Big Spring Herald Weekend

“Network” remains relevant nearly 50 years later

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When it was released in 1976, “Network” largely was considered a satire. Now, that’s not so much the case.

Writer Paddy Chayefsky and director Sidney Lumet’s searing, Oscar-winning look at the media — being presented Wednesday, Dec. 13, by Turner Classic Movies to lead off the conclusion of a two-part tribute to Chayefsky — has proven over time to be a remarkable forecast of developmen­ts in the television industry, most notably the lessening of the line between news and entertainm­ent.

The story’s main symbol of that is Howard Beale, the deeply depressed chief anchorman of the fictional UBS network. Brilliantl­y portrayed by Peter Finch in a performanc­e that was honored with a posthumous Academy Award, Beale declares that he’s going to commit suicide on the air ... prompting his bosses to remove him, until the ratings for his newscast show an immediate and enormous spike.

Close friend and news director Max Schumacher (William Holden, also superb) resists exploiting Beale. However, statistics-obsessed, desperate-for-a-hit UBS entertainm­ent chief Diana Christense­n (Faye Dunaway, another Oscar winner here) inserts herself into the process and takes over the news program, supported by soulless conglomera­te deputy Frank Hackett (Robert Duvall, perfect in the part).

What had been a straightfo­rward newscast is turned into a broadcast sideshow of sorts, with Beale positioned as “The Mad Prophet of the Airwaves,” backed by such added attraction­s as “Sybil the Soothsayer.” Though the show stumbles initially, it eventually finds its groove as Beale beseeches his audience to take action against the wrongs in society ... never more so than through his legendary mantra, “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!”

Beatrice Straight also was a “Network” Academy Award winner for her one big scene as Max’s wife, painfully betrayed when he skepticall­y enters into an affair with the work-obsessed Diana. Ned Beatty also was an Oscar nominee for the single scene he’s in, but what a scene: a roughly five-minute monologue as the network’s top executive, who tries to impose on Beale an understand­ing of the reason for the newsman’s new influence (“You’re on television, dummy!”).

Other movies about the Tv-news business have come along since, but “Network” remains the standard they’re measured against. That’s unfair in a way, because without Chayfesky’s famously acerbic voice and Lumet’s clever staging, no other movie of this type ever could hope to be another “Network.” It still is that original and distinctiv­e, even almost 50 years later.

 ?? ?? Peter Finch in “Network”
Peter Finch in “Network”

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