|
JFK and Robert Drew at the Tribeca Film Festival
By
Ron Steinman
“A President to Remember: In the Company of John F.
Kennedy.” Produced and Directed by Robert Drew
Narrated by Alec Baldwin
Call it nostalgia. Call it remembrance. Call
it a reminder of how things were before John F. Kennedy was
assassinated forty-five years ago in 1963. In every way, you
will be right. Today, President John F Kennedy is a man steeped
in myth, especially to today’s generation and probably for
anyone under fifty years old. He is an icon unlike almost any
other American president except for possibly Abraham Lincoln.
Robert Drew’s latest film is not for the cynical, the
know-it-alls, or those who will say, I’ve been there, done that.
It is an unabashed, affectionate look at John F Kennedy. Few
people really know anything about him except the obvious.

Copyright Drew Associates
Almost fifty years ago Robert Drew helped
develop hand-held cameras that allowed him and his crews to
enter, as flies on the wall, the inner world of Kennedy – with
his permission, of course — as he campaigned for president, then
won the Oval Office, and then went through a host of crises that
he solved with a dedicated staff. For this film, Drew culled
highlights of Kennedy’s life from the four major films he
directed about him during those heady years. In “A President to
Remember” we watch JFK campaign for president. We witness
speeches he made – especially portions of the one about his
Catholicism and how it would not affect how he would govern the
country. We see excerpts of John Kennedy and Richard Nixon in
the debate that changed the tone of the campaign and then helped
to turn the election his way.

Copyright Drew Associates
Importantly, Drew and his cameras had access
to the Oval Office during two major confrontations when Kennedy
was president. The major foreign crisis was, of course, when the
Soviet Union under Nikita Khrushev moved missiles into Cuba.
Here we see JFK interacting with his advisors, not panicking,
being thoughtful, and being careful because one false step and
the world could have seen nuclear war. Kennedy was able to face
down the Soviet Union and cause Khrushev and his military to
remove the missiles, thus allowing the world to breathe more
easily without the possibility of nuclear war.
The other powerful set of scenes that take
place in the Oval Office were those during the time when
Governor George Wallace of Alabama refused to allow black
students to enter the University of Alabama. Driven by Attorney
General Robert Kennedy and ably assisted by Deputy Attorney
General Nicholas Katzenbach, it was an epic diplomatic battle
over state rights between Alabama, in the person of George
Wallace, and the Federal government over who had control of
desegregation. Troops massed. Large crowds gathered. The nation
was tense because Wallace threatened to stand in the schoolhouse
door and not admit the two African-American students. We observe
the Kennedy brothers being calm and resolute in the face of a
defiant George Wallace. We watch as they face down Governor
Wallace and finally win. The two students are admitted.
President Kennedy goes on TV that night and sets the tone for
future government commitments to civil rights. I seriously doubt
that any president today would allow such intimate access to
show the highest in government at work. I have to wonder what
the result of President George Bush going to war with Iraq would
have had, had at least some of his discussions been recorded for
posterity.
Though the film does not take us through
everything in Kennedy’s life, we do get to see him on trips to
the Berlin Wall, and his journey to Ireland. We see the
sometimes awkward grace of Jackie Kennedy, how she supported him
in her role as First Lady, the intimate looks she gives him, and
her ability to win people with her smile and her gentle charm.
Is this film worth seeing? If you know very
little about John F Kennedy and his presidency, the answer is
yes. If you think you know more than you do, the answer is still
yes. If you know in detail everything about JFK, the answer is a
strong yes. We will probably never see the likes of John F
Kennedy again. The film refreshes our memory. Rush to wherever
it is playing. It is not comprehensive. It cannot be. It is
selective. In these selections, however enough of JFK’s
intellect, his wit, his caring attitude, his humanity and his
style show through, if even only in small doses, to make the
movie worth your time when it comes to a theater near you. This
is especially so with the Democratic Party campaign for its
candidate for president nearly over and the campaign for a new
president about to being.
.............................................................................................................................
At NBC News for 35 years, Ron Steinman was bureau chief
in Saigon, Hong Kong and London, was a senior producer on Today and wrote
and produced for Sunday Today. At ABC News Productions, he produced
and wrote documentaries for A&E, TLC, Discovery, Lifetime and the
History Channel. He has a Peabody, a National Headliner award, a
National Press Club award, a International Documentary Festival Gold
Camera Award, two American Women in Radio & Television awards and
has been nominated for five Emmy's. He is a partner in
Douglas/Steinman Productions, whose latest documentary, "Luboml: My
Heart Remembers," aired on PBS' WLIW/21 and the History Channel in
Israel, April 29, 2003. He is the author of, "The Soldiers 'Story",
"Women in Vietnam," and most recently, "Inside Television's First
War: A Saigon Journal," University of Missouri Press, 2002.
|