The Best Movies of 1. Rank. Hover over title or click blue text for more information. Unforgiven. 19. 92. Eastwood, Clint. USABDThe Player.
Altman, Robert. USABDThe Crying Game. Jordan, Neil. UK / Japan. DReservoir Dogs. 19. Tarantino, Quentin. USABDHowards End. Ivory, James. UK / Japan.
An Independent Life (1992) Release Info. Jump to: Release Dates (7) . France: 30 September 1992. An Independent Life (1992) information, ranked #2556 by Films101, directed by Vitali Kanevski, starring Pavel Nazarov, Dinara Drukarova, Toshihiro Vatanabe. This is the second installment of a three-part series of autobiographical films about the director's life. The first, which won various awards for its maker, was. Learn and talk about An Independent Life, and check out. An Independent Life (1992) The Puppetmaster (1993) Raining Stones (1993).
This is the second instalment of a three-part series of autobiographical films about the director's life. Samostoyatelnaya zhizn aka An Independent Life (1992).
BDMalcolm X1. 99. Lee, Spike. USABDOne False Move. Franklin, Carl. USADThe Story of Qiu Ju. Zhang, Yimou. China / Hong Kong. DGlengarry Glen Ross. Foley, James. USABDSAladdin.
Clements, Ron / Musker, John. USABDSStrictly Ballroom. Luhrmann, Baz. Australia.
Pierce County Legislators. An Independent Life (1992) Subtitles. Find An Independent Life subtitles by selecting the correct language for your Movie release. IT SHOULD have been the marketing coup of 1992. The Independent Books; Puzzles; indy100; Apps. Great Financial Disasters of Our Time: The Hoover.
BYHusbands and Wives. Allen, Woody. USAYThe Last of the Mohicans. Mann, Michael. USABDHard Boiled. Woo, John. Hong Kong. DSMan Bites Dog. 19.
United States presidential election, 1. United States presidential election, 1. Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Bush/Quayle (1.
Blue denotes those won by Clinton/Gore (3. D. C.). Numbers indicate electoral votes allotted to the winner of each state. The United States presidential election of 1. It was held on Tuesday, November 3, 1.
There were three major candidates: Incumbent Republican. President. George H. Bush; Democratic.
Arkansas Governor. Bill Clinton, and independent Texas businessman Ross Perot. Bush had alienated much of his conservative base by breaking his 1. The economywas in recession and Bush's perceived greatest strength, foreign policy, was regarded as much less important following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the relatively peaceful climate in the Middle East after the defeat of Iraq in the Gulf War. Clinton won a plurality in the popular vote, and a wide Electoral College margin. The election was a significant realigning election after three consecutive Republican landslides. As of 2. 01. 6, this is the most recent election in which an incumbent president was unseated, the last one having been the 1.
Ronald Reagan unseated then- incumbent Jimmy Carter. Perot's campaign took 1. Maine and Utah. This was noted for being the strongest vote share of a third- party candidate since 1. Nominations. Buchanan's best showing was in the New Hampshire primary on February 1. President Bush won 7. Buchanan won 2,8. David Duke, a former Republican Louisiana state representative and Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan won 1.
Just over 1. 00,0. H. Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle easily won renomination by the Republican Party.
However, the success of the conservative opposition forced the moderate Bush to move further to the right than in the previous election, and to incorporate many socially conservative planks in the party platform. Bush allowed Buchanan to give the keynote address at the Republican National Convention in Houston, Texas, and his culture war speech alienated many moderates.
With intense pressure on the Buchanan delegates to relent, the tally for president went as follows: Vice President Dan Quayle was renominated by voice vote. Democratic Party nomination. Bush's approval ratings were 8. His re- election was considered very likely. As a result, several high- profile candidates, such as Mario Cuomo, refused to seek the Democratic nomination. In addition, Senator Al Gore refused to seek the nomination due to the fact his son was struck by a car and was undergoing extensive surgery as well as physical therapy.
However, Tom Harkin, Paul Tsongas, Jerry Brown, Bob Kerrey, Douglas Wilder and Bill Clinton chose to run as candidates. U. S. Senator Tom Harkin (Iowa) ran as a populist liberal with labor union support. Senator Paul Tsongas (Massachusetts) highlighted his political independence and fiscal conservatism. Former California Governor Jerry Brown, who had run for the Democratic nomination in 1. Governor, declared a significant reform agenda, including Congressional term limits, campaign finance reform, and the adoption of a flat income tax. Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey was an attractive candidate based on his business and military background, but made several gaffes on the campaign trail. Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton positioned himself as a centrist, or New Democrat.
He was still relatively unknown nationally before the primary season. That quickly changed however, when a woman named Gennifer Flowers appeared in the press to reveal allegations of an affair. Clinton rebutted the story by appearing on 6. Minutes with his wife, Hillary Clinton.
The primary season began with U. S. Senator Tom Harkin winning his native Iowa as expected. Paul Tsongas of Massachusetts won the New Hampshire primary on February 1. Clinton's second- place finish, helped by his speech labeling himself . Jerry Brown won the Maine caucus and Bob Kerrey won South Dakota. Clinton won his first primary in Georgia. Tsongas won the Utah and Maryland primaries and a caucus in Washington.
Harkin won caucuses in Idaho and Minnesota while Jerry Brown won Colorado. Bob Kerrey dropped out two days later. Clinton won the South Carolina and Wyoming primaries and Tsongas won Arizona. Jerry Brown won the Nevada caucus. Clinton swept nearly all of the Super Tuesday primaries on March 1.
Clinton won the Michigan and Illinois primaries. Tsongas dropped out after finishing 3rd in Michigan.
Jerry Brown, however, began to pick up steam, aided by using a 1. Brown scored surprising wins in Connecticut, Vermont and Alaska. As the race moved to the primaries in New York and Wisconsin, Brown had taken the lead in polls in both states. Then he made a serious gaffe by announcing to an audience of New York City's Jewish community that, if nominated, he would consider Reverend Jesse Jackson as a Vice Presidential candidate. Clinton won dramatically in New York (4. Clinton then proceeded to win a long streak of primaries leading up to Jerry Brown's home state of California. Clinton won this primary 4.
The convention met in New York, New York, and the official tally was: Clinton chose U. S. Senator. Al Gore (D- Tennessee) to be his running mate on July 9, 1.
Choosing fellow Southerner Gore went against the popular strategy of balancing a Southern candidate with a Northern partner. Gore did serve to balance the ticket in other ways, as he was perceived as strong on family values and environmental issues, while Clinton was not. His electoral performance in each of those states led to those parties being given ballot- qualified status. The public's concern about the federal budget deficit and fears of professional politicians allowed the independent candidacy of billionaire Texan Ross Perot to explode on the scene in dramatic fashion.
His volunteers succeeded in collecting enough signatures to get his name on the ballot in all 5. In June, Perot led the national public opinion polls with support from 3. Bush and 2. 5% for Clinton).
He compounded this damage by eventually claiming, without evidence, that his withdrawal was due to Republican operatives attempting to disrupt his daughter's wedding. There, the Libertarian Party nominated Andre Marrou, former Alaska. State Representative and the Party's 1. President. Nancy Lord was his running mate.
Marrou and Lord drew 2. New Alliance Party nomination. Those states with a lighter shade are states in which she was an official write- in candidate. New Alliance candidate: Lenora Fulani, who was the 1. New Alliance Party, received a second consecutive nomination from the Party in 1.
Unlike in 1. 98. 8, Fulani failed to gain ballot access in every state, deciding to concentrate some of that campaign funding towards exposure of her candidacy and the Party to the national public. Fulani also sought the endorsement of the Peace and Freedom Party of California, but despite winning a majority in that party's primary, she would lose the nomination to Ronald Daniels, the former Director the National Rainbow Coalition.
Rather than pursuing a ballot space of her own, Fulani would endorse Daniels's candidacy in California. Fulani and her running mate Maria Elizabeth Munoz received 7. Natural Law Party nomination. Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write- in candidate. Natural Law candidate: The newly formed Natural Law Party nominated scientist and researcher John Hagelin for President and Mike Tompkins for Vice President.
The Natural Law Party had been founded in 1. Hagelin and 1. 2 others who felt that governmental problems could be solved more effectively by following . During this and future campaigns, Hagelin favored abortion rights without public financing, campaign finance law reform, improved gun control, a flat tax, the eradication of PACs, a ban on soft money contributions, and school vouchers. The party's first presidential ticket appeared on the ballot in 2. U. S. Taxpayers' Party nomination.
Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write- in candidate. U. S. Taxpayers' candidates: The U. S. Taxpayers Party ran its first presidential ticket in 1. Initially Howard Phillips had hoped to successfully entice a prominent conservative politician, such as the former Senator Gordon J. Humphrey of New Hampshire, or even Patrick Buchanan who at the time had only been mulling over running against President Bush (he would officially declare in December of '9. No one however announced their intention to seek the Taxpayers Party nomination, Buchanan himself in the end endorsing President Bush at the Republican National Convention in Houston. Phillips had been unofficially nominated earlier in the year so as to allow the Party to be able to properly seek ballot access, a temporary post that was made permanent in September, with Phillips and Albion Knight being named the official presidential ticket of the party.
Phillips and Knight drew 4. Populist Party Nomination. Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write- in candidate.
Populist candidate: Former United States Army. Special Forces officer and Vietnam veteran.
Bo Gritz was the nominee of the Populist Party, facing virtually no opposition. Under the campaign slogan . During the campaign, Gritz openly proclaimed the United States to be a . During his campaign, part of Gritz's standard stump speech was an idea to pay off the National debt by minting a coin at the Treasury and sending it to the Federal Reserve. This predates the 2. Trillion dollar coin concept. During August 1. 99.
Gritz attracted national attention as mediator during the government standoff with Randy Weaver at Ruby Ridge, Idaho. He received 1. 06,1. In two states he had a respectable showing for a minor third party candidate: Utah, where he received 3. Idaho, where he received 2. In some counties, his support topped 1.
Franklin County, Idaho, was only a few votes away from pushing Bill Clinton into fourth place in the county. Lyndon La. Rouche's candidacy.