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Frost/Nixon
A dramatic retelling of the post-Watergate television interviews between British talk-show host David Frost and former president Richard Nixon in 1977, three years after the scandal that ended his presidency.
















10 October 1986, Marin County, California, USA

10 September 1959, Los Angeles, California, USA

20 April 1959, Burbank, California, USA


12 January 1960, Windsor, Ontario, Canada

31 March 1957, San Mateo, California, USA

8 July 1958, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA


17 November 1928, Oklahoma, USA

31 May 1955, Brooklyn, New York, USA

18 May 1979, Northampton, Pennsylvania, USA

1 January 1970, Los Angeles, California, USA


October 28, 2014
Both leads are outstanding. Langella is especially mesmerizing as the calculating grand manipulator. It's not an impression of the former president, but a piece of his essence.
December 25, 2008
Plays often lose their energy when adapted for the screen. But even on the stage, Frost/Nixon had a cinematic dynamism, and Howard has only enhanced that quality.
January 23, 2009
The outcome isn't half as conflicted as you might imagine, though it's hard to argue that Howard brings anything new to Morgan's play.
October 28, 2014
Frost/Nixon is smart and involving, a thoroughly grown-up and carefully made drama about the real-life, on-air showdown between a lightweight TV personality and a disgraced ex-president.
October 28, 2014
The magnificently-flawed former US president Richard Milhous Nixon, as embodied by Frank Langella, is a magnetic presence in Ron Howard's adaptation of Peter Morgan's stageplay.
October 28, 2014
It's a credit to the actor that by the end, Langella is living, it seems, in Nixon's skin.
October 28, 2014
You never feel like you're watching a play on film: The way Morgan has opened up the proceedings in his screenplay feels organic under the direction of Ron Howard, who has crafted his finest film yet, and one of the year's best.
October 28, 2014
Howard has successfully made an okay, watchable movie, kept from greatness only by his undying artistic blandness.
February 08, 2009
Nixon is infinitely more complex than George W. Bush, which is probably why this one slice of his life is more intriguing than "W," which covers decades.
December 25, 2008
All this makes for great entertainment on the big screen, though the real legacy of the Nixon interviews is more vexing than Morgan would have us understand.
October 28, 2014
In its glib and reductionist way, it works like a charm. Or better yet, like television. Which, finally, is a compliment.
October 28, 2014
The movie is essentially a chamber piece pivoting on two beautifully nuanced performances.