One of the most talked-about and controversial theatrical releases of 2006 was more than five years in the making. Giuliani Time investigates the stories behind the "new" New York City that Giuliani laid claim to. From "qu... more »ality of life" policing to welfare reform, and First Amendmentrelated debacles, the feelings about the Giuliani years largely depended on where you stood. Giuliani Time is the story of the effect this former Reagan administration official and high profile federal prosecutor had on what he called the "Capital of the World." It is a wild ride of political ambition and public amnesia, alternate realities, wars of perception and dramatic, even cataclysmic, events.Featuring Donald Trump, Ed Koch, William Bratten, David Dinkins, and many others.DVD Extras Include:Commentary TrackDeleted ScenesExtended InterviewsTrailersResource LinksAnd much more.« less
Shirl P. (busfaretokentucky) Reviewed on 7/21/2014...
This is a very eye opening documentary. It won Best Documentary in 2006. It shows what happened to New York under his leadership...the good the bad and the ugly.
Movie Reviews
Your Time's Up, Rudy
!Edwin C. Pauzer | New York City | 06/14/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The movie begins with Mayor Giuliani speaking at the Republican Convention delivering his adlib: "As I saw the smoke from the burning building and people jumping to their deaths, I turned to my police commissioner, Bernard Kerik and said, "Thank God, George Bush is our president.'" New Yorkers, being shameless in vocalizing their derision and adept at detecting hyperbole, erupted in "Bronx cheers" throughout the theater.
So begins the story dramatizing the rise of Rudy Giuliani in the New York Republican Party as an ambitious district attorney who was attempting to make his bones by prosecuting high profile cases. It profiles his political life through the end of second term as "hizzoner" of New York.
It illustrates in event after event, familiar to many New Yorkers the level to which one man would stoop to get even, and hurt people he considered his enemies. These "enemies" included his wife, the press, people who stole his thunder or the limelight, those who did not give him their utter fealty, those who disagreed with him, or just poor people whom he denied their constitutional right to federally funded food stamps.
This movie dramatically demonstrates Giuliani's intolerance of anyone's challenge to his authority, and his zero tolerance for criticism of any kind. But perhaps, his greatest hubris was his request of each mayoral candidate (whoever won) to delay being sworn in for three months. So great was Gotham's need for the guidance and leadership of Rudy Giuliani that he felt he was more important than the democratic process and the will of the people. He even wanted to go to court to get it.
Firing his popular police commissioner, William Bratton, his open affair with his communication aide, Christine Latagono, the shooting of Amadou Diallo, the broom handle sodomy of Abner Luema from a police officer saying," It's Giuliani time," to his failed marriages, his infidelities, and his attempt to regulate art in New York, this movie brings out a dark and sinister side of a man who now wants to be President of the United States.
This story was a bit long, but not quite too long, and it certainly deserves watching. It is an accurate portrayal of one man because his behavior and words are documented. This DVD answers the question that one might ask: How is this man so popular everywhere, except where he governed?
See the DVD and you'll have your answer.
"
Essential viewing for anyone planning to vote in 2008
Robert Moore | Chicago, IL USA | 03/04/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"There have been few politicians in recent American history to have such a positive national image on the basis of such slender evidence. In fact, the more you know about
Rudy Giuliani, the less you will care for him. Especially now, with the media hanging the astonishing epithet "America's Mayor" on Giuliani is nothing short of outrageous. Such a tag overlooks almost everything in his two terms as mayor of New York.
Let's be honest. Giuliani is not a completely forgotten politician for one and only one reason: his physical presence near the World Trade Center towers on 9/11. To his credit and unlike our president (who was fearfully flying from one area of the United States to another--I still remember Peter Jennings's astonishment on learning that Bush was not flying back to Washington from Florida but to various spots west, baffled why the nation's leader wasn't . . . well, leading), Giuliani immediately put himself on the spot. Just as 9/11 saved Bush's political fortunes, so 9/11 saved Giuliani's. Indeed, when watching the documentary one is often struck by the resemblances between Bush and Giuliani. Both are antagonistic towards political dissent, both have adopted imperial styles of governing, both attempt to take credit for successes not due to them and refuse to assume responsibility for their failures, both are inflexible and incapable of changing course or listening to the advice of others, and both have little regard for civil rights protections in the Constitution. There is one major difference between the two: Bush seems to have little of the personal racial animosity that characterizes so many of Giuliani's policies. Bush's policies hurt blacks because as they fall into a poorer demographic and his policies favor primarily the well off. His attitudes are more class-based than race-based. Giuliani does seem to take great notice of race.
This documentary is not terribly exciting. It dwells not so much on personal scandals as on political scandals; these are not easily presented in our sound-byte age. Nonetheless, the film does a marvelous job of showing the manifold shortcomings in Giuliani's policies. If one knows anything about Giuliani one knows that he claims to have cleaned up New York and reduced crime. As the film correctly notes, it is not often mentioned that Giuliani supposedly reduced crime at a time when the crime rate was dropping all across the United States. What happened in New York was not markedly out of line with what happened in the other cities in America. But that did not deter Giuliani from claiming to have cleaned up the city.
The other side of the coin is not as frequently noted. Giuliani is an indefatigable opponent of free speech and constantly during his two terms became involved in first amendment cases, all of which he lost and all of which cost taxpayers considerable amounts of money. What is striking about this is the fact that he was a former federal prosecutor for New York and thus had to have had some sense that the suits were not winnable. Although they do not address this case in the film, I remember reading that Giuliani sued New York Magazine for running ads saying, "We're one thing that Rudy Giuliani can't take credit for." Though he lost in the Appeals Court, he insisted that the case go to the Supreme Court, where he lost (not for the first time). The amount of personal hubris required for this is difficult to imagine.
The film goes onto a host of other issues, to his failure to do anything about homelessness except to hide the homeless, his insistence on those on welfare to work menial jobs without providing job training, his manipulation of the police department, the huge police scandals that arose during his second term, his failures in education, to his attempt to take credit for New York's economic boom in the nineties when it was in fact an international boom and not a local one. All of this makes for important and unsettling viewing. As the man runs for president, I kept asking, "Is this a man I would want to run the country?" Over and over came the answer, "No, absolutely not."
Although Giuliani likes to talk about Reagan as a role model, the politician he most resembles is Bush 43. I believe in 2008 Americans are going to want a change. With Giuliani what we would get is more of the same that we had under Bush, if less neoconservativism in foreign affairs and a little less evangelical piety. But personally I think there is little chance that Giuliani will get the nomination for the GOP let alone get elected. He is twice divorced, unmarried, a Roman Catholic, and has never held office above mayor. This doesn't fit the traditional profile for a White House inhabitant. But I also think Americans will get to know more about his record as mayor of New York. It is at best a weak one; at worst he has one of the worst civil rights records of any politician in America. As of yesterday in a Newsweek poll he was the leading GOP contender for the presidency. I do not think that that will last as his policies come under closer scrutiny. But anyone contemplating voting for him in the primaries truly needs to see this documentary. If he truly is America's major, I think there will be a demand for his impeachment."
Mandatory for 2008
S. | Honolulu, HI | 06/27/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Every registered voter should see this film...bottom line, Giuliani is a scary man. He's a threat to your civil rights and will be far more oppressive than W.
Giuliani Time shows the real New York during Rudy's celebrated tenure and cuts through the crap of the 9/11 hero manufactured by the mainstream media. This documentary shows life through the eyes of those that have suffered through his policies. It demonstrates that the man is no friend to the average citizen, quick to squash civil rights and human dignity in order to further his agenda. He's a power hungry fool that will do our nation great harm, all to fuel his own personal gain."
Petering out
J. L LaRegina | New Jersey | 10/27/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"GIULIANI TIME covers the career of Rudolph Giuliani through 2001. Prior to the September 11, 2001, terror attack that made Giuliani the closest thing people seeking a hero could clutch, his political prospects were on a deserved, probably permanent downswing. A great prosecutor, Giuliani's career embodied the Peter Principle as he proved a great failure as New York City's divisive mayor.
The film takes its title from the saying New York City police had for illegal policies the mayor implemented. When an officer searched a young black man for no reason it was "Giuliani time." Ditto the mayor's attack on street artists, whom police arrested for exercising their constitutional right of free speech. You've got to wonder what a city cop arriving home after busting a painter for displaying art told the kids when they asked, "What did you do to make the city safer today?"
GIULIANI TIME ends with 9/11 giving Rudolph Giuliani credibility a second time. Since then Giuliani again proved the Peter Principle, bombing in his run for United States president. Journalist Wayne Barrett, who has followed Giuliani's career and grants interviews to the GIULIANI TIME filmmakers, has since cowritten an informative book on the mayor's post-9/11 livelihood, GRAND ILLUSION. Warning: If you think you could not like Rudolph Giuliani less after GIULIANI TIME, wait until you read GRAND ILLUSION.
See GIULIANI TIME."
You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll get mad as hell.
Jessica | New York | 07/04/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Especially if you live in NYC - watch this film and take a minute to contemplate the damage wrought by the Giuliani administration and the ongoing effects of the policies that were effected under his regime. Excellent commentaries include Norman Siegel and Frances Fox Piven. Its really well done and also captures the perverse charisma of its star - even while expertly debunking the mythology surrounding his "success" as NYC mayor."