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"Tanner on Tanner" (2004)
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Overview
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Release Date:
5 October 2004 (USA)
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Awards:
1 nomination
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NewsDesk:
(2 articles)
Director Robert Altman Dies at 81
(From IMDb News. 21 November 2006)
Reeve Receives Posthumous DGA Nomination
(From Studio Briefing - Film News. 11 January 2005)
(From IMDb News. 21 November 2006)
Reeve Receives Posthumous DGA Nomination
(From Studio Briefing - Film News. 11 January 2005)
User Reviews:
A cult classic in the creators own minds
more (7 total)
Cast
(Series Cast Summary - 21 of 34)| Cynthia Nixon | ... | Alex Tanner (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Michael Murphy | ... | Jack Tanner (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Pamela Reed | ... | T.J. Cavanaugh (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Matt Malloy | ... | Deke Connors (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Ilana Levine | ... | Andrea Spinelli (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Luke Macfarlane | ... | Stuart DeBarge (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Aasif Mandvi | ... | Salim Barik / ... (4 episodes, 2004) | |
| Harry Belafonte | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Carl Bernstein | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Janeane Garofalo | ... | Herself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Richard Gephardt | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Robert Redford | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Alexandra Kerry | ... | Herself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Jim Fyfe | ... | Emile Berkoff (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Chris Matthews | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Al Sharpton | ... | Himself (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Michael Kaycheck | ... | New York policeman (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Avery Clyde | ... | Rebecca (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Marla Sucharetza | ... | Roxanne Newman (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Ryan Spahn | ... | Ryan (2 episodes, 2004) | |
| Krysten Ritter | ... | Saleswoman (2 episodes, 2004) |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Tanner '04 (USA) (working title)
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Runtime:
120 min
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Cynthia Nixon, who plays the same role she did in the original, did this sequel to HBO's _"Tanner '88" (1988) (mini)_ as she was wrapping up work on "Sex and the City" (1998), also broadcast on HBO. In this series, her character has become a filmmaker and film teacher. In the last episode, a student asks her if she knows anyone "at HBO".
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Quotes:
Jack Tanner:
He's a newly minted Log Cabin Republican.
Alex Tanner: He's gay?
Jack Tanner: Yes.
Alex Tanner: And he's a Republican?
Jack Tanner: Yes.
Alex Tanner: Maybe now I won't have to interview him.
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Alex Tanner: He's gay?
Jack Tanner: Yes.
Alex Tanner: And he's a Republican?
Jack Tanner: Yes.
Alex Tanner: Maybe now I won't have to interview him.
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Movie Connections:
Features "The Charlie Rose Show" (1991)
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Message Boards
Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for "Tanner on Tanner" (2004)| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| Random Fact | boba483 |
| Most Boring show EVER | craigyoung26 |
Recommendations
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| "Tanner '88" | Man of the Year | System Fault | It's Good to Be in D.C. | Wag the Dog |
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Altman is very proud of the fact that people in his movies talk over each other, because, he says, people do that in life. Well, people also cough, burp, go off on tangents, etc. The point is that just because people actually do something doesn't make it compelling cinema. That's one issue.
The bigger issue is that this just isn't a very clever or direct or hitting or relevant satire, in 1988 or 2004. Garry Trudeau is still living in the 1960s and thinks everyone except a small core of Republican elected officials is a 60s-style hippie liberal. I mean the guy still trots out Zonker in his strip - a character that is a complete anachronism, yet Trudeau still employs him as if he is representative of a large stripe of American youth.
Don't get me wrong. I am a conservative, but I'm not saying that this is bad because it's got a liberal bent. It could take a liberal tack and be funny and relevant, but it's not. It is mainly a vanity piece with a bunch of prominent celebrity liberals (including the odious, repellent Ron Reagan, Jr.). At times it feels unscripted, and the rest of the time it has a snarky air of self-importance and "aren't we oh-so-clever?"-ness.
Someone said that this show insists it has a cult following. I think its cult status is more wished-for than actual. I'm certain there are two or three people out there who taped all the original episodes in 1988 and still have them, but if that is the standard, then every show ever aired is a cult classic to some degree. If Tanner didn't have the names Altman and Trudeau attached, it would be another forgotten HBO production from the 1980s. Instead, it's presented as hard-hitting, incisive political commentary from guys who are at the top of their game. The reality, however, is about as far from that as possible. Pat Paulsen's presidential satire is more relevant than Tanner ever was, and he's been dead for a decade.