Perhaps now is a good moment in time for the release of a movie profile about a very popular Republican President, and perhaps it’s fitting and understandable in these times that Reagan (Lionsgate, on Blu-ray $24.99 as of Nov. 19, 2024) is a superficial, sanitized, feel-good portrait of the former California Governor who defeated Democrat incumbent Jimmy Carter to serve two consecutive terms from 1981-89.
Dennis Quaid portrays the 40th U.S. President with Penelope Ann Miller playing his second and long-time wife and First Lady Nancy Reagan. Also appearing are Jon Voight as a former KGB agent, Kevin Dillon as studio president Jack Warner, and Mena Suvari as Reagan’s first actress wife Jane Wyman. Here’s a video trailer…
Voight’s KGB agent takes us though Reagan’s life as if he’s presenting a PowerPoint slide presentation of selected significant moments with only video clips of each one. Despite the movie being nearly 2 1/2-hours, it feels like no scene lasts more than about 60-seconds. It’s almost like the director simply dramatized the photo op moments that are shown of the real Reagan during the closing credits. There’s no context, no depth. The script feels like it is simply bullet points. Any emotional attachment would have to be drawn from one’s own memory rather than what is being viewed on the screen.
The Blu-ray format provided an opportunity to allow viewers to explore Reagan in more depth with bonus features showing the actual person and/or behind-the-scenes of the making of the movie — heck, coulda been a feature-length documentary on the make-up alone. But there are no bonus features.
There is, however, a closed-caption option for subtitles, which offers a humorous mistake that must have been overlooked in the QC process: 45-minutes into the movie, rancher and California State Supreme Court associate justice William P. Clark is riding horses with outgoing Gov. Reagan on Reagan’s ranch. Suggesting that Reagan should consider a run for President in order to prevent the spread of Communism, Clark says (according to the captions): “They taunt, unfortunately, won’t last. The Soviets are here to stay.”
Of course, it should have read: “Détente, unfortunately, won’t last,” détente being the term applied to the uneasy de-escalating of weapons build-up by the Soviets and Americans during Nixon’s administration.
— By Scott Hettrick