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* AbledInTheAdaptation: {{Downplayed}} - Joe Kennedy is still heavily crippled from the effects of his stroke like in real life, but is at least capable of speaking in sentences here, unlike his inability to say anything beyond the word "No" in real life at this point.



* AlcoholInducedStupidity: There's a heavy implication that Ted was drunk during the car crash and that this may've been what made him avoid contacting the police for so long.

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* AlcoholInducedStupidity: There's a heavy implication that Ted was drunk during the car crash and that this may've may have been what made him avoid contacting the police for so long.

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* BadLiar: One of the men on Ted's crisis team lies to a New York Times reporter by telling him that Ted suffered a concussion during the accident and his doctor has prescribed him sedatives to control the pain. The reporter immediately knows that he's being lied to because you don't give sedatives to somebody who has suffered a concussion (because doing so could actually kill them).

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* BadLiar: BadLiar:
**
One of the men on Ted's crisis team lies to a New York Times reporter by telling him that Ted suffered a concussion during the accident and his doctor has prescribed him sedatives to control the pain. The reporter immediately knows that he's being lied to because you don't give sedatives to somebody who has suffered a concussion (because doing so could actually kill them).

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* AbusiveParents: The film pulls no punches in depicting Ted's father, Joseph Sr., as a spiteful and ice-cold man who is more concerned with the legacy of the family and the look of things than of Ted.
** Highlighted in the last third of the movie, where, as the Chappaquiddick scandal threatens to engulf his son, Joseph Kennedy responds by ''slapping'' him for being such a royal screw-up.

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* AbusiveParents: The film pulls no punches in depicting Ted's father, Joseph Sr., as a spiteful and ice-cold man who is more concerned with the legacy of the family and the look of things than of Ted.
** Highlighted
Ted. It’s highlighted in the last third of the movie, where, as the Chappaquiddick scandal threatens to engulf his son, Joseph Kennedy responds by ''slapping'' him for being such a royal screw-up.
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* AmbiguousSituation: There are a few shots that suggest Ted may have been having [[YourCheatingHeart an extramarital affair]] with Mary Jo, and his handlers specifically want to head off such rumors after the accident. Ted’s relationship with his wife is likewise very rocky (they would divorce over a decade later) and he seems protective of Mary Jo even when [[GoodVictimsBadVictims throwing her under the bus]] would be a safer action for him. However, nothing is explicitly said or shown to indicate adultery actually is occurring.

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* AmbiguousSituation: There are a few shots that suggest Ted may have been having [[YourCheatingHeart an extramarital affair]] affair with Mary Jo, and his handlers specifically want to head off such rumors after the accident. Ted’s relationship with his wife is likewise very rocky (they would divorce over a decade later) and he seems protective of Mary Jo even when [[GoodVictimsBadVictims throwing her under the bus]] would be a safer action for him. However, nothing is explicitly said or shown to indicate adultery actually is occurring.
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* TheUnfavorite: Ted Kennedy was always this for Joe Kennedy Sr., who preferred Jack and Bobby as the next generation.


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* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Ted becomes this by the film’s ending, portraying himself as an apologetic guy who made a simple mistake. Said mistake cost a woman her life and would’ve gotten anybody else a much harsher punishment.
* WartsAndAll: Heavily [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructed]] with Ted’s press conference. While Ted admits his fault in the crash, he deliberately manipulates facts and perception to make himself look better than he actually was (saying he tried to valiantly save Mary Jo when he actually just fled the scene and made his friends do it, swimming all the way back to the mainland by himself when his friends actually just rowed him to shore). After all, if he told the whole truth, there’s a good chance the people of Massachusetts would throw him out of office.


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* WeUsedToBeFriends: Joey abandons Ted and the rest of the Kennedys when he realizes just what they’re willing to do to stay in power. The credits further clarify that he remains estranged from the family to this day (he died later in 2017).


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* WoundedGazelleGambit: Ted tries to pull this at Mary Jo’s funeral, wearing a neck brace despite having no neck injury. [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] when his handlers point out how stupid the idea is and the reporters present at the funeral immediately see through the act.

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* AlcoholInducedStupidity: There's a heavy implication that Ted was drunk during the car crash and that this may've been what made him avoid contacting the police for so long.
* AmbiguousSituation: There are a few shots that suggest Ted may have been having [[YourCheatingHeart an extramarital affair]] with Mary Jo, and his handlers specifically want to head off such rumors after the accident. Ted’s relationship with his wife is likewise very rocky (they would divorce over a decade later) and he seems protective of Mary Jo even when [[GoodVictimsBadVictims throwing her under the bus]] would be a safer action for him. However, nothing is explicitly said or shown to indicate adultery actually is occurring.
* ArtisticLicenseMedicine: An InUniverse example. Ted’s handlers claim that a doctor has diagnosed Ted with a concussion from the crash and has prescribed him sedatives. The editor of the New York Times immediately points out this is the exact ''opposite'' of what is done to concussion victims, as sedatives interfere with determining the severity of the concussion and could even kill the patient.
* AristocratsAreEvil: The Kennedy family are a rich and well-established family in Massachusetts, and the film makes it clear their power and influence allows them to get away with acts that would destroy any other person.



** Ted himself is shown to be this, as his handlers point out his initial statement to the police was rife with contradictions that any halfway decent prosecutor could pick apart.



* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: There are ''numerous'' moments in the immediate aftermath of the accident where, had different choices been made, we would not have this scandal: Joey tells Ted to ''immediately'' report the accident. He doesn't. The head diver that the police has to fish out Mary Jo remarks that if he had gotten there at a normal response time, he could have gotten Kopechne out in 25 minutes, tops.

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* ConvenientlyTimedDistraction: By sheer coincidence, Ted’s accident happens right in the middle of the Apollo 11 Moon mission (after the launch, but just before the actual moon landing). Ted’s handlers use this as a way to keep Ted’s name out of the papers, since [[GenreSavvy they correctly assume]] more people would be paying attention to a historic moment in human history than a car crash in Massachusetts.
* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: There are ''numerous'' moments in the immediate aftermath of the accident where, had different choices been made, we would not have this scandal: Joey tells Ted to ''immediately'' report the accident. He doesn't. The head diver that the police has to fish out Mary Jo remarks that if he had gotten there at a normal response time, he could have gotten Kopechne out in 25 minutes, tops.tops.
* DaChief: Police Chief Arena runs the Chappaquiddick Island Police Department, and is the one left in charge of investigating of the crash. [[SubvertedTrope Unlike most examples]], he’s actually relatively calm and even kind of a pushover, allowing Ted to leave the police station without an interrogation and more-or-less lets him steer the investigation. It’s only towards the end that he starts to get suspicious of the story, but it’s too late by then to change anything.
* DarkComedy: Right before Mary Jo’s funeral, Ted fastens himself in a neck brace so that [[WoundedGazelleGambit he looks more injured than he actually was]]. When Joe tells him it’s a terrible idea, Ted confidently says it’ll work and walks into the room filled with his advisors to hear their appraisal. However, the group immediately start telling Ted how bad an idea it is and Ted [[RageQuit storms off]] yelling, “Screw you guys!”
* DarkestHour: The film essentially takes place entirely during this, with Ted having to deal with the blowback from Mary Jo’s accidental death. On a larger basis, this is one in a long string of [[ExaggeratedTrope darkest hours]] for the Kennedy’s, all stemmed by the former Kennedy brothers’ deaths.
* DarkLordOnLifeSupport: After suffering a stroke eight years earlier, Joe Kennedy Sr. is left in a wheelchair with half of his body paralyzed and barely able to speak. That doesn’t stop him from covering up his son’s messes with his political power.
* DownerEnding: Ted escapes prosecution for Mary Jo’s death and decides he can live with the guilt, alienating his only true friend Joey and preventing him from ascending to the Presidency like his brother did.
* DrunkDriver: It’s heavily suggested that Ted Kennedy was intoxicated when the car went off the bridge, given the large party he was attending with his staff. This explains why he tries his best to avoid the police for so long, as he doesn’t want to be tested for his alcohol levels.
* DueToTheDead: Even though his handlers tell him to say Mary Jo was driving to absolve him of any guilt, Ted refuses to do so since it would make Mary Jo look like a reckless drunk who almost killed a senator.


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* EvilCripple: Joe Kennedy Sr. spends the film in a wheelchair, crippled from a stroke years earlier. He also plots the cover up for his son’s accident and repeatedly [[AbusiveParents proclaims his disappointment in him]].


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* ForegoneConclusion: Anybody that knows about the incident knows Mary Jo will be dead and that Ted Kennedy will suffer few consequences.


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* HeelRealization: Ted has one briefly after Joe points out how dirty the entire cover-up is becoming, and he implores Joe to write his resignation speech as a means of reconciliation. [[RedemptionRejection He doesn’t follow through, though]].


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** Similarly, close to the end of the film, Ted tells his father that he realized that his three dead brothers weren’t great because they were Kennedys, but because they were great individuals with their own abilities. Because of this, Ted realizes he doesn’t have to stay Senator and preserve the Kennedy name to become a great man. However, after his father’s rebuttal and his own self-doubts, Ted decides against resigning and continues to propagate his version of the events.
* KarmaHoudini: Had Ted been anyone else, he would’ve gone to jail for vehicular manslaughter and extreme negligence. But because he’s from a powerful political family, he gets off with a slap on the wrist.
* LadyMacbeth: An odd example, as it’s not Ted’s wife that fills this function. While Ted’s wife is present, it’s clear from her first scene that they’re on bad terms (they divorced several years later). Paula, however, sticks by Ted throughout the film, and encourages him even when it’s shown that Mary Jo’s death was his fault.
* LastOfHisKind: Ted Kennedy is the last of the Kennedy brothers, with the prior three having been killed by war or assassination.
* LastSecondChance: Right before Ted’s press conference, Joe gives him his resignation speech. But Ted refuses to read it.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Ted says this verbatim after Joe and Mark are unable to get Mary Jo out of the car.
* MyGreatestFailure: In the ending, Ted refers to the entire incident as this, listing Moses and Judas as great figures who are remembered the one bad thing they did. Joe [[ShutUpHannibal retorts]] that for all of Moses’s faults, he “didn’t leave a girl at the bottom of the Red Sea”.
* {{Nepotism}}: Ted pretty much escapes any punishment because of his name and the power his father has.


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* NotHelpingYourCase: Ted’s handlers point out Ted is doing this by writing his own statement, as it contains major contradictions and wonky facts that could easily be picked apart by a prosecutor.
** This happens again when Ted wears a neckbrace to Mary Jo’s funeral, as the reporters present can easily tell he’s faking injury by how easily he’s turning his head to look around at the crowd.
* OneSteveLimit: [[AvertedTrope Averted]] with the name Joe, as the real-life Joe Gargan and Joe Kennedy Sr. made this impossible to avoid. However, Gargan is referred to as "Joey" throughout the picture and Kennedy Sr. is called “Dad” by Ted and “Mr. Kennedy” by his team.


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* OutlivingOnesOffspring: Joe Kennedy Sr., though wheelchair bound, lived for years after his three sons’ deaths. [[AvertedTrope Averted]] in Ted’s case, who lived almost fifty years past him.


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* RealityIsUnrealistic: Some might find Ted’s car crash happening right in the middle of the Apollo 11 mission too much of a ContrivedCoincidence to be believable, but that is actually what happened.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Despite having speech hindered from a stroke, Joe Kennedy Sr. gives one to Ted in response to Ted’s decision to resign from the Senate.
--> '''Joe Kennedy Sr.''': You will…never be great.
* RedemptionRejection: By the film’s end, Ted has a chance to receive some kind of self-inflicted justice by resigning from his Senate seat. However, he decides he can live with killing Mary Jo and stays the course with the manipulated story he’s concocted.


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* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: Ted Kennedy largely avoids any legal trouble from the accident through his and his father’s influence, which stretches as high as the Massachusetts Attorney General.


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* SpottingTheThread: To alleviate suspicions, Ted’s handlers tell the New York Times editor that Ted suffered a concussion and that his doctor prescribed him sedatives for treatment. The editor quickly points out that concussions are one of the conditions one ''never'' gives a patient sedatives for, something even a small town doctor would know. This quickly lets him on that there’s a bigger story brewing than Ted is letting on.
* SurpriseCarCrash: The whole plot is started off by one, with Ted driving his car off a bridge and abandoning Mary Jo in the upturned vehicle.


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* TokenGoodTeammate: Joe Gargan is this for Ted’s team, being the only one who has any problems with the constant manipulation of truth and cover-ups. It’s no surprise that he breaks off his relationship with Ted after the latter’s MoralEventHorizon.
* TragicVillain: All Ted Kennedy wanted to be was an inspiration to America and to make her a better place to be. Too bad his poor judgment led to a woman being killed and him covering up his fault in the crash in the name of the greater good.
* TrappedInASinkingCar: Mary Jo’s death happens because of this, with the added detriments of the car being upside down and the water slowly suffocating her.
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It is the summer of 1969. UsefulNotes/TedKennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father.

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It is the summer of 1969. UsefulNotes/TedKennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in that January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US U.S. Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father.
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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2e066480_86f2_40e4_879b_1790ded191f1.jpeg]]

''Chappaquiddick'' is a 2017 film directed by John Curran and written by Taylor Allen and Andrew Logan. The film stars Creator/JasonClarke as Senator Edward (Ted) Kennedy, and Creator/KateMara as Mary Jo Kopechne. The cast is rounded out with Creator/EdHelms, Creator/JimGaffigan, Creator/ClancyBrown, and Creator/BruceDern in major supporting roles.

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[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:312:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2e066480_86f2_40e4_879b_1790ded191f1.jpeg]]

''Chappaquiddick'' is a 2017 American drama film directed by John Curran and written by Taylor Allen and Andrew Logan. The film stars Creator/JasonClarke as Senator Edward (Ted) Kennedy, and Creator/KateMara as Mary Jo Kopechne. The cast is rounded out with Creator/EdHelms, Creator/JimGaffigan, Creator/ClancyBrown, and Creator/BruceDern in major supporting roles.



The film was released on April 6, 2018.

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The film film, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2017, was widely released on April 6, 2018.



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* BadLiar: One of the men on Ted's crisis team lies to a New York Times reporter by telling him that Ted suffered a concussion during the accident and his doctor has prescribed him sedatives to control the pain. The reporter immediately knows that he's being lied to because you don't give sedatives to somebody who has suffered a concussion (because doing so could actually kill them).
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* ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules: Over the course of the film, Joey becomes increasingly appalled over the fact that Ted cares more about his political future than the woman who died in his car. This eventually leads to Joey resigning as Ted's personal attorney and cutting all ties with the Kennedy family.
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* IgnoredEpiphany: There are moments when Ted appears to fully realize the horrible tragedy of Jo Kopechne's death, most notably when he calls her parents to deliver the news [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone and can barely hold it together as her mother breaks down over the phone]]. Another man might take the opportunity to own up to his horrible error and try make amends. [[NeverMyFault Ted does not]].

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* IgnoredEpiphany: There are moments when Ted appears to fully realize the horrible tragedy of Jo Kopechne's death, most notably when he calls her parents to deliver the news [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone and can barely hold it together as her mother breaks down over the phone]]. Another man might take the opportunity to own up to his horrible error mistake and try make amends. [[NeverMyFault Ted does not]].
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2e066480_86f2_40e4_879b_1790ded191f1.jpeg]]

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It is the summer of 1969. Ted Kennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father.

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It is the summer of 1969. Ted Kennedy, UsefulNotes/TedKennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father.
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Additional Trope

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* BrutalHonesty: Just after Ted bares his soul, see below, Joe Sr. says "You...will...never be great."
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* OvershadowedByControversy: Ted Kennedy is considered one of the heroes of modern American liberalism, and is one of the longest-serving senators in US history. He also ''never'' fully recovered his reputation from Chappaquiddick. If the movie's thesis is any indication, he entirely deserved that overshadowing.



* TheWoobie: Ted ''thinks’'' he’s this, but the film makes it clear that Joey Gargan is the real sympathetic character (aside from Mary Jo Kopechne who, you know, ''lost her life'') the audience should root for.
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* IgnoredEpiphany: There are moments when Ted appears to fully realize the horrible tragedy of Jo Kopechne's death, most notably when he calls her parents to deliver the news [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone and can barely hold it together as her mother breaks down over the phone]]. Another man might take the opportunity to own up to his horrible error and try make amends. Ted does not (see NeverMyFault).

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* IgnoredEpiphany: There are moments when Ted appears to fully realize the horrible tragedy of Jo Kopechne's death, most notably when he calls her parents to deliver the news [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone and can barely hold it together as her mother breaks down over the phone]]. Another man might take the opportunity to own up to his horrible error and try make amends. [[NeverMyFault Ted does not (see NeverMyFault).not]].

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* IgnoredEpiphany: There are moments when Ted appears to fully realize the horrible tragedy of Jo Kopechne's death, most notably when he calls her parents to deliver the news [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone and can barely hold it together as her mother breaks down over the phone]]. Another man might take the opportunity to own up to his horrible error and try make amends. Ted does not (see NeverMyFault).



* OvershadowedByAwesome: How Ted (and, to be fair, the American public at large) views himself in comparison to his brothers: John F. Kennedy was the president, the glittering symbol who became a mythologized figure in the wake of his tragic assassination. Robert F. Kennedy carved out his own niche as a hardass Attorney General, who dared people to dream and could inspire people (and may very well have won the Presidency in 1968 if he was not assassinated by Sirhan Sirhan). Ted...doesn't have the charm of John nor the passionate idealism of Robert. And it's clear that he's tormented by that reality.

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* OvershadowedByAwesome: How Ted (and, to be fair, the American public at large) views himself in comparison to his brothers: John F. Kennedy was the president, the glittering symbol who became a mythologized figure in the wake of his tragic assassination. Robert F. Kennedy carved out his own niche as a hardass Attorney General, who dared people to dream and could inspire people (and may very well have won the Presidency in 1968 if he was not hadn't been assassinated by Sirhan Sirhan). Ted...doesn't have the charm of John nor the passionate idealism of Robert. And it's clear that he's tormented by that reality.
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* TheWoobie: Ted ‘’thinks’’ he’s this, but the film makes it clear that Joey Gargan is the real sympathetic character (aside from Mary Jo Kopechne who, you know, ‘’lost her life’’) the audience should root for.

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* TheWoobie: Ted ‘’thinks’’ ''thinks’'' he’s this, but the film makes it clear that Joey Gargan is the real sympathetic character (aside from Mary Jo Kopechne who, you know, ‘’lost ''lost her life’’) life'') the audience should root for.
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* TheWoobie: Ted ‘’thinks’’ he’s this, but the film makes it clear that Joey Gargan is the real sympathetic character (aside from Mary Jo Kopechne who, you know, ‘’lost her life’’) the audience should root for.
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It is the summer of 1969. Ted Kennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father. In July of 1969, Kennedy and a coterie of his friends (as well as former members of his brother Robert's 1968 presidential campaign) retreat to the Martha's Vineyard getaway of Chappaquiddick Island for a weekend of fun and celebration.

Late on the night of July 18, 1969, Kennedy and Mary Jo Kopechne (a member of Bobby's campaign staff) leave a party and drive to the beach.[[note]]In his sworn testimony Kennedy insisted that he was giving Kopechne a ride back to the ferry and the hotel on the mainland. He said he took a wrong turn and headed to the beach by mistake. Skeptics of this story noted that Kopechne left her purse and hotel key at the party. In the movie Kennedy drives to the beach on purpose.[[/note]] Kennedy loses control of the car as they approach a rickety, guardrail-free bridge over a tidal pond, and the car goes off the bridge and into the water. While Kennedy was able to escape the crash, Kopechne was unable to resurface, and would die in the car overnight. What followed was a national scandal that changed the course of presidential history, intimately exposing the broad reach of political power, the influence of America's most celebrated family, and the vulnerability (and political destruction) of Ted Kennedy, the youngest son, in the shadow of his family legacy.

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It is the summer of 1969. Ted Kennedy, the youngest of the famed Kennedy brothers, is a political rockstar. Already an established senator from Massachusetts, he made history in January by becoming the youngest majority whip in US Senate history. There are rumblings about how he might eventually run for President in 1972, following in the footsteps of both his brothers John and Robert Kennedy. But at the same time, Ted Kennedy is privately struggling to maintain the legacy established by both his legendary brothers and his domineering father. In July of 1969, Kennedy and a coterie of his friends (as well as former members of his brother Robert's 1968 presidential campaign) retreat to the Martha's Vineyard getaway of Chappaquiddick Island for a weekend of fun and celebration.

In July of 1969, Kennedy and a coterie of his friends (as well as former members of his brother Robert's 1968 presidential campaign) retreat to the Martha's Vineyard getaway of Chappaquiddick Island for a weekend of fun and celebration. Late on the night of July 18, 1969, Kennedy and Mary Jo Kopechne (a member of Bobby's campaign staff) leave a party and drive to the beach.[[note]]In his sworn testimony Kennedy insisted that he was giving Kopechne a ride back to the ferry and the hotel on the mainland. He said he took a wrong turn and headed to the beach by mistake. Skeptics of this story noted that Kopechne left her purse and hotel key at the party. In the movie Kennedy drives to the beach on purpose.[[/note]] Kennedy loses control of the car as they approach a rickety, guardrail-free bridge over a tidal pond, and the car goes off the bridge and into the water. While Kennedy was able to escape the crash, Kopechne was unable to resurface, and would die in the car overnight. What followed was a national scandal that changed the course of presidential history, intimately exposing the broad reach of political power, the influence of America's most celebrated family, and the vulnerability (and political destruction) of Ted Kennedy, the youngest son, in the shadow of his family legacy.

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