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Advise & Consent

Advise & Consent is a 1962 American political drama film based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Advise and Consent by Allen Drury, published in 1959.[2]

Advise & Consent
Theatrical release poster by Saul Bass
Directed byOtto Preminger
Screenplay byWendell Mayes
Based onAdvise and Consent
by Allen Drury
Produced byOtto Preminger
Starring
CinematographySam Leavitt
Edited byLouis R. Loeffler
Music byJerry Fielding
Production
companies
Otto Preminger Films
Alpha Alpina
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • July 7, 1962 (1962-07-07) (United States)
Running time
138 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2 million (US/Canada)[1]

The film was adapted for the screen by Wendell Mayes and was directed by Otto Preminger. The ensemble cast features Henry Fonda, Charles Laughton, Don Murray, Walter Pidgeon, Peter Lawford, Gene Tierney, Franchot Tone, Lew Ayres, Burgess Meredith, Eddie Hodges, Paul Ford, George Grizzard, Inga Swenson, Betty White and others.

The title derives from the United States Constitution's Article II, Sec. 2, cl. 2, which provides that the president of the United States "shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the Supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States."

The film, set in Washington, D.C., follows the nomination process of a man who commits perjury in confirmation hearings for his nomination as Secretary of State.

Plot Edit

The president nominates Robert A. Leffingwell as Secretary of State. The second-term president, who is ill, has chosen him in part because he does not believe that Vice President Harley Hudson, whom both he and others usually ignore, will successfully continue the administration's foreign policy should the president die.

Leffingwell's nomination is controversial within the Senate, which must use its advice and consent powers to approve or reject the appointment. The parties of both the president and the minority are divided. Senate Majority Leader Bob Munson, the senior senator from Michigan, loyally supports the nominee despite his doubts, as do the hard-working majority whip Stanley Danta of Connecticut and womanizer Lafe Smith of Rhode Island. Demagogic peace advocate Fred Van Ackerman of Wyoming is especially supportive, but Munson repeatedly advises him not to aggravate the situation. Although also of the majority party, the curmudgeonly president pro tempore Seabright "Seab" Cooley of South Carolina dislikes Leffingwell for both personal and professional reasons and leads the opposition.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee appoints a subcommittee, chaired by majority member Brigham Anderson of Utah, to evaluate the nominee. The young and devoted family man is undecided on Leffingwell. Cooley dramatically introduces a surprise witness, Herbert Gelman, during the subcommittee's hearing. The minor Treasury Department clerk testifies that he was briefly affiliated with a communist cell with Leffingwell and two others at the University of Chicago. Leffingwell denies the charge and questions Gelman's credibility but later tells the president that he had committed perjury and that Gelman was correct. He asks the president to withdraw his nomination, but the president refuses.

Cooley identifies another member of the cell, senior treasury official Hardiman Fletcher. He forces Fletcher to confess to Anderson, who tells Munson. Despite personal lobbying by the president, the subcommittee chairman insists that the White House withdraw the nomination because of Leffingwell's perjury or he will subpoena Fletcher to testify. The president angrily refuses, but the majority leader admits that the White House will soon have to nominate another candidate. Anderson delays his committee's report on Leffingwell, but the president sends Fletcher out of the country, angering the senator.

Anderson's wife receives anonymous phone calls from a man warning that unless the subcommittee reports favorably on Leffingwell, information about what happened with "Ray" in Hawaii will be disclosed. A worried Anderson visits fellow army veteran Ray Schaff in New York. Schaff admits that he sold evidence of a past homosexual relationship between the two. Hudson and Anderson's friend, Smith, joins others in attempting to counsel the troubled chairman, but unable to reconcile his duty and his secret, Anderson takes his own life.

The president denies knowing about the blackmail to Munson and Hudson. He tells the majority leader that he is dying and that Leffingwell's confirmation is vital. Munson criticizes Cooley for opposing the nominee but not exposing Fletcher and thus forcing Anderson to bear the pressure alone. Anderson's death nonetheless permits the subcommittee and the Foreign Relations Committee to proceed with the nomination. Both report favorably to the full Senate.

 
Sen. Seabright Cooley (Charles Laughton) speaking against the Leffingwell nomination on the Senate floor

In the Senate Chamber, Cooley apologizes for his "vindictiveness." While he will vote against Leffingwell and his "alien voice," the senator will not ask others to follow. Munson, moved by Cooley's action, cites the "tragic circumstances" surrounding the confirmation. The majority leader will vote for Leffingwell but will permit a conscience vote from others. Hudson's quorum call and the majority leader's refusal to yield the floor prevent Van Ackerman from speaking until Munson asks for the "yeas and nays," ending debate. The majority leader tells Van Ackerman that but for the Andersons' privacy, the Senate would have censured and expelled him, as he was responsible for the blackmail. Van Ackerman leaves the chamber before the vote.

Munson's side is slightly ahead until Smith unexpectedly votes against Leffingwell, and the majority leader prepares for the vice president to break the tie in the nominee's favor. Secret Service agents enter the chamber, and Hudson receives a message from the Senate chaplain. He announces that he will not break the tie, thus causing the nomination to fail, and that the president has died during the vote. As he leaves with the Secret Service, Hudson tells Munson that he wants to choose his own secretary of state. The film ends as Munson makes a motion to adjourn because of the former president's death.

Cast Edit

Note

  • Appearing in two scenes as Senator John J. McCafferty—who, whenever awakened from a deep sleep, automatically responds "Opposed, sir! Opposed!"—was the 87-year-old Henry F. Ashurst, one of the first senators elected by Arizona, serving five terms. Ashurst died on May 31, 1962, a week before the film's premiere.
  • This marked Charles Laughton's final film appearance. He died of cancer in December 1962, five months after the film's release.
  • David McCullough, who would later become a renowned author on American history, appeared as an extra in the film.[3]

Production Edit

Preminger offered Martin Luther King Jr. a cameo role as a senator from Georgia,[4] although there were no serving African-American senators at the time. King rejected the offer and put out a press release rejecting any claims that he accepted a role.[5] Former vice president Richard Nixon was offered the role of the vice president, but he refused and pointed out some "glaring and obvious" errors in the script, presumably including the critical fact that under Article II of the U.S. Constitution, the vice president automatically assumes the office of the president upon the president's death, and would not have been able to cast a tie-breaking vote as vice president.[6]

Advise & Consent was one of a sequence of Preminger films that challenged both the Motion Picture Association of America's Production Code and the Hollywood blacklist. It pushed censorship boundaries with its depiction of a married senator who is being blackmailed over a wartime homosexual affair, and was the first mainstream American film after World War II to show a gay bar.[4][7] Preminger confronted the blacklist by casting known left-wing actors Geer and Meredith.[citation needed] Fonda's character Leffingwell was seen as drawing particularly on real-life State Department official (and accused Soviet spy) Alger Hiss.[7][8][9]

The film's poster and advertising campaign by Saul Bass featured a logo: the nation's capital dome opening up like a teapot. Bass likewise designed the film's abstract titles which riffed on the stripes in the American flag.[10]

The film marked a screen comeback for Gene Tierney, whose breakthrough to major stardom came in Preminger's 1944 film Laura. Tierney had withdrawn from acting for several years because of her ongoing struggle with bipolar disorder. Advise & Consent was the last of four films she made for Preminger, and one of her last major film roles overall. Advise & Consent was Laughton's last film; he had cancer during filming and died six months after the film's release. Lawford, John F. Kennedy's brother-in-law, plays Lafe Smith, a senator from Rhode Island modeled after Kennedy, although in Drury's book the character represents Iowa. Betty White made her film debut in Advise & Consent, appearing in one scene as a young senator from Kansas.[11][12]

Many scenes were filmed at real locations in Washington D.C., including the Capitol, the canteen of the Treasury Building, the Washington Monument and the Crystal Room of the Sheraton Carlton Hotel.[13][14]

Critical response Edit

The staff of Variety praised the acting but considered the screenplay problematic, writing: "As interpreted by producer-director Otto Preminger and scripter Wendell Mayes, Advise and Consent is intermittently well dialogued and too talky, and, strangely, arrested in its development and illogical... Preminger has endowed his production with wholly capable performers... The characterizations come through with fine clarity."[15]

The New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther did not like the storyline, writing: "Without even giving the appearance of trying to be accurate and fair about the existence of a reasonable balance of good men and rogues in government, Mr. Preminger and Wendell Mayes, his writer, taking their cue from Mr. Drury's book, have loaded their drama with rascals to show the types in Washington." Crowther also was bothered by the use of the homosexual affair. He wrote, "It is in this latter complication that the nature of the drama is finally exposed for the deliberately scandalous, sensational and caustic thing it is. Mr. Preminger has his character go through a lurid and seamy encounter with his old friend before cutting his throat, an act that seems unrealistic, except as a splashy high point for the film."[16]

Critic John Simon described Advise & Consent as "pure hokum."[17]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 75% based on reviews from 12 critics.[18]

On May 10, 2005, Warner Bros. released the film on DVD as part of its Controversial Classics box set.[19] The following year, it was included in the Henry Fonda Signature Collection.

The Academy Film Archive preserved Advise & Consent in 2007.[20]

Accolades Edit

Wins

Nominations

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Big Rental Pictures of 1962". Variety. 9 Jan 1963. p. 13. Please note these are rentals and not gross figures
  2. ^ Harrison's Reports film review; June 9, 1962, page 86.
  3. ^ Simon & Schuster Books (July 29, 2009). Historian David McCullough's Favorite Movie. YouTube. Google LLC. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Holm, D.K. (2005). "Advise and Consent Review". The DVD Journal.
  5. ^ "Draft, Press Release on King's appearance in "Advise and Consent"". 29 July 2014.
  6. ^ Alan Schroeder, Celebrity-in-Chief, p. 293
  7. ^ a b Rich, Frank (May 15, 2005). "Just How Gay Is the Right?". The New York Times. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
  8. ^ Kaplan, Roger (October 1, 1999). . Hoover Institution. Archived from the original on February 9, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  9. ^ Ringle, Ken (September 4, 1998). "Allen Drury, Father Of the D.C. Drama". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  10. ^ Horak, Jan-Christopher (2014). Saul Bass : Anatomy of Film Design. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-4720-8. OCLC 892799673.
  11. ^ Evening News staff (August 30, 1961). "Betty Lands One". The Binghamton Evening News. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  12. ^ Anonymous (May 15, 2011). "Investment in Future; White's Talent". Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  13. ^ Advise & Consent (1962) - IMDb, retrieved 2021-01-15
  14. ^ "U.S. Senate: Advise and Consent". www.senate.gov. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  15. ^ "Advise and Consent Review". Variety. December 31, 1961.
  16. ^ Crowther, Bosley (June 7, 1962). "Screen: 'Advise and Consent' Opens: Movie on Washington Is at Two Theatres". The New York Times.
  17. ^ Simon, John (1982). Reverse Angle: A Decade of American Film. Crown Publishers Inc. p. 79. ISBN 9780517544716.
  18. ^ "Advise and Consent (1962)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2020-10-10.
  19. ^ "WarnerBros.com". Warner Bros.
  20. ^ "Preserved Projects". Academy Film Archive.
  21. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Advise and Consent". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-02-22.

External links Edit

advise, consent, novel, advise, consent, confused, with, advice, consent, 1962, american, political, drama, film, based, pulitzer, prize, winning, novel, advise, consent, allen, drury, published, 1959, theatrical, release, poster, saul, bassdirected, byotto, p. For the novel see Advise and Consent Not to be confused with Advice and consent Advise amp Consent is a 1962 American political drama film based on the Pulitzer Prize winning novel Advise and Consent by Allen Drury published in 1959 2 Advise amp ConsentTheatrical release poster by Saul BassDirected byOtto PremingerScreenplay byWendell MayesBased onAdvise and Consentby Allen DruryProduced byOtto PremingerStarringHenry Fonda Charles Laughton Don Murray Walter Pidgeon Peter Lawford Gene Tierney Paul Ford George Grizzard Inga SwensonCinematographySam LeavittEdited byLouis R LoefflerMusic byJerry FieldingProductioncompaniesOtto Preminger FilmsAlpha AlpinaDistributed byColumbia PicturesRelease dateJuly 7 1962 1962 07 07 United States Running time138 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 2 million US Canada 1 The film was adapted for the screen by Wendell Mayes and was directed by Otto Preminger The ensemble cast features Henry Fonda Charles Laughton Don Murray Walter Pidgeon Peter Lawford Gene Tierney Franchot Tone Lew Ayres Burgess Meredith Eddie Hodges Paul Ford George Grizzard Inga Swenson Betty White and others The title derives from the United States Constitution s Article II Sec 2 cl 2 which provides that the president of the United States shall nominate and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate shall appoint Ambassadors other public Ministers and Consuls Judges of the Supreme Court and all other Officers of the United States The film set in Washington D C follows the nomination process of a man who commits perjury in confirmation hearings for his nomination as Secretary of State Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Critical response 4 1 Accolades 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditThe president nominates Robert A Leffingwell as Secretary of State The second term president who is ill has chosen him in part because he does not believe that Vice President Harley Hudson whom both he and others usually ignore will successfully continue the administration s foreign policy should the president die Leffingwell s nomination is controversial within the Senate which must use its advice and consent powers to approve or reject the appointment The parties of both the president and the minority are divided Senate Majority Leader Bob Munson the senior senator from Michigan loyally supports the nominee despite his doubts as do the hard working majority whip Stanley Danta of Connecticut and womanizer Lafe Smith of Rhode Island Demagogic peace advocate Fred Van Ackerman of Wyoming is especially supportive but Munson repeatedly advises him not to aggravate the situation Although also of the majority party the curmudgeonly president pro tempore Seabright Seab Cooley of South Carolina dislikes Leffingwell for both personal and professional reasons and leads the opposition The Senate Foreign Relations Committee appoints a subcommittee chaired by majority member Brigham Anderson of Utah to evaluate the nominee The young and devoted family man is undecided on Leffingwell Cooley dramatically introduces a surprise witness Herbert Gelman during the subcommittee s hearing The minor Treasury Department clerk testifies that he was briefly affiliated with a communist cell with Leffingwell and two others at the University of Chicago Leffingwell denies the charge and questions Gelman s credibility but later tells the president that he had committed perjury and that Gelman was correct He asks the president to withdraw his nomination but the president refuses Cooley identifies another member of the cell senior treasury official Hardiman Fletcher He forces Fletcher to confess to Anderson who tells Munson Despite personal lobbying by the president the subcommittee chairman insists that the White House withdraw the nomination because of Leffingwell s perjury or he will subpoena Fletcher to testify The president angrily refuses but the majority leader admits that the White House will soon have to nominate another candidate Anderson delays his committee s report on Leffingwell but the president sends Fletcher out of the country angering the senator Anderson s wife receives anonymous phone calls from a man warning that unless the subcommittee reports favorably on Leffingwell information about what happened with Ray in Hawaii will be disclosed A worried Anderson visits fellow army veteran Ray Schaff in New York Schaff admits that he sold evidence of a past homosexual relationship between the two Hudson and Anderson s friend Smith joins others in attempting to counsel the troubled chairman but unable to reconcile his duty and his secret Anderson takes his own life The president denies knowing about the blackmail to Munson and Hudson He tells the majority leader that he is dying and that Leffingwell s confirmation is vital Munson criticizes Cooley for opposing the nominee but not exposing Fletcher and thus forcing Anderson to bear the pressure alone Anderson s death nonetheless permits the subcommittee and the Foreign Relations Committee to proceed with the nomination Both report favorably to the full Senate Sen Seabright Cooley Charles Laughton speaking against the Leffingwell nomination on the Senate floorIn the Senate Chamber Cooley apologizes for his vindictiveness While he will vote against Leffingwell and his alien voice the senator will not ask others to follow Munson moved by Cooley s action cites the tragic circumstances surrounding the confirmation The majority leader will vote for Leffingwell but will permit a conscience vote from others Hudson s quorum call and the majority leader s refusal to yield the floor prevent Van Ackerman from speaking until Munson asks for the yeas and nays ending debate The majority leader tells Van Ackerman that but for the Andersons privacy the Senate would have censured and expelled him as he was responsible for the blackmail Van Ackerman leaves the chamber before the vote Munson s side is slightly ahead until Smith unexpectedly votes against Leffingwell and the majority leader prepares for the vice president to break the tie in the nominee s favor Secret Service agents enter the chamber and Hudson receives a message from the Senate chaplain He announces that he will not break the tie thus causing the nomination to fail and that the president has died during the vote As he leaves with the Secret Service Hudson tells Munson that he wants to choose his own secretary of state The film ends as Munson makes a motion to adjourn because of the former president s death Cast EditHenry Fonda as Robert A Leffingwell Administrator of the Office of Defense Mobilization Charles Laughton as Senator Seabright Seab Cooley of South Carolina and president pro tempore of the Senate Don Murray as Senator Brigham Brig Anderson of Utah Walter Pidgeon as Senate Majority Leader Robert Bob Munson of Michigan Peter Lawford as Senator Lafe Smith of Rhode Island Gene Tierney as Dolly Harrison Franchot Tone as President Lew Ayres as Vice President Harley Hudson former governor of Delaware Burgess Meredith as Herbert Gelman Eddie Hodges as Johnny Leffingwell Paul Ford as Senate Majority Whip Stanley Danta of Connecticut George Grizzard as Senator Frederick Fred Van Ackerman of Wyoming Inga Swenson as Ellen Anderson Edward Andrews as Senator Orrin Knox of Illinois Paul McGrath as Hardiman Fletcher Will Geer as Senate Minority Leader Warren Strickland of Idaho Betty White as Senator Bessie Adams of Kansas Malcolm Atterbury as Senator Tom August of Minnesota chairman of Foreign Relations Committee J Edward McKinley as Senator Powell Hanson of New Mexico Bill Quinn as Senator Paul Hendershot of Indiana Tom Helmore as British ambassador Irv Kupcinet as journalist John Granger as Ray SchaffNote Appearing in two scenes as Senator John J McCafferty who whenever awakened from a deep sleep automatically responds Opposed sir Opposed was the 87 year old Henry F Ashurst one of the first senators elected by Arizona serving five terms Ashurst died on May 31 1962 a week before the film s premiere This marked Charles Laughton s final film appearance He died of cancer in December 1962 five months after the film s release David McCullough who would later become a renowned author on American history appeared as an extra in the film 3 Production EditPreminger offered Martin Luther King Jr a cameo role as a senator from Georgia 4 although there were no serving African American senators at the time King rejected the offer and put out a press release rejecting any claims that he accepted a role 5 Former vice president Richard Nixon was offered the role of the vice president but he refused and pointed out some glaring and obvious errors in the script presumably including the critical fact that under Article II of the U S Constitution the vice president automatically assumes the office of the president upon the president s death and would not have been able to cast a tie breaking vote as vice president 6 Advise amp Consent was one of a sequence of Preminger films that challenged both the Motion Picture Association of America s Production Code and the Hollywood blacklist It pushed censorship boundaries with its depiction of a married senator who is being blackmailed over a wartime homosexual affair and was the first mainstream American film after World War II to show a gay bar 4 7 Preminger confronted the blacklist by casting known left wing actors Geer and Meredith citation needed Fonda s character Leffingwell was seen as drawing particularly on real life State Department official and accused Soviet spy Alger Hiss 7 8 9 The film s poster and advertising campaign by Saul Bass featured a logo the nation s capital dome opening up like a teapot Bass likewise designed the film s abstract titles which riffed on the stripes in the American flag 10 The film marked a screen comeback for Gene Tierney whose breakthrough to major stardom came in Preminger s 1944 film Laura Tierney had withdrawn from acting for several years because of her ongoing struggle with bipolar disorder Advise amp Consent was the last of four films she made for Preminger and one of her last major film roles overall Advise amp Consent was Laughton s last film he had cancer during filming and died six months after the film s release Lawford John F Kennedy s brother in law plays Lafe Smith a senator from Rhode Island modeled after Kennedy although in Drury s book the character represents Iowa Betty White made her film debut in Advise amp Consent appearing in one scene as a young senator from Kansas 11 12 Many scenes were filmed at real locations in Washington D C including the Capitol the canteen of the Treasury Building the Washington Monument and the Crystal Room of the Sheraton Carlton Hotel 13 14 Critical response EditThe staff of Variety praised the acting but considered the screenplay problematic writing As interpreted by producer director Otto Preminger and scripter Wendell Mayes Advise and Consent is intermittently well dialogued and too talky and strangely arrested in its development and illogical Preminger has endowed his production with wholly capable performers The characterizations come through with fine clarity 15 The New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther did not like the storyline writing Without even giving the appearance of trying to be accurate and fair about the existence of a reasonable balance of good men and rogues in government Mr Preminger and Wendell Mayes his writer taking their cue from Mr Drury s book have loaded their drama with rascals to show the types in Washington Crowther also was bothered by the use of the homosexual affair He wrote It is in this latter complication that the nature of the drama is finally exposed for the deliberately scandalous sensational and caustic thing it is Mr Preminger has his character go through a lurid and seamy encounter with his old friend before cutting his throat an act that seems unrealistic except as a splashy high point for the film 16 Critic John Simon described Advise amp Consent as pure hokum 17 On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 75 based on reviews from 12 critics 18 On May 10 2005 Warner Bros released the film on DVD as part of its Controversial Classics box set 19 The following year it was included in the Henry Fonda Signature Collection The Academy Film Archive preserved Advise amp Consent in 2007 20 Accolades Edit Wins National Board of Review NBR Award Best Supporting Actor Burgess Meredith 1962Nominations 1962 Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or 21 British Academy of Film and Television Arts BAFTA Film Award Best Foreign Actor Charles Laughton 1963See also EditList of American films of 1962References Edit Big Rental Pictures of 1962 Variety 9 Jan 1963 p 13 Please note these are rentals and not gross figures Harrison s Reports film review June 9 1962 page 86 Simon amp Schuster Books July 29 2009 Historian David McCullough s Favorite Movie YouTube Google LLC Archived from the original on 2021 12 15 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b Holm D K 2005 Advise and Consent Review The DVD Journal Draft Press Release on King s appearance in Advise and Consent 29 July 2014 Alan Schroeder Celebrity in Chief p 293 a b Rich Frank May 15 2005 Just How Gay Is the Right The New York Times Retrieved January 19 2015 Kaplan Roger October 1 1999 Allen Drury and the Washington Novel Hoover Institution Archived from the original on February 9 2014 Retrieved February 13 2013 Ringle Ken September 4 1998 Allen Drury Father Of the D C Drama The Washington Post Retrieved February 13 2013 Horak Jan Christopher 2014 Saul Bass Anatomy of Film Design Lexington The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 4720 8 OCLC 892799673 Evening News staff August 30 1961 Betty Lands One The Binghamton Evening News Retrieved July 11 2019 Anonymous May 15 2011 Investment in Future White s Talent Inland Valley Daily Bulletin Retrieved July 11 2019 Advise amp Consent 1962 IMDb retrieved 2021 01 15 U S Senate Advise and Consent www senate gov Retrieved 2021 01 15 Advise and Consent Review Variety December 31 1961 Crowther Bosley June 7 1962 Screen Advise and Consent Opens Movie on Washington Is at Two Theatres The New York Times Simon John 1982 Reverse Angle A Decade of American Film Crown Publishers Inc p 79 ISBN 9780517544716 Advise and Consent 1962 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 2020 10 10 WarnerBros com Warner Bros Preserved Projects Academy Film Archive Festival de Cannes Advise and Consent festival cannes com Retrieved 2009 02 22 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Advise amp Consent Advise amp Consent at IMDb Advise and Consent at the TCM Movie Database Synopsis at AllMovie Advise amp Consent at the American Film Institute Catalog Advise and Consent trailer on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Advise 26 Consent amp oldid 1168658540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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