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All the President's Men

"The most devastating detective story of this century."

1976-04-09 Drama 2hr 18m

During the 1972 elections, two reporters' investigation sheds light on the controversial Watergate scandal that compels President Nixon to resign from his post.

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All the President's Men
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Storyline

During the 1972 elections, two reporters' investigation sheds light on the controversial Watergate scandal that compels President Nixon to resign from his post.

  • Released
    1976-04-09
  • Revenue
    $70,600,000
  • Budget
    $8,500,000
  • Runtime
    2hr 18m
  • Genre
    Drama, History, Mystery, Thriller
  • Status
    Released
  • Language
    EspaƱol, English
  • imdb-logo
    7.9
  • Production
    Wildwood Enterprises

Crew

Alan J. Pakula
Director
William Goldman
Screenplay
Walter Coblenz
Producer

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Cast

Dustin Hoffman

Dustin Hoffman

Carl Bernstein
Robert Redford

Robert Redford

Bob Woodward
Jack Warden

Jack Warden

Harry Rosenfeld
Martin Balsam

Martin Balsam

Howard Simons
Hal Holbrook

Hal Holbrook

Deep Throat
Jason Robards

Jason Robards

Ben Bradlee
Jane Alexander

Jane Alexander

Bookkeeper
Meredith Baxter

Meredith Baxter

Debbie Sloan
Penny Fuller

Penny Fuller

Sally Aiken
John McMartin

John McMartin

Foreign Editor
Robert Walden

Robert Walden

Donald Segretti
Frank Wills

Frank Wills

Frank Wills
F. Murray Abraham

F. Murray Abraham

Arresting Officer #1
David Arkin

David Arkin

Eugene Bachinski
Henry Calvert

Henry Calvert

Bernard L. Barker
Dominic Chianese

Dominic Chianese

Eugenio R. Martinez
Bryan Clark

Bryan Clark

Arguing Attorney
Valerie Curtin

Valerie Curtin

Miss Milland
Gene Dynarski

Gene Dynarski

Court Clerk
Nate Esformes

Nate Esformes

Virgilio R. Gonzales
Ron Hale

Ron Hale

Frank Sturgis
Richard Herd

Richard Herd

James W. McCord, Jr.
Polly Holliday

Polly Holliday

Dardis' Secretary
James Karen

James Karen

Hugh Sloan's Lawyer
Paul Lambert

Paul Lambert

National Editor
Gene Lindsey

Gene Lindsey

Alfred D. Baldwin
Anthony Mannino

Anthony Mannino

Arresting Officer #2
Allyn Ann McLerie

Allyn Ann McLerie

Carolyn Abbott
James Murtaugh

James Murtaugh

Congress Library Clerk
John O'Leary

John O'Leary

Attorney #1
Jess Osuna

Jess Osuna

Joe, FBI Agent
Penny Peyser

Penny Peyser

Sharon Lyons
Sloane Shelton

Sloane Shelton

Bookkeeper's Sister
Lelan Smith

Lelan Smith

Arresting Officer #3
Jaye Stewart

Jaye Stewart

Male Librarian
Ralph Williams

Ralph Williams

Ray Steuben
George Wyner

George Wyner

Attorney #2
Leroy Aarons

Leroy Aarons

Financial Editor
Stanley Bennett Clay

Stanley Bennett Clay

Assistant Metro Editor
Carol Coggin

Carol Coggin

News Aide
Laurence Covington

Laurence Covington

News Announcer
John Devlin

John Devlin

Metro Editor
John Furlong

John Furlong

News Desk Editor
Sidney Ganis

Sidney Ganis

L.A. Stringer
Basil Hoffman

Basil Hoffman

Assistant Metro Editor
Jamie Smith-Jackson

Jamie Smith-Jackson

Post Librarian
Doug Llewelyn

Doug Llewelyn

White House Aide
Jeff MacKay

Jeff MacKay

Reporter
Greg Martin

Greg Martin

Reporter
Ron Menchine

Ron Menchine

Post Librarian
Jess Nadelman

Jess Nadelman

Assistant Metro Editor
Florence Pepper

Florence Pepper

Message Desk Receptionist
Barbara Perlman

Barbara Perlman

CRP Receptionist
Louis Quinn

Louis Quinn

Salesman
Peter Salim

Peter Salim

Reporter
Shawn Shea

Shawn Shea

News Aide
Pam Trager

Pam Trager

Reporter
Carol Trost

Carol Trost

Ben Bradlee's Secretary
Richard Venture

Richard Venture

Assistant Metro Editor
Wendell Wright

Wendell Wright

Assistant Metro Editor
Al Beaudine

Al Beaudine

Reporter (uncredited)
Gary Bohn

Gary Bohn

Reporter (uncredited)
Stephen Burnette

Stephen Burnette

Reporter (uncredited)
Marcello Clay

Marcello Clay

Reporter (uncredited)
Edward Coch Jr.

Edward Coch Jr.

Reporter (uncredited)
Cara Duff-MacCormick

Cara Duff-MacCormick

Tammy Ulrich (uncredited)
Len Felber

Len Felber

Reporter (uncredited)
Mel Gold

Mel Gold

Reporter (uncredited)
Bart Greene

Bart Greene

Reporter (uncredited)
Francine Henderson

Francine Henderson

Reporter (uncredited)
Eugene Jackson

Eugene Jackson

Reporter (uncredited)
Pauline Lum

Pauline Lum

Reporter (uncredited)
Robert S. Mills

Robert S. Mills

TV Reporter (uncredited)
Ray Pourchot

Ray Pourchot

Reporter (uncredited)
John Randolph

John Randolph

John Mitchell (voice) (uncredited)
Bill Scully

Bill Scully

Reporter (uncredited)
Bob Templeton

Bob Templeton

Reporter (uncredited)
Lance Vantile Whitfield

Lance Vantile Whitfield

Child in Courtroom (uncredited)
Spiro Agnew

Spiro Agnew

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Walter Cronkite

Walter Cronkite

Self (archive sound) (uncredited)
Thomas Eagleton

Thomas Eagleton

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Richard Kleindienst

Richard Kleindienst

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Pat Nixon

Pat Nixon

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Richard Nixon

Richard Nixon

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Ronald Ziegler

Ronald Ziegler

Self (archive footage) (uncredited)

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Movie Reviews

Reviews for All the President's Men
reviewer avatar

A Review by Geronimo1967 8

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-06-03

Based on the true, ground-breaking, investigations by the Washington Post into the seemingly innocuous break-in into the Watergate Building;... read more

Based on the true, ground-breaking, investigations by the Washington Post into the seemingly innocuous break-in into the Watergate Building; this film produces two of the finest performances ever committed to film. Dustin Hoffman already had some grittier parts in his repertoire; but for Robert Redford this is more of a departure from his usual roles and the rapport between the two, initially suspicious journalists, builds as we all begin to realise that there is a hell of a lot more to this than just some unlucky burglars. Jason Robards and Martin Balsam serve as the real life editorial leads at the newspaper, but also as characters we can all use to take stock during these rapidly advancing, and incriminating developments. Alan J. Pakula subtly and deftly takes us through the chronology in an enthralling manner; exposing crossing sub-plots and personalities - as well as demonstrating the palpable risks being taken by many to uncover the truth. We all know the ending, but this film is quite possibly the reason why many still recall this momentous story.

reviewer avatar

A Review by FilipeManuelNeto 9

Written by FilipeManuelNeto on 2024-03-12

**Fifty years after Watergate, what have we learned?** The ā€œWatergate Affairā€ was fifty years ago. For those who don't remember or weren'... read more

**Fifty years after Watergate, what have we learned?** The ā€œWatergate Affairā€ was fifty years ago. For those who don't remember or weren't born, it all started with the invasion of the Democratic Party offices in the Watergate Building, in Washington D.C., by a group of men, caught while trying to install bugs and copy documents. The group's connection to the CIA became obvious and, as the inquiries progressed, the story became more bizarre: after all, everything had been done under orders coming from within the White House, from people very interested in manipulating the elections that year, in which Richard Nixon was going to run for his second term against the Democratic candidate, George McGovern. The film tells us about this, but stops here, focusing on the contribution of journalists from The Washington Post, who investigated the matter and published relevant information. The film doesn't say what happened next, but as we know, Nixon was re-elected and quickly found himself under suspicion about his involvement in the Watergate break-in. Nixon refused to give explanations, hiding behind his office prerogatives, not even when it became known that there was a voice recording system in his office. With Congress demanding to hear these recordings under serious threats of impeachment, Nixon preferred to resign and, since then, ā€œWatergateā€ has been an eternal synonym of political corruption at the highest level. Directed by Alan Pakula and released in the years following the events, the film would have needed no further explanation. The names of those involved and the details of the story would be fresh in everyone's memory. However, more than fifty years later, who remembers the details? As the film does not give us explanations, only people who know the subject well or have read about it will watch the film without needing to go to the Internet every ten minutes. Even I, a historian, needed to refresh my memory. Aside from this problem, the film is good and is faithful to the events and what the two ā€œPostā€ journalists did. There is another problem with this film, although it is a minor problem: at this time, in the 70s, it seems that a politician was required to have bulletproof morality and a virtually untainted character. And now? We are in 2024 and democracy, instead of maturing, seems to have rotted to the point that American citizens allow a former president, who is in the grip of justice and apparently involved in a direct attack against Congress (which represents all the people) to presents himself again as a candidate without any problems, ready to be carried on shoulders to a cabinet he should never set foot in again. I am not North American, but as a European I refuse to consider such a matter a mere internal issue, taking into account the role that the USA wants to maintain on the international stage, in NATO or in the UN. Unfortunately, the degradation of democracy happens here too, and has been taken advantage of by Putin, President Xi and other enemies of the free world, a world of peace and freedom that our fathers worked hard to build together, and we are letting disappear. Returning to the film... it's worth seeing the performance of Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford in two roles that helped a lot in the evolution of their careers. They are some of the best actors of that period and did a colossal job in this film. The supporting cast is equally remarkable and deserves our full attention. I particularly liked the work of Martin Balsam, Jack Warden and Jason Robards, outstanding actors who transformed three roles without much relevance into good additions to the general plot. And although we only learned more details recently, Hal Holbrook was an excellent choice to bring to life the mysterious ā€œDeep Throatā€, one of the decisive sources for linking Watergate with the White House. Technically, it is a discreet film that bets everything on the rigorous reconstruction of the settings, environments and events. There are some very good sound effects (the association of the sounds of typewriters with the sound of gunshots was intelligent and well done, for example) and the lighting effects were equally well-used. Note the dark and mysterious atmosphere of the encounters with ā€œDeep Throatā€, with the light almost reduced to what is essential. The film deservedly won four Oscars (Best Sound, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Art Direction and Best Supporting Actor) and was one of the big contenders for Best Film.

Read Full Review (The thoughts and opinions expressed here are solely those of the reviewer.)
A Review by CinemaSerf

Based on the true, ground-breaking, investigations by the Washington Post into the seemingly innocuous break-in into the Watergate Building; this film produces two of the finest performances ever committed to film. Dustin Hoffman already ha...

reviewer avatar

A Review by Geronimo1967 8

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-06-03

Based on the true, ground-breaking, investigations by the Washington Post into the seemingly innocuous break-in into the Watergate Building; this film produces two of the finest performances ever comm...

read more
reviewer avatar

A Review by FilipeManuelNeto 9

Written by FilipeManuelNeto on 2024-03-12

**Fifty years after Watergate, what have we learned?** The ā€œWatergate Affairā€ was fifty years ago. For those who don't remember or weren't born, it all started with the invasion of the Democratic P...

read more