'Frost/Nixon' Captivates Young Viewers

Watergate is ancient history to students but "Frost/Nixon" gets their attention.

ByABC News
December 18, 2008, 2:20 PM

SYRACUSE, N.Y., Dec. 19, 2008 -- The crowd erupted in laughter -- again. And for a split-second it felt like a screening of "Superbad," but clearly without McLovin. That's precisely what is so captivating about Ron Howard's new political drama "Frost/Nixon": It makes history accessible to a college audience, which is no mean feat.

"We talk to a lot of kids after they've seen the film," first assistant director Bill Connor said, "and a lot have said to us, 'I loved the picture. I never would have thought to walk into it initially, but I got interested in it and I came in and what a terrific movie it was.'"

"Frost/Nixon," based on the hit Broadway play of the same name, follows the 1977 interview-turned-boxing match between British TV host David Frost (Michael Sheen) and fallen President Richard Nixon (Frank Langella).

Many Syracuse students had never even heard of the Frost-Nixon interviews, let alone understood their significance. But it was in those interviews that Nixon finally took responsibility for Watergate and issued an apology.

The movie and Langella's performance are already generating a lot of Oscar buzz. But on the Syracuse University campus, "Frost/Nixon" held even more significance, as Langella and Connor were Syracuse alumni.

Every seat in the auditorium was filled for the advanced screening as Connor introduced the movie. Connor, an '89 grad, talked about working with Langella, a '59 grad.

"Honestly, my relationship with Frank on the set was a pretty stoic one," he said. "He had asked all the crew members to refer to him as 'Mr. President' and act as if he was president the entire time. So there was never really any downtime to talk to Frank about going down to Faegan's [a popular campus bar]," he said, laughing.

"Frost/Nixon" -- at more than 2 hours -- is a bit long and dialogue heavy. But that didn't seem to bother some students.

"I know this is a fictional representation," said sophomore broadcast journalism major David Farby, "but it gave me a look inside what was going through the mind of Richard Nixon. And that's really never been done before."