This film really captures Shirley Chisholm in her all her glory as the total antithesis of modern politics. That doesn't necessarily give it enough strength to stand out to anyone not personally interested in the subject matter, but it was enough to draw a casual observer like myself. The approach is clean and well-researched, and everyone of importance gets their chance to speak. From a documentary film perspective, it's the content and not the direction that makes "Chisholm '72" stand out. It's that purity of approach which has made it impossible for anyone with a similarly deep conviction and honesty to ever be elected to the highest American office. Unbought and Unbossed is Shirley Chisholms account of her remarkable rise from young girl in Brooklyn to Americas first African-American Congresswoman. In her world, there were no compromises for the greater good, there was just the good and that's that. She didn't have much interest in the standard nonsense, the buying and trading of votes, and totally rejected the notion that you should support anyone but who you believed in. I don't mean that in the sense that she was both black and female (though it certainly factored significantly in 1972), but in a purely ideological respect. It turns out that Shirley Chisholm wasn't your typical politician out there vying for control of the country. But I bought this one on a whim a couple years back and finally decided to watch it today. A documentary film about one of the endless and countless failed attempts at attaining the presidency wouldn't normally catch my attention.
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