The Post **** / *****
Directed by: Steven Spielberg.
Written by: Liz Hannah and Josh Singer.
Starring: Meryl Streep (Kay Graham),
Tom Hanks (Ben Bradlee), Sarah Paulson (Tony Bradlee), Bob Odenkirk (Ben
Bagdikian), Tracy Letts (Fritz Beebe), Bradley Whitford (Arthur Parsons), Bruce
Greenwood (Robert McNamara), Matthew Rhys (Daniel Ellsberg), Alison Brie (Lally
Graham), Carrie Coon (Meg Greenfield), Jesse Plemons (Roger Clark), David Cross
(Howard Simons), Zach Woods (Anthony Essaye), Pat Healy (Phil Geyelin), Michael
Stuhlbarg (Abe Rosenthal).
The
Post is a good example of why Steven Spielberg is arguably the most successful
filmmaker in history – he makes everything he does look effortless. The Post is
a film that could very well get mired in prestige movie cliché, and there are
times when it seems like it’s about to slip down that slope and get there – and
every time Spielberg and company pull it out. The movie moves at a brisk pace
for not quite two hours, and makes exciting a story that is basically people in
rooms talking, based on a true story in which we all already know the result.
Yes, the screenplay by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer occasionally strains for
contemporary resonance a little too much – the film wants you to think about current President Donald Trump as much as
the President at the time in the movie, Richard Nixon, and isn’t overly subtle
about it. But it’s all wrapped up in such an entertaining package, you hardly
care.
The
film is about the Pentagon Papers – those Top Secret documents, that Daniel
Ellsberg smuggled out to try and get to the public so they could know the truth
about the Vietnam War – essentially, that the government knew in 1965 the war
was unwinnable, but they kept right on sending troops to fight and die anyway
for years, because no one wanted to be at the helm when they had to admit
America lost a war. The New York Times started publishing stories based on
these papers, and then were barred by a court awaiting final decision. This
movie is about The Washington Post – who get their hands on the same papers,
after the Times is barred, and has to decide whether or not to publish. Doing
so could result in the Washington Post being shut down, and criminal charges
for those involved.
The
movie focuses on two characters. The first Kay Graham (Meryl Streep), the
publisher of the Washington Post, who has had to take the job over after her
husband’s suicide, and feels tremendous weight to keep the paper her father
founded running. The second is Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks), the now infamous Editor
of the Post, whose goal is to publish, to uphold the First Amendment, and keep
Nixon’s feet to the fire. Between them is an army of reports and lawyers and
advisers, pushing and pulling them in different directions.
This
is Streep’s best performance in years. I’ve been struck over the years that
although Streep is undeniably one of the greatest actresses of all time, she
hasn’t always been in great films, or worked with great directors. Part of this
is undeniably the sexist nature of Hollywood – the biggest directors are men,
who make films about men, so Streep is stuck either being a supporting player
to inferior men, or the lead in somewhat lesser films. Part of it is Streep
though – she loves to do these larger than life roles – and sometimes that
results in her sucking all the air of a film for herself – the movie becomes
about the Streep performance more than the film itself. Here, she gives a
quieter, more nuanced performance – as a woman who is unsure of herself, in
large part, because she is surrounded by men, all of whom think they clearly
know better than she does how to run her business. She has to trust her own
judgment when nobody else does. She’s a strong woman, no less so because of the
vulnerability she brings to the character.
Hanks
isn’t quite as good as Bradlee – but he’s close. Normally Hanks plays good guys
– and Ben Bradlee is one too – although he’s also more of a stubborn asshole
than Hanks normally plays (the fact that he’s right doesn’t make him less of an
asshole). There aren’t as many notes for Hanks to play as Streep gets – and he doesn’t
come close to topping Jason Robards in All the President’s Men in terms of the
ultimate Bradlee performance – but it’s more solid work from Hanks, who like
his director here, specializes in making things look effortless. The two are
supported by a great cast – Bob Odenkirk, David Cross (Mr. Show reunion!),
Tracy Letts, Carrie Coon, Matthew Rhys, Jesse Plemons, Bradley Whitford, and on
and on – there isn’t a weak performance in the cast. My favorite of these small
roles may just be Sarah Paulson – who for much of the film looks like she is
not going to get to do anything except be Bradlee’s supportive wife, who gets
to make sandwiches when the reports come to her home – and isn’t that a waste
to get someone of Paulson’s talent to do that. But then she delivers a short
monologue to Bradlee that makes him see Graham in a different light – and really,
all women at the time. No, it’s not Michael Stuhlbarg in Call Me By Your Name –
but it justifies the casting of the great Paulson.
Yes,
the movie can feel too on the nose at times – the last few scenes are way too
heavy handed, and the few depictions of protests on the streets feel like we’re
watching narcs in hippie costumes, not legitimate protests. But The Post is the
type of Hollywood movie that no one seems to remember how to make anymore.
Spielberg, Streep and Hanks do though – and they pull off a really excellent,
entertaining piece of mainstream cinema for adults. That’s one of the rarest
things in Hollywood these days.
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