Category: (DVD)
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Set in 1963, in the swirl of glamour and intrigue that turned President John F. Kennedy's Washington into Camelot, a young teenager has an inside view of JFK’s torrid affair with his neighbor and secret CIA assassination plans. History unfolds in front of your eyes in this gripping and dramatic coming of age story.
Ok,Reviewed by Calvin L. Toler, 2009-12-28
This movie shouls have shown a little more with and the president, not the after math because you got a better understaning of it.
coming-of-age tale meets JFKReviewed by Roland E. Zwick, 2009-09-26
***1/2
Written by Alex Metcalf and directed by William Olsson, "An
American Affair" at least earns points for originality. For what
starts out as a fairly conventional coming-of-age tale set in 1963
Washington D.C. suddenly turns into a piece of historical fiction
when the obligatory older woman 13-year-old Adam Stafford (Cameron
Bright) falls madly in love with turns out to be none other than
the mistress of President John F. Kennedy himself. Thus, not only
is Adam introduced to the wonderful world of raging hormones but to
the sociopolitical issues of the day as well.
Adam is the son of two journalists who have no clue their child has
been peeping into the home across the way, enjoying a full-court
view of Catherine Caswell (nicely played by Gretchen Mol), a
glamorous divorcee and ex-CIA agent guaranteed to get any healthy
young American lad's juices flowing. When Adam introduces himself
to her, Catherine hires him on as a gardener, a setup that gives
the youngster plenty of opportunity to not only make his move on
this prospective conquest but, thanks to her uniquely complicated
social life, to have a special behind-the-scenes glimpse into a bit
of juicy, albeit undocumented, political history.
"An American Affair" throws so many disparate elements into the mix
- May/December romance (or maybe more like February/August), lurid
political melodrama, adolescent wish-fulfillment, cloak-and-dagger
espionage, conspiracy-theory speculation - that it can't help but
generate a certain fascination, even when the story itself is not
all that convincing or the passion for the subject not everything
it could be (this applies mainly to the first half).
All the "Summer of `42" stuff is, ultimately, far less compelling
than the political details of the period, steeped as they are in
Kennedy-era glamour and paranoia, with larger-than-life figures
acting out a torrid little soap opera in the foregroound, while
shadowy figures (mainly Cubans and CIA agents) skulk around in the
background. The scenes surrounding the assassination are treated
with subtlety and restraint, making them all the more heartbreaking
and poignant for those in the audience who lived through the
experience. In fact, the whole last half hour of the film achieves
a haunting sadness that finally penetrates to the very marrow of
one`s bones.
The movie certainly won't solve the puzzle as to "Who killed JFK?,"
but it has some fun trying to piece it all together.
real story is better than the movieReviewed by William Bayer, 2009-08-07
This movie, clearly and transparently based on the last year in the life of Mary Pinchot Meyer, is, unfortunately, not as good as it could have been. All the real characters are here and very thinly disguised: Ms. Meyer, Cord Meyer, James Angleton, JFK, with the addition of a fictional nice teen-age boy who happens to live next door. This character is the problem. Though well-acted, the role is poorly conceived, and the boy's various shadowings and spyings look absurd. Plus there's some tiresome material set at his Catholic day school. Gretchen Mol is wonderful, as is the actor who plays the Angleton character. But this could have been so much better if the filmmakers had taken a tougher position. Left out are Ben and Tony Bradlee and their role in the destruction of Mary Pinchot Meyer's (possibly inflammatory) diary. On the plus side, the LSD scene is nicely done. Bottom line: a fascinating tale receives a mediocre treatment. What a shame!
HOT movie never lets upReviewed by V. fulgenzi, 2009-05-08
Half real, half fiction, this movie never lets up, holds your interest from beginning to end. Mol is really beautiful and very effective in the role. Where has she been? (Never saw her before) Other cast members are equally effective. Don't miss it!