The Congress (TV Movie 1989) Poster

(1989 TV Movie)

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7/10
Good, but the topic is WAY too broad for the time allotted to this film.
planktonrules11 October 2011
I have a lot more criticism of this film than most viewers would--simply because of my background as a history and government teacher. So, I noticed things others probably wouldn't--just like a baseball fan would notice problems in a documentary about baseball that non-fans would not notice. So, when you read all my comments, keep this in mind.

This film by Ken Burns attempts what seems impossible--to encapsulate the history of Congress in only 91 minutes!! This SHOULD have been something for a mini-series but Burns did a dandy job of shoving in an explanation of it as well as the highlights over the last 200+ years--albeit it was a HURRIED film. It covers such major topics as slavery and sectionalism, the power of big business on Congress in the 1800s (and this sure hasn't changed), the 17th Amendment, Progressive politics, the Nixon trial and the Capitol building itself. But, it also misses many important topics--a couple of which are inexplicably absent. How could the film never explain exactly HOW Congress works--the process, the differences between the House and Senate, overriding vetoes and the like? And, most confusing, how could the film mention the Nixon trials in 1974 without also talking about the impeachment of Andrew Johnson a hundred years earlier? So, when it comes to completely encapsulating what is Congress, it is a failure. Now this does NOT mean it's a bad film--it's just a very incomplete film--mostly because there just wasn't enough time for such a big undertaking. Oddly, Burns DID make some exceptionally long documentaries (such as on the Civil War, WWII and baseball)--but this just isn't the case here.

One important thing about the film--it IS interesting. The interviews are generally very good and the use of old film and photos exceptional--like you'd find in any Burns documentary. Well made.

By the way, as I said above, having taught American history as well as government, I noticed that a common mistake was repeated in the film. According to the film, the Constitution "guaranteed the separation of Church and State". Actually, this isn't in the Constitution at all (though popular opinion is that it is) but comes from a letter written by Thomas Jefferson well after the Constitution was adopted. The Constitution guarantees freedom of religion AND guarantees that there will be no national religion (such as England and the Church of England). The phrase 'separation of church and state' as well as the concepts just aren't there but were later assumed to be. This isn't my opinion--this just is what the document actually says.
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8/10
Touching Tribute to US Legislative Branch
dabrygo20 November 2020
This documentary explores about 200 years of Congress, from its inception along with the Bill of Rights through its tempestuous Civil War years and its subsequent booming Railroad-era "Millionaire's Club" days, which were followed by New Deal Progressivism and modern-day Congress. The documentary particularly shines when describing some of the big personalities throughout congressional history, who in turn gave the legislative branch a personality of its own. (To name a few: Clay, Calhoun, and Webster; "Uncle" Joseph Gurney Cannon; and Everett "The Wizard of Ooze" Dirksen.) The history of the Capitol Building is also covered and is very interesting.
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3/10
Very lightweight after the first half hour
Bill-4122 May 2021
Almost insubstantial for the last hour. Has not held up well as to history and production values. Could be updated, like the tenth inning.
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