OverviewReviewCastProduction CreditsAwards
   
Secret Honor
Plot Synopsis by Mark Deming

After resigning in disgrace, Richard Nixon (Philip Baker Hall) sits at a desk in his study late at night, dictating his memoirs. Taking one drink, then another, he rants about Eisenhower, Castro, Khruschchev, Kissinger, the Kennedys, and any number of other people, some real, some imagined, finally cohering into a remarkable explanation of why his fall from grace was actually a supreme and selfless act of patriotism. Robert Altman's film adaptation of Hall's one-man show (written by Donald Freed and Arnold Stone) makes this performance feel more cinematic than one might expect, as the visual rhythms subtly match the ebbs and flows of Hall's performance. While Hall doesn't look or sound much like Nixon, the sheer, paranoid force of his characterization is thoroughly convincing: love Nixon or hate him, Secret Honor will give you plenty of support either way.

» View DVD Releases
Similar Works
Nixon  (1995, Oliver Stone)
All the President's Men  (1976, Alan J. Pakula)
Bob Roberts  (1992, Tim Robbins)
Primary Colors  (1998, Mike Nichols)
Give 'em Hell, Harry!  (1975, Steve Binder)
Tanner '88 [TV Series]  (1988, Robert Altman)
The Faking of the President  (1976, Alan Abel, Jeanne Abel)
The Final Days  (1989, Richard Pearce)
The Empty Mirror  (1996, Barry J. Hershey)
Thirteen Days  (2000, Roger Donaldson)
Other Related Works
 Is related to:    Blind Ambition  (1979, George Schaefer)
   Mark Twain Tonight 
   American Presidents: Richard Nixon 
   The Human Voice 
   FDR 
   A Huey P. Newton Story  (2001, Spike Lee)