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Path to War (2002) (TV)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
18 maj 2002 (USA) moreTagline:
Beyond the battlefields of Vietnam. Inside the halls of power. A different kind of war would decide the fate of a nation. morePlot:
In the mid-1960s, President Johnson and his foreign-policy team debate the decision to withdraw from or escalate the war in Vietnam. full summary | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
moreAwards:
Won Golden Globe. Another 17 nominations moreUser Comments:
The Very Opposite of a Jules Feiffer Cartoon more (35 total)Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Michael Gambon | ... | Lyndon Johnson | |
| Donald Sutherland | ... | Clark Clifford | |
| Alec Baldwin | ... | Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense | |
| Bruce McGill | ... | George Ball, Undersecretary of State | |
| James Frain | ... | Richard Goodwin | |
| Felicity Huffman | ... | Lady Bird Johnson | |
| Frederic Forrest | ... | General Earle G. Wheeler | |
| John Aylward | ... | Dean Rusk, Secretary of State | |
| Philip Baker Hall | ... | Everett Dirkson | |
| Tom Skerritt | ... | General William Westmoreland | |
| Diana Scarwid | ... | Marny Clifford | |
| Sarah Paulson | ... | Luci Baines Johnson | |
| Gerry Becker | ... | Walt Rostow | |
| Peter Jacobson | ... | Adam Yarmolinsky | |
| Cliff De Young | ... | McGeorge Bundy, National Security Advisor (as Cliff DeYoung) |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
165 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
1.78 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Dolby DigitalFun Stuff
Trivia:
Cameo: [Gary Sinise]Gov. George Wallace. He previously played Wallace in George Wallace (1997) (TV), also directed by John Frankenheimer. The footage of Wallace on television is from Sinise's performance in that film. moreQuotes:
Lyndon Baines Johnson: How many planes will we lose?Gen. Earle 'Buzz' Wheeler: 20 to 25.
Lyndon Baines Johnson: How many casualties?
Gen. Earle 'Buzz' Wheeler: 50.
Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense: 50 to 300 is my estimate, and if the bombs miss, it can go as high as 12,000, with fifty percent of these civilians and fifty percent of those killed.
Gen. Earle 'Buzz' Wheeler: Of course, we don't plan these strikes to miss our targets.
Lyndon Baines Johnson: But you do miss sometimes. And this time you could hit a Russian ship. And the bomber pilot will be a kid from Johnson City, Texas, and that'll be the kid that starts World War III, thank you very much.
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Soundtrack:
The Eyes of Texas moreFAQ
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A TV movie about President Lyndon B. Johnson? A historical drama about his "suffering" during the Vietnam war escalation? Intriguing idea, like its attempt of resurrecting from the dust of last century the climate which generated Johnson's Great Society political project... A vision that failed, even if the movie closes celebrating its persistence before the end titles. More than everything else, this is a stage drama unlikely to stand the real, terrifying drama going on outside the "halls of power" -- namely, in the bombarded and famished country of Vietnam. In the face of such a massacre (of both Americans and Vietnamese), when we are told that some 58,000 marines and TWO MILLION Asiatics died in the last four years of the war only, there is no drawing room drama that can give justice to the "mess". This was no simple "mess", it was a genocide -- something one would have thought belonging to a bloodier, more cruel past, like a new extermination of Jews. Here, the "Jews" were the Communists from South-East Asia: Vietcong, women, oldsters & children alike. America lost much more than a bloody war in Vietnam; the film partially tries to show that (like in the impressive suicide scene of a man who burns alive under the very eyes of Robert McNamara at the Pentagon), but generally speaking "Path to War" remains more interested in the affairs going on between the male trio of its protagonists: LBJ, "Bob" McNamara (whose wife had ulcer, we learn) and Clark Clifford, the man who succeeded McNamara as Secretary of Defence (a marvelously saturnine Donald Sutherland). I realize this is a historical film tailored to suit American audiences: it's just as right that they ask questions about their past and the more controversial figures of their political life; but I can assure you that, when screened outside the U.S., the film looks more like the capable drawing room caper which I mentioned before, no matter if THIS drawing room is Oval and located at the White House. All this taken into account, it's a standing tribute to its director, John Frankenheimer, and to its leading players that the film "per se" succeeds in capturing our attention and sustaining it through 165 minutes of dialogue and interior sequences, like no ordinary TV movie would be even remotely capable of doing these days. It is, in just one word, a mature conception of a historical movie, sustained by brilliant performances ands a good screenplay... The real shame is that too many of us (especially the non-Americans?) best remember LBJ through the devastating portrait Jules Feiffer made of those years in its cartoons. Forty years later, Frankenheimer gives us a different thing to muse about: we accept it from his "maestro" hands -- with just a little reserve in the back of our minds.