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The film reunites its original two stars from the West End and Broadway productions of the play, [[Michael Sheen]] as British television journalist/comedian David Frost and Frank Langella as former United States President [[Richard Nixon]].
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{{tropelist}}
* [[Affably Evil]]: Nixon is pretty witty throughout.
* [[Age Lift]]: Swifty Lazaar was six years older than Richard Nixon but Toby Jones, who plays Swifty, is nearly thirty years younger than Frank Langella, who plays Nixon.
* [[Berserk Button]]: Nixon does not like being questioned about Watergate.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: Reston wants to check out some transcripts at the federal courthouse. No, ''waste of time'', everyone assures him.▼
* [[Big Fancy House]]: La Casa Pacifica.
▲* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: Reston wants to check out some transcripts at the federal courthouse. No, ''waste of time'', everyone assures him.
* [[Expecting Someone Taller]]: [[Inverted Trope|Inverted]]. Upon seeing Nixon in person, Reston declares he's taller than he'd imagined. This is because Frank Langella, who plays Nixon, is about five inches taller than the President.
* [[Golden Snitch]]: Due to the necessity of creating more tension for the dramatization. Unlike what happened in real life, Nixon is in control for three of the four interviews, but Frost's success with the last one determines the whole outcome. There is [[Lampshade Hanging]] of this done by the [[Narrator]].
* [[Hannibal Lecture]]: Richard Nixon attempts to do this to Frost with a late night phone call, but as his drunken ramblings progress, all his [[Not So Different]] lines only end up revealing how broken and full of self-loathing he is. Frost doesn't even need to say [[Shut UP, Hannibal]]- he now knows that all he needs to do is corner Nixon and the man will destroy himself.
* [[Hard Work Montage]]: Frost after the drunk phone call.
* [[Historical Villain Upgrade]]: Jack Brennan as played by Kevin Bacon is a
* [[Honor Before Reason]]: Nixon claims this as his reason for not informing authorities of his men's actions, noting he had known them since they were children. He later calls his mistakes "Mistakes of the heart, not of the head".
* [[Hypocritical Humor]]: The researcher who despises Nixon swears he'll never shake hands with him; he does so moments later, stunned by being face-to-face with an ex-President of the United States.
* [[It Has Been an Honor]]: Nixon's drunk phone call.
* [[It's All About Me]]: Nixon can be like this at times. When answering questions about Vietnam, he frames answers by playing up his own moral strength and turning his decision into a noble self-sacrifice, casting himself as an undeserving victim. Snidely lampshaded by Jim who responds to Nixon's claims of "Being the last casualty of the Vietnam War" with a bitter "Tell that to the amputees".
* [[Mind Screw]]: Nixon is a master at this, including a [[Crowning Moment of Funny]] when he asks Frost if he'd spent the night fornicating moments before the cameras start rolling. Subverted when Nixon rings up Frost in the middle of his [[Heroic BSOD]]; at first it appears he's trying to further damage Frost's morale, but Nixon is actually drunk. When Frost
* [[Money, Dear Boy]]: Nixon's reason for agreeing to be interviewed in the first place.
* [[Never My Fault]]: Nixon refuses to accept any responsibility for Watergate, which is partly why Frost and Co. want to do the interview: They want Him to finally confess and admit his own guilt.
* [[Nice to the Waiter]]: Nixon is portrayed as being quite a pleasant man in this film, his relationship with Jack Brennan being almost fatherly.
* [[Nice Job Fixing It, Villain]]: Nixon's late night phone call motivates a
* [[Not So Different]]: The phone call about [[Self-Made Man|self-made men]]
* [[Papa Wolf]]: Inverted. Jack Brennan is extremely protective of Nixon, who serves as a father figure, and threatens to ruin Frost if he damages his image.
* [[Pet the Dog]]: After the last interview, Nixon plays this completely straight.
* [[Precision F-Strike]]: The usually elegant Nixon going on an enraged rant ending with "We are gonna make the motherfuckers choke!"
* [[Rule of Drama]]: The two had considerably less riding on the outcome of the interviews then it is implied.
* [[Very Loosely Based on a True Story]]: Jack Brennan is actually quite funny and not all that stern, Nixon got 20% of the ad revenue from the interviews enticing him to want to get more people to watch it, there was no midnight call about "Cheeseburgers
* [[Where Are They Now? Epilogue]]: A very short one reminding the viewers that Nixon's corrupt actions as President haunted him until his death in 1994 and that what he is most remembered for now is creating the [[Scandalgate|-gate suffix to any political scandal]]. It also has information about Frost as well.
* [[Worthy Opponent]]: Nixon calls Frost this during the phone call.
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[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Frost/Nixon]]
[[Category:Films Based on Plays]]
[[Category:Film]]
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