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The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 93 ratings
IMDb7.7/10.0

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July 20, 2010
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Format Multiple Formats, Color, NTSC, Widescreen, Closed-captioned
Contributor Hedrick Smith, Daniel Ellsberg, Howard Zinn, John Dean, Rick Goldsmith, Tony Russo, Judith Ehrlich, Patricia Ellsberg See more
Language English
Number Of Discs 1
Runtime 1 hour and 34 minutes
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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2010
    This film shows how a Rand employee filtered top secret documents to the press, and how those made headlines for more than two weeks, somehow contributing to speeding up the end of the Vietnam war, and even playing some role in the resignation of President Nixon. What most astonished me in this documentary was not the story of how the Vietnam war was rejected in the '70s, but the fact that nowadays nobody seems to care on the current wars being fought in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The Nixon administration classified a man like Ellsberg "the most dangerous man of America"; nowadays, we still have "dangerous men and women", but nobody cares; Richard Gage has united more than 1.000 architects and engineers, people who professionally know that the three skyscrapers that went down on 9/11 couldn't possibly have done so due to fire, but were controlled demolitions (9/11 Mysteries Part 1: Demolitions) - they all insist in a new investigation; we have a man like David Ray Griffin, who has summed up more than 50 arguments why the official version of 9/11 is a big lie (The New Pearl Harbor Revisited: 9/11, the Cover-Up, and the Exposé); we even have a former Pentagon officer, April Gallop, prosecuting her own former boss, for the bombing of the Pentagon, where her son was seriously hurt; but : who cares?

    Nobody cares, because the press is no longer independent. Forty years ago, the New York Times and The Washington Post still had some editorial independence and somehow fulfilled their role as government watchdogs; nowadays, those papers are fully corporate-controlled; CIA director William Casey claimed in 1981 that "We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." See also former Washington Post editor's Ben Bagdikian excellent analysis of the current state of affairs in The New Media Monopoly.

    Nobody cares, because even if there would be a desire to do so, there is hardly any free time left... precisely because we are submerged, once again, in a Great Depression, courtesy of our real "masters" - the big banks... Obama recently said : "We have spent over a trillion dollars at war, often financed by borrowing from overseas. This, in turn, has short-changed investments in our own people, and contributed to record deficits. For too long, we have put off tough decisions on everything from our manufacturing base to our energy policy to education reform. As a result, too many middle class families find themselves working harder for less, while our nation's long-term competitiveness is put at risk." See also Vile Acts of Evil: Volume 1 Banking in America to understand how the banking system has been playing tricks with the public in the last two centuries.

    On top of that, we don't have popular leaders any more firmly opposing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. John Lennon sang "Give peace a chance" and wrote "Power to the people" to give the demonstrators a new hymn in the '70s. He has not only been shot, but no pop star has even come close to his heels to replace this real working class hero. We are left with Bono, who likes to be invited by Bush and Blair. He even claims that John Lennon did much harm writing "Imagine", a "very deceiving" song following him. Yeah, right, Bono. The only deception I see in this is you befriending mass murderers, instead of standing up to their unjustified wars.

    America 's new legally criminal social structure based on administrative detention, enshrined in The Patriot Act and a number of executive orders, some secret, changed society profoundly, more and more in the direction of a totalitarian state, very far away from the democratic republic the Founding Fathers had in mind. Heavily-armed SWAT teams smashed down doors and agents armed with search warrants carried out simultaneous raids in Minneapolis and Chicago early morning on the 24th of September 2010. Rummaging through personal belongings, agents carted off boxes of files, documents, books, letters, photographs, computers and cell phones from Minneapolis antiwar activists Mick Kelly, Jessica Sundin, Meredith Aby, two others, as well as the office of that city's Anti-War Committee. Meanwhile, FBI agents raided the Chicago homes of activists Stephanie Weiner and Joseph Iosbaker.

    It is time we recognize the many freedoms we used to have and lost all along the way ! This documentary is a wake-up call !
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2017
    Understanding the Pentagon Papers is a must to understanding the sixties and everything since. Daniel Ellsberg was a most unusual pioneer but a pioneer nevertheless. This is a standout movie because most people are not going to take the time to read 7000 pages of government research.What was in that research must never be forgotten. This movie is captivating but like the subject it portrays, it is complicated. In the end Daniel Ellsberg is disappointed that he didn't immediately start a revolution of political and governmental ethics. In truth, he did! But even the reviewer had to rewind many times to understand; America is still rewinding and still trying to grasp it all. Its not that Ellsberg didn't start the revolution of ethics, he did. Its just that he had no idea the time piece governing his efforts. Recent times have drawn us into a look at the past as they should. In surfing the net the obvious landing spot is Watergate. If we look closer however we will learn that that chapter was actually brought to us by this one. If you want the short course The Most Dangerous Man in America is a very good place to begin. It does try to put as much into one lesson as possible. I had to watch it three times and then follow with a reading on Wikipedia before I felt like I was beginning to get it. What the movie lacks and what Ellsberg himself lacks is more focus on exactly what the Pentagon Papers were saying and what they implied. It was little more than exposing what governments have been , in part , since the beginning of time. It is also perhaps one of the first really good cracks in that wall in all of time. Humanity gets its first really good dose of growing pains in this one. She will never be the same again. So much of art and film in the last 50 years gets it roots in the revolutions of the sixties. This is the king pin upon which it all stands. -And this time its all true. The movie jumps around a bit and drags a bit here and there but you'll stay on edge anyway as the truth becomes clearer and clearer. The poetic dagger plunges deep as we revisit actual tapes of dialogue between Nixon and Kissinger. If you wondered about the age old "maybe they were just a means to an end, and not that bad " thinking, the culminating scenes of this movie should provide enough information to make a conclusive and informed decision. Since we have little else to compare it to or to replace it I think "The Most Dangerous Man in America" should be a fundamental for all Americans, all Vietnamese, and anyone that was bothered enough by the truth to stand up for it.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2021
    I'm 65, and far too many people my age have no idea what started the Vietnam War, only that a lot of young American men died there. The "Vietnam War" documentary by Ken Burns is fantastic, and this movie is a great companion to the Burns project. Also, "The Post" with Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks is great to see how Ellsberg certainly wasn't the only one putting his neck on the chopping block in the name of the First Amendment in the publishing of the Pentagon Papers. This movie does a really good job of depicting the risk to all involved, how defending the right to publish is to actually publish, and of documenting the true vindictiveness of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger. In the "extra features" are a good many tape recordings of Nixon and various minions who did his dirty work that are quite enlightening. Every US president since Washington had their skeletons in the closet, but prior to the publishing of the Pentagon Papers, the people of the US had a belief that our presidents were people to look up at in respect and admiration. Ellsberg's bravery changed all that to a point of no return, something Nixon knew all too well. There is a very real chain of events ('68 election manipulation by Nixon -> bombing in Cambodia -> Pentagon Papers publication -> Watergate -> Nixon resignation -> Ford pulling out of South Vietnam -> Khmer Rouge taking Cambodia and genocide of 2.5 million Cambodians) that could qualify for a high school (or college) class all by itself. This movie documents a key link in that progression very well. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!!!
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2015
    It was interesting to revisit the Watergate period and all the outrageous things that went on during that time.
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2024
    Was very educational.

Top reviews from other countries

  • Jan
    5.0 out of 5 stars video
    Reviewed in Canada on December 26, 2012
    Great information for folks dealing with and interested in this topic . It is well compiled and informative. Reccomended for others with similar interests.
  • Dominick Francis Jenkins
    5.0 out of 5 stars A work of political intelligence of the highest order
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 4, 2010
    This is a work of political intelligence of the highest order. I do not say that lightly. In two decades of campaigning against nuclear weapons I have not encountered a documentary that so inspired me. I came on it by accident in the early hours of the morning seated in the dark in the back row of a jumbo jet flying from London to Singapore. As I watched in the dark I was inspired. At times I broke down in tears . These were tears of joy. They were also tears of sorrow. They were tears of joy to see such intelligence at work in the making of a documentary today . They were also tears of joy to see how a number of intelligent men and women -- I say a number, because while Daniel and Patricia Ellsberg are completely inspiring, the film points to so many others whose stories I would now like to know more about -- right at the heart of America's power elite and believing in its highest values, who saw the danger of communism , who appreciated the values of the American military, who understood the value of America's Constitution but were aware of how the actual political game is played, came to take a stand where they were against the horror of Vietnam -- and did so effectively. They were also tears of sorrow. How could one not watch what happened and ask why did it take so long for America to end that war? And, they were tears of sorrow because the war in Vietnam would be followed by the stupidity of the Second Cold War, the recklessness of financial deregulation .... there was personal moment. I too took my wife to a peace demonstration at which I was speaking and she wondered what her bosses and work colleagues would think if she was seen there. It is a film worth watching twice. The filmmakers and the Ellsberg have confronted us with hard truths --- the presidency is discredited, but notice, so to was the American people. It is, in short, a film that calls us to both intransigent intellectual and political work to ensure that the spark of hope that this film identifies are not quenched but lead to our working together across the globe to ensure that the best that the whole of humanity is now thinking and doing is realised. Buy 10 copies, buy 100 copies, of this DVD and send it to your friends and family and suggest they do the same.
  • EFBC
    3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting...
    Reviewed in Canada on October 26, 2016
    Interesting... Documentary content low (an ongoing trend)
  • Andrew
    4.0 out of 5 stars Valuable documentary
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 11, 2013
    A documentary which harts the dilemma of a patriotic American who not only supported the Vietnam war, but helped to plan it. He increasingly grew convinced that the public were not being told the truth and furthermore, that to remain silent was to be complicit in the deception which was killing thousands of US soldiers and tens of thousands - a million estimated in all - of Vietnamese in a war that was unwinnable on the false premise of the "domino" theory. Also shows the strength of commitment in US legal system to freedom of speech.
  • spiritus
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Hero of Our Time
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 7, 2011
    Daniel Ellsberg was a very important - perhaps the most decisive - figure in bringing to an end the Vietnam War. His release of the Pentagon papers (an internal study commissioned by Robert Mcnamara which demonstrated that the official justification for the war was fraudulent) was the turning point which finally brought to an end this senseless tragedy in which so many American and Vietnamese lives were lost. This Academy Award nominated documentary tells the story of how a former RAND corporation hawk came to be the undoing of the Military Industrial Complex's lucrative military expedition in South-East Asia.