I don't know if I've ever looked at journalists as heroes, but this movie paints these investigative journalists at the Boston Globe as heroic figures. It makes you want to pursue a career in journalism to uncover all the dirt that our most important institutions are hiding. That's not to say that the movie glamorizes journalism, because it doesn't. It is gritty work and these are average people that do not have much going on in their lives outside of their careers. This movie is so good because it doesn't try to sugar coat it. This is difficult, demoralizing, alienating, soul-searching work. And as the story (very) slowly unfolds at a controlled pace, the audience comes to the same discoveries of disbelief that the characters do.
Michael Keaton has been getting all the buzz because he's fresh off of Birdman, but I think Mark Ruffalo gives the best performance amid a phenomenal ensemble cast. He always does. Rachel McAdams, too, does a standout job following some disappointing work in True Detective. And John Slattery looks markedly different outside of a suit, but the big office still suits him well. From inside the Boston Globe, we get the perspective of the journalists. We hear the victims' stories through the ears of the interviewers, and we hardly see any of the perpetrators. They are unseen villains. The visible antagonist is the community itself and I think that is what makes the story so devastatingly interesting, how ingrained the Catholic Church is in Boston society.
Michael Keaton has been getting all the buzz because he's fresh off of Birdman, but I think Mark Ruffalo gives the best performance amid a phenomenal ensemble cast. He always does. Rachel McAdams, too, does a standout job following some disappointing work in True Detective. And John Slattery looks markedly different outside of a suit, but the big office still suits him well. From inside the Boston Globe, we get the perspective of the journalists. We hear the victims' stories through the ears of the interviewers, and we hardly see any of the perpetrators. They are unseen villains. The visible antagonist is the community itself and I think that is what makes the story so devastatingly interesting, how ingrained the Catholic Church is in Boston society.
No comments:
Post a Comment