1964 (film)

1964[1]
Directed by Stephen Ives
Produced by Amanda Pollak
Written by Stephen Ives
Narrated by Oliver Platt
Music by Peter Rundquist
Cinematography Andrew Young
Haskell Wexler
Edited by George O’Donnell
Amy Foote
Production
company
Release dates
  • January 2015 (2015-01)
Running time
120 minutes
Country United States
Language English

1964 is a documentary film produced by Insignia Films for the American Experience series about political, social and cultural events in the United States for the calendar year 1964. It is based partly on Jon Margolis book The Last Innocent Year: America in 1964.[2] The documentary depicts the year 1964 as significant and epic in that following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in late 1963, 1964, as a presidential election year, becomes a departure point for American history, that the U.S. is still affected by. It is also the year of the British Invasion led by the Beatles, when Cassius Clay fights Sonny Liston for the World Heavyweight Championship, Betty Friedan book, The Feminine Mystique, is published, and Republican activist, Phyllis Schlafly's book, A Choice, Not an Echo, is published. It is also the year of Freedom Summer, an initiative by the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee for college students to register black Americans in Mississippi, the subsequent murders (Freedom Summer Murders) of three CORE activists (including two young white men from NYC) in Mississippi by white supremacists that created a national sensation, and the Harlem Riot of 1964, culminating in the Berkeley Free Speech Movement at the University of California at Berkeley. A recurrent theme of the film is its departure as presidential election year, with President Lyndon B. Johnson running as the expected Democratic Party nominee and the nomination of U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater selected through a grassroots campaign for the Republican nomination for President of the United States, that defines the future divisions of the US political party competition.

Commentators

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.