Hillary Clinton said that she experienced Hwan's moments during interviews to prepare the new documentary about her life as well as while watching it after its preparation.

She also felt those moments when she suddenly lost the 2016 US presidential election and after positions in which she adopted a divisive approach during her career over 50 years.

The four-part movie "Hillary", which will start showing on Hulu TV on the sixth of March, records her life from her upbringing in Chicago to her enrollment in Yale College of Law to her acquisition of the status of first lady and her membership in the Senate and her assumption of the post of Secretary of State and her failed attempt to become the first female head of state United.

The film also examines how Hillary's rise was associated with her campaign to achieve equality between men and women.

Hillary participated in 35-hour interviews conducted by cinematographer Nanette Birsten, who recorded her behind-the-scenes footage during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Both said that there were no prohibitions in discussing any topic. Hillary, 72, discussed everything from her loss to Donald Trump to her husband's betrayal of her, which caused his 1998 trial to remove him, even if he survived the isolation.

The film was also recorded with Bill Clinton in preparation for the film.

"There were a lot of moments of humiliation," Hillary said Friday to the TV Critics Association after an introductory film.

"One of them was admitting that I often, in my view, was misrepresented and misunderstood, and that I have to take a lot of responsibility for that."

"I really want to ignore it, erase it, and not think about it," she said of such moments.

She said she was often surprised by the reactions to her comments, while she felt that those statements were "not out of the ordinary".

While watching the movie, she said that there were times she wished she could better convey her ideas.

The film will be shown at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah later this month, and will also be shown at the Berlin Film Festival in February.

"I wanted people to understand that this was an incredibly controversial historical figure," Peersstein said.