strategy when they see it, and if America's "mother country" was speaking to us, clearly, "Mother" was trying to warn us that we were making a mistake.
It's no coincidence that Lennon and many other British Invaders took a strong anti-war stance during the time of U.S troop involvment in Vietnam; the vast majority of them could have been killed in World War II as children and could probably empathize better with the plight of Vietnamese civilians.
Lennon was born during the air raid over Liverpool(Read:Industrial town+ Seaport = Inevitable prime target for the Luftwaffe) on October 9, 1940, and like all newborns in hospitals of that area, was whisked to the hospital nursery upon delivery and placed in a basket beneath his bassinet to protect him from potential injury in case the hospital was bombed and the ceiling caved in, and spent the first 4 1/2 years of his life dodging Luftwaffe bombs. While many of us are old enough to remember the last day of his life, if we consider the events of the first day of his life, it should explain enough about the anti-war protest he made somewhere in between.
Other reviewers mention Lennon's abandonment of his first wife and son, Julian--a detail excluded from this film. But Lennon, too experienced abandonment by his parents in his early life, and his family's dysfunction may have been another symptom of the war.
I couldn't say I agreed 100% with his support of John Sinclair, who was convicted of possession of marijuana in 1969. But the Nixon Administration's ultimately futile attempt to deport Lennon was more out of pettiness than a justifyable attempt to dissuade someone who supported a law-breaker.
Yoko Ono, who herself survived air raids over Tokyo as a child, Tariq Ali, Ron Kovacs, Carl Bernstein, Dick Cavett, Angela Davis, Chris Charlesworth, George McGovern, Gore Vidal Noam Chomsky, and Geraldo Rivera are among the luminaries of the period, interviewed in counterpoint to the archival footage.
Viewers are presented with familar footage of the Lennons--their "bed in" for peace, John's performance of "Imagine", Lennon with son, Sean who turned one the day his father was vindicated in court, and ultimately, we relive those sad days of December, 1980.
As I conclude my homage to the World's Most Famous Battle of Britain Baby in time for what would have been his 67th birthday, I feel sufficiently appreciative of the empathy most reviewers on this site have shown for a man whose life of rebelliousness may have been one long attempt to overcome post traumatic stress disorder, but whose example as a peace activist shook many out of complacency along the way.

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CatalogDVDDVDDVDDVDDVD
Release date2007-02-132005-12-062007-11-062007-11-132007-02-20
MediaDVDDVDDVDDVDDVD
released in theatres20061988-10-072007-11-062007-11-132006-11-10
Running time in minutes9610014918093
DVD aspect ratio1.78:11.85:11.75:1-1.33:1
Audience RatingPG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)R (Restricted)G (General Audience)NR (Not Rated)R (Restricted)
FormatClosed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSCClosed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSCAnamorphic, Color, DTS Surround Sound, Widescreen, NTSCBest of, Box set, Dolby, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, NTSCClosed-captioned, Color, Full Screen, NTSC
DVD Region code11111
Ean00313982091199781419815782509995103479506034979903130796019799294
Book Isbn-1419815784---
Upc031398209119012569726550-603497990313796019799294
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