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1[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wilson-1944_1748.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:310:See if you can pick out Wilson.]]
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4''Wilson'' is a lavish 1944 EpicMovie directed by Henry King, about the political career of UsefulNotes/WoodrowWilson, from his run for Governor of New Jersey through to the end of his Presidency. Wilson is played by Alexander Knox.
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6Released at the height of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, the movie is essentially propaganda for the war effort. We're clearly meant to see parallels between UsefulNotes/WorldWarI and the then-current conflict, and between Wilson and UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt (both being progressive Democrats, after all). At the end, Wilson's failed vision of a UsefulNotes/LeagueOfNations including the U.S. is treated with a note of hope that it may [[UsefulNotes/UnitedNations be realized someday]].
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8The movie was critically acclaimed, winning five Oscars, but was a BoxOfficeBomb. This really sucked because ''Wilson'' was the most expensive movie ever made at the time, beating the record set by ''Film/GoneWithTheWind''. It also was very upsetting to producer Darryl F. Zanuck, who was a big fan of Woodrow Wilson and regarded the film as a pet project.
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10The supporting cast includes Creator/CharlesCoburn as Wilson's friend and confidant Professor Henry Holmes, Creator/VincentPrice as his Treasury Secretary (and eventual son-in-law) William Gibbs [=McAdoo=], Creator/ThomasMitchell as his loyal aide Joseph Tumulty, Ruth Nelson as his first wife Ellen, Geraldine Fitzgerald as his second wife Edith, and Sir Creator/CedricHardwicke as Massachusetts Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. Music/AlfredNewman composed the score.
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12Not to be confused with the 2017 dramedy film ''ComicBook/{{Wilson}}'' adapted from the graphic novel by Daniel Clowes.
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14----
15!!This film provides examples of:
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17* AllGermansAreNazis: The movie conflates UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany of the 1910s with UsefulNotes/NaziGermany of the contemporary 1940s, which obviously serves the movie's purporse as World War II propaganda.
18* AmericaSavesTheDay: Wilson's vision for the U.S. role in the war.
19* AndStarring: And Alexander Knox as Woodrow Wilson.
20* AndThatsTerrible: "Does that mean you're going to overlook the most dastardly crime of which any civilized nation has ever been guilty?!" Ah, that wartime propaganda hyperbole. This is referring to the sinking of the ''Lusitania'', in case you were wondering.
21* ArtisticLicenseHistory:
22** In real life, Ellen Wilson died shortly after the start of World War I. In the film, her death comes shortly before the war instead.
23** The movie focuses on Wilson's personal life, elections, and World War I to the exclusion of basically everything else that happened during his administration. There's not even a mention of UsefulNotes/TheMexicanRevolution, which dominated Wilson's foreign policy prior to U.S. involvement in the European war.
24** The movie has Wilson finding out about 1) the German resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare and 2) the infamous Zimmerman Telegram at the exact same time.
25** Wilson's speech asking Congress to declare war is heavily abridged. It's understandable considering the full speech would take about twenty minutes to read. Being under four minutes, the film's version is just a series of punchy excerpts strung together. Oddly, the signature "safe for democracy" line is not included.
26* AssumedWin: ''The New York Times'' mistakenly calls the 1916 election for Hughes, but late returns from California turn the tide for Wilson.
27* AsYouKnow: Tons of this for exposition, like the scene at a 1917 inaugural party where Wilson is informed that he "barely squeaked by in the Electoral College".
28* {{Biopic}}: Greatest Triumph and then Downfall.
29* {{Blackface}}: In an in-universe {{Vaudeville}} show, a performer in blackface impersonates UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt
30* CompositeCharacter: Senator "Big Ed" Jones is fictional, but is presumably an amalgam of several corrupt party bosses from the time.
31* CoversAlwaysLie: The poster on the right side of this page shows the sinking of the ''Lusitania''. In the actual film, the sinking is mentioned in dialogue, but never actually shown.
32* {{Eagleland}}: Very, very much the first flavor. What else would you expect from a film made during World War II?
33* ExtraExtraReadAllAboutIt:
34** "Extra, extra! Lusitania torpedoed off coast of Ireland!"
35** "Extra, extra, read all about it! Germany agrees to quit submarine warfare!"
36* GracefulLoser: After Wilson is elected, Taft and Roosevelt send letters of congratulations. When it looks like Hughes has won the 1916 election, Wilson is all set to be this trope. Wilson also acts this trope when his plan for U.S. membership in the League of Nations is thwarted.
37* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: Woodrow Wilson still has his admirers and there is much he did that is arguably to be admired, but he had some very significant flaws which the movie glosses over:
38** The movie completely whitewashes Wilson's racism and bigotry toward ethnic Americans and immigrants, which is quite striking when you consider that 1944 wasn't exactly the height of racial tolerance. The real Wilson was racist even by the standards of his time, believing blacks to be inherently inferior and expanding on segregationist policies. The movie's Wilson treats blacks as equals, talks lovingly about the American melting pot, and lectures the German ambassador on how Nazi-like racial views are wrong.
39** The thing libertarians and conspiracy theorists hate him for (creating the Federal Reserve) is shown briefly and later mentioned in passing. Obviously, the filmmakers didn't think it was a big deal.
40** Also unmentioned is Wilson's support for the eugenics movement, his frequent military interventions in Latin America[[note]]To be fair, they were focused more on supporting democracy and less on economic interests than the interventions of his predecessors. In any case, the film makes no mention of them.[[/note]], and his crack down on civil liberties while the U.S. was in World War I. Nor is any mention made of the women's suffrage movement, which Wilson had a rather complicated relationship with.
41** There is no mention of UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu, which is fitting, since it means the movie paid about as much attention to the pandemic as the actual Wilson administration.
42* HistoricalVillainUpgrade:
43** As mentioned above, the movie essentially treats UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany as a stand-in for UsefulNotes/NaziGermany.
44** Fairly or unfairly, the movie places the blame for World War II on Henry Cabot Lodge, UsefulNotes/WarrenGHarding, and other isolationist politicians who prevented U.S. entry into the League of Nations. This ignores the fact that their resistance to the League was not merely about hardcore isolationism, but Woodrow Wilson's refusal to compromise on the issue of America's role in international affairs.
45* InsistentTerminology: Joseph Tumulty, Wilson's principal aide from his days as Governor of New Jersey, continues to call him "Governor" throughout his presidency.
46* IvyLeagueForEveryone: "Teddy Roosevelt's a Harvard man, Bill Taft's from Yale, and I'd give five dollars of my money any day to let a Princeton boy have a crack at both of them in the same game." Obviously justified since those men really did attend those universities.
47* MononymousBiopicTitle: Obviously
48* PoliticiansKissBabies: Mentioned when Wilson jokingly tells his daughters that they'll have to kiss the babies for him
49* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: After having spent two years trying to keep out of the war, Wilson finally snaps and delivers one of these to the German ambassador.
50* RefusalOfTheCall: Played straight when Wilson initially refuses to run for Governor of New Jersey
51* SleazyPolitician: Senator "Big Ed" Jones is the old-fashioned "party boss" kind.
52* SmartPeoplePlayChess: The boys in the White House Press Room play chess and smoke pipes to boot.
53* StandardSnippet: The movie seems determinded to cram in every traditional American song at least once. Oddly, "The Star-Spangled Banner" is not included.
54* StockFootage: After the U.S. enters the war, we're shown a newsreel of actual World War I-era footage. Later, there's a similar newsreel of Wilson and his wife arriving in Paris, which has the actors inserted into one brief scene where the "Big Four" are shown in close-up.

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