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The U.S. Vs. John Lennon (2006)

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Sobre o filme

"Of all the documentaries ever made on John Lennon, this is the one he would love the best", said Yoko Ono, Lennon?s widow. Before Iraq and the Bush administration, before Bruce Springsteen and Pearl Jam, there was John Lennon - the celebrated music star who used his fortune and his fame to protest against the Vietnam War and fight for world peace. The documentary shows the transformation from Lennon, the musician to social activist and how the U.S. government tried to silence him and expel him from the country. This is not only an isolated episode in American history, but a relevant fact today. Focusing on the 1966/1976 period, the documentary also broaches the struggle for civil rights, the new left and political movements, the disappointment with the Nixon government and Watergate. Political activism on the part of Afro-Americans Angela Davis and Bobby Seale, journalists Carl Bernstein and Walter Cronkite, a Vietnam veteran, and activist Ron Kovic, historian and novelist Gore Vidal, among others. But Lennon is the voice and the central presence in the documentary. He arises as has never before been seen: a man of principle, amusing, an extraordinarily charismatic young man who refuses to keep quiet in face of injustice. Yoko Ono, as opposed to the image made of her by the press and by the fans, appears as an aggregating important factor in the musician?s political decisions.

Título original: The U.S. Vs. John Lennon

Ano: 2006

Classificação: 14 years

Duração: 99 minutos

Gênero: Documentary

País: United States

Cor: color, 35mm

Direção: DAVID LEAFJOHN SCHEINFELD

Roteiro: David Leaf, John Scheinfeld

Fotografia: James Mathers

Montagem: Peter S. Lynch II

Produtor: David Leaf, John Scheinfeld, Steve Ligerman

Produção: Lionsgate, VH1 Rock Docs, Authorized Pictures

Edições: 30, 30, 36, 36