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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/primary.png]]
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3''Primary'' is a 1960 [[{{Documentary}} documentary]] film about the April 5, 1960 Democratic presidential primary election in Wisconsin, and specifically the campaigns of Senators UsefulNotes/HubertHumphrey and UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy.
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5Producer Robert Drew and his crew were granted unprecedented behind-the-scenes access to the Kennedy and Humphrey campaigns. Drew's use of innovative lightweight cameras and sound equipment allowed for an intimate, fly-on-the-wall style that was nearly unprecedented for documentaries of the day. The film is now regarded as a breakthrough in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_cinema direct cinema]] and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cin%C3%A9ma_v%C3%A9rit%C3%A9 cinema verite]] filmmaking. ''Primary'' was added to the UsefulNotes/NationalFilmRegistry in 1990.
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7Drew followed up with the subsequent JFK documentaries ''Adventures on the New Frontier'' (1961), ''Film/CrisisBehindAPresidentialCommitment'' (1963), and ''Faces of November'' (1964). Creator/TheCriterionCollection released a DVD/Blu-ray set containing all four films in 2016.
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11* BookEnds: The first scene and the last scene are both Hubert Humphrey traveling the back roads of rural Wisconsin while his "Vote for Hubert" campaign jingle plays.
12* ElectionDayEpisode: How else would the movie end?
13* EverybodySmokes: A woman introducing Kennedy at a rally in Milwaukee feels compelled to ask people in the crowd to stop smoking.
14* FishOutOfWater: The narration notes that eastern, urban, Catholic JFK is not a natural fit for small-town Wisconsin.
15* HitlerCam: Both candidates are shown this way on a couple of occasions.
16* MinimalistCast: A latter-day viewer might wonder why there are only two candidates for the Democratic nomination. The reason is that in 1960 only a few states conducted presidential primaries (fifteen states and UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC for the Democrats) and most of the delegates to the nominating convention were still controlled by state party machines. The other main candidates for the 1960 Democratic nomination, UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson, Adlai Stevenson, and Stuart Symington, did not compete in any primaries. In fact, this primary and the later West Virginia primary were the only contested primaries of the campaign.
17* PolkaDork: The kids playing an unbearably cheesy accordion arrangement of the Humphrey jingle as Humphrey shakes hands somewhere.
18* RepurposedPopSong: Music/FrankSinatra's "High Hopes" had an altered version used to promote UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy for president, naturally the presidential version was used several times in the documentary in scenes with Kennedy.
19* ShaggyDogStory: Kennedy wins the primary, but he wins on what everyone already knew was his strength, namely, urban Catholic voters. Humphrey wins the rural Protestant regions of Wisconsin, and as the narration notes, the standings in the race remain unchanged after all that frantic campaigning. It was not this race, but Kennedy's easy victory the next month in heavily Protestant West Virginia, that proved the turning point in the campaign for the 1960 nomination.

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