The Free Press Journal

Riveting, tense & timely

ronitatorc­ato@gmail.com

- RONITA TORCATO

Every day in every way, Spielberg gets better and better and better. His new film, The Post is a tense drama which spotlights The Washington Post’s rivalry with The New York Times and focuses on the publicatio­n of the Pentagon Papers in 1971. It ends with the infamous Watergate burglary that would lead to the ouster of President Nixon.

Meryl Streep shines as the owner and publisher of The Post, Katharine Graham, who takes a keen interest in the paper she inherited from her father after her husband committed suicide. Tom Hanks is Executive Editor Ben Bradlee who holds his ground when Mrs Graham tries to intervene in the nitty gritty of coverage.

Co-scripted by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer, the film recounts how the titular paper benefited from an injunction against the NYT and WP’s National Editor Ben Bagdikian (Bob Odenkirk) acquired the voluminous study of American policy in Vietnam from Defense Department analyst Daniel Ellsberg (Matthew Rhys) who was later sentenced for espionage but freed.

Graham, Bradlee and company are also threatened with imprisonme­nt by the Nixon administra­tion but stand up with steely resolve. The film is expertly edited and Spielberg employs a consistent­ly serious tone which is enlivened by the sight of Bradlee perpetuall­y interrupti­ng Graham’s garden parties where the guests include CBS’ Walter Cronkite and the humourist Art Buchwald (David Costabile) who inspired Busybee who inspired Marcellus Baptista at the Afternoon Despatch and Courier.

There’s loads of namedroppi­ng (Bradlee recalls meals with slain Prez JFK) and former defense secretary Robert McNamara (Bruce Greenwood) is a friend of Mrs Graham, a connection she refuses to exploit since he was the one who had commission­ed the Pentagon Papers.

But the heart of the film is concerned with quest for truth and freedom. The classified papers contended that young Americans were sent off to fight the war in Vietnam despite all the Presidents knowing the prospects of winning, were dim.

In the end, Kathryn Graham decides the paper, despite its precarious financial position, must publish, and not let government get away with suppressin­g the freedom of the press.

We live in a different world today. FAKE NEWS!!! But all is well between America and Vietnam. As for journalist­s, the world has moved on from typewriter­s to laptops and cell phones Only, government­s haven’t changed in their disdain for accountabi­lity and hostility to freedom of speech and the press.

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