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My Fellow Americans was a 1996 movie starring Jack Lemmon and James Garner as feuding ex-presidents. Dan Aykroyd, Lauren Bacall, John Heard, Wilford Brimley, and Jeff Yagher also appeared in this comedy.

Originally Lemmon's perennial collaborator, Walter Matthau, was slated to co-star. However, health problems kept Matthau from appearing in the film and James Garner was instead chosen to star opposite Lemmon in their only project together.

Notably, in one part of the movie, each ex-President makes up his own lyrics to "Hail to the Chief". The version of Kramer (Lemmon) is "Hail to the Chief, he's the chief and he needs hailing / He is the chief so you all had better hail like crazy." The version of Douglas (Gardner) is more sinister: "Hail to the Chief, if you don't I'll have to kill you / I am the chief, so you'd better watch your step, you bastards."

Synopsis


Former United States Presidents Russell P. Kramer (Lemmon), and Matthew Douglas (Garner) have spent the past thirty years hating each other. The movie starts out with the Republican Senator Kramer of Ohio winning the Presidential election, defeating Democratic Indiana Governor Matthew "Matt" Douglas. We hear Kramer's trademark speech, "Our dreams are like our children . . . "

The film then skips forward four years, to the Democrat Douglas' win over the incumbent Kramer. Then it skips forward another four years, to the point where Kramer's former Vice President William "Bill" Haney (Aykroyd) defeats Douglas. Haney's Vice President Ted Matthews (John Heard) is widely seen as an idiot. By the end of his first term, Douglas is well-known for his infidelity. Finally it skips ahead three years.

At this point, Kramer is spending most of his time writing a large number of books, and speaking at various functions. Kramer continues to use the "Our dreams are like our children" line at every opportunity. Douglas is in New York, putting the finishing touches to his own book. Douglas is also going through a divorce. Kramer and Douglas are sent to a funeral by Haney, and spend almost the entire trip arguing with each other.

Soon, the Democrats find out about Olympia, a series of kickbacks to a defense contractor organised by Haney when he was Vice-President. Democratic Party Chairman Joe Hollis (Brimley) encourages Douglas to investigate further whilst Haney and his Chief of Staff, Carl Witnaur (Bradley Whitford, who appears in The West Wing in a similar role), plot to have Kramer take the blame. Hollis tells Douglas that the Democrats would support him if he wanted to run for office again. When the rumors of Olympia begin to suggest that Kramer was involved, Kramer begins his own investigation.

At this point, the contractor who was involved in the kickback becomes very nervous. The NSA Chief, Colonel Paul Tanner (Everett McGill), arranges to assassinate the contractor. White House officials then take both former Presidents on Marine One, and tell them that Haney wants to see them at Camp David. Some way in to the flight, it turns out the helicopter is heading south, to what would later be revealed as North Carolina. Douglas realizes something is very wrong, then he and Kramer force the pilots to land the helicopter. They leave just before the helicopter explodes.

Kramer and Douglas are left in the middle of nowhere. They decide to go to Kramer's Library in Ohio to obtain a record the penny-pinching Kramer kept of all meals served during his time in the White House, which will prove Haney was present at a key meeting with the contractor. During a series of misadventures, the two ex-Presidents meet a variety of ordinary Americans and see the effects their terms in office have had.

After several close encounters with NSA agents, they arrive in Ohio and discover there is no evidence. Douglas and Kramer then kidnap Witnaur and take him to Hollis' home, where he reveals the full plot to blame Kramer for Olympia. But Witnaur knows nothing about the assassination of the contractor, and the attempts to kill the Presidents, which was all Tanner's doing. Hollis arranges for Douglas and Kramer to meet with a journalist to tell their story, but they decide to go straight to the White House to confront Haney directly.

Colonel Tanner knows the two ex-Presidents will be coming to the White House and imposes strict security. Douglas and Kramer slip through with the help of a cook (Esther Rolle). They make it through to the Oval Office only to discover Haney is giving a press conference in the gardens, and the story of their deaths in a helicopter crash has been released to the press. The NSA has them trapped, which was Tanner's plan. However, they use a secret tunnel to exit the White House. They hijack and ride police horses through the grounds to get to Haney, pursued by the NSA, police and security. The two are finally saved when a police sniper decides to disobey orders to shoot them, and instead shoots Tanner, who is himself about to shoot the ex-Presidents.

Arriving in the middle of the president's speech, Kramer and Douglas are reluctantly welcomed by Haney, and tell him they need to talk. Back in the Oval office, they play him a tape of his chief of staff's confession. Haney agrees to resign, whilst Douglas and Kramer are introduced to the sniper who saved them, who turns out to be a gay man who they had encountered ealier in the film. As Haney delivers his resignation speech, Kramer and Douglas muse on Matthews' elevation to the post. They realise that the only way he could have become President was if something like this had happened. When they confront him, he admits the truth, thinking he's now safe and explaining that his apparent stupidity was really just a "fakade" *. But Kramer and Douglas have the last laugh, recording his admission for later release to the press. This lands Matthews in a Federal Prison.

The film ends nine months later, with Matthews being sent to prison and Douglas and Kramer, running on the same ticket as independents in the Presidential election, arguing which of them is nominee for President.

Quotes


"Our dreams are like our children . . ." - Kramer's catch phrase

Last lines of the movie.
Douglas: My fellow Americans.
Kramer: You son of a . . .

Kramer: You could spit into a petri dish and create a whole new civilization

External link


1996 films | Comedy films

Ein Präsident für alle Fälle

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "My Fellow Americans".

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