Wilson
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The political career of Woodrow Wilson is chronicled, beginning with his decision to leave his post at Princeton to run for Governor of New Jersey, and his subsequent ascent to the Presidency of the United States. During his terms in office, Wilson must deal with the death of his first wife, the onslaught of German hostilities leading to American involvement in the Great War, and his own country's reticence to join the League of Nations. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation in 2006.
Cast

Alexander Knox
Woodrow Wilson

Geraldine Fitzgerald
Edith Bolling Galt

Thomas Mitchell
Joseph Tumulty

Ruth Nelson
Ellen Wilson

Cedric Hardwicke
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge

Charles Coburn
Professor Henry Holmes

Vincent Price
William Gibbs McAdoo

William Eythe
George Felton

Mary Anderson
Eleanor Wilson

Ruth Ford
Margaret Wilson

Sidney Blackmer
Josephus Daniels

Stanley Ridges
Dr. Cary Grayson

Eddie Foy Jr.
Eddie Foy

Charles Halton
Colonel House

Thurston Hall
Senator Edward H. 'Big Ed' Jones

Marcel Dalio
Premier Georges Clemenceau

Katherine Locke
Helen Bones

Stanley Logan
Robert Lansing, Secretary of State

Edwin Maxwell
William Jennings Bryan

Paul Everton
Judge Westcott (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Had they been contemporaries, one might be forgiven for thinking that Daryll F. Zanuck owed Woodrow Wilson quite a sum of money. The 28th President could hardly have written a more favourable biopic, had he penned it himself. Oscar nominated Alexander Knox is superbly cast, though, in this depiction of the rise of the academic, principled fellow to the White House. Insofar as history in concerned, however - it is pretty factually "loose", somewhat fanciful, and though an interesting assessment of America's leader during the latter stages of WWI - clearly a man of ideals and vision - the only thing it doesn't credit him with is the invention of the wheel. The production looks terrific. especially at the beginning when we are exposed to the hustings of his gubernatorial and then presidential campaigns, when the film is lively and energetic (assisted ably by Alfred Newman's score). Once ensconced in office, the pace slows to that of a snail in a bowl of treacle, and the melodrama of his rather tragic personal life ensures the story just becomes quite dull - more of a rose-tinted chronology. Brief interventions from Sir Cedric Hardwicke as arch-opponent Senator John Cabot Lodge help occasionally, but this is essentially a kindly, very long, retrospective on a man that is pretty much entirely intended for domestic, and sympathetic, consumption.
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