Tuesday, January 30, 2018
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'The Post:' A Once and Future America
Tom Hanks as Ben Bradlee and Meryl Streep as Katharine Graham in 'The Post' |
To count the number of films that
have thrilled me more than The Post,
I wouldn’t need more than one hand.
This intimate epic spotlighting
the exposure of the Pentagon Papers features Tom Hanks shedding his gentleness
to play likeable tough guy Ben Bradlee, editor of the Washington Post. He
watches in admiration as publisher Katharine Graham (Meryl Streep) transforms
herself from an uncertain heiress to a courageous American journalist whose
decision to publish helped end the U.S. government’s criminal waste of
thousands of lives in the Vietnam War.
The moving drama — witty, urgent, humane
— is deftly directed by Steven Spielberg, and who but John Williams could
deliver such a suspenseful and heroic score.
The film, which bookends Alan J. Pakula’s
1976 film All the President’s Men
quite deliberately, has a strong and well-handled feminist vibe too, as all
these all-knowing old white guys try to bully the one tentative woman on whom
the fate of the nation now depends.
Bart and I had a frisson when we
unexpectedly saw our friend Ben Livingston suddenly appear on screen in a key
dramatic scene.
The audience was mostly people of
a certain age, probably longing for a time when the American press could save
this nation from itself. A time long gone.
But if that isn’t the once and
future America up there on screen, it should be.
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