Saskatoon StarPhoenix

The monster who operated in plain sight

Whatever it says now, Robbie Collin writes, Hollywood let Weinstein off the hook.

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It's usually frowned upon when critics give away a film's ending. But She Said, the new drama about the New York Times's investigat­ion into Harvey Weinstein, is surely an exception: we all know exactly where that particular chain of events wound up. In 2017, the newspaper's expose went out and the predatory producer subsequent­ly went down for 23 years, after being convicted of rape and sexual assault.

The story was so seismic that commentato­rs coined the phrase “the Weinstein effect” to describe the wave of allegation­s against powerful men in film and television that followed in its wake. The dramatizat­ion of the writing of said story, however, has been rather less world-shaking in impact. On its recent release in the United States and Canada, She Said took in just $2.2 million: not just well below industry expectatio­ns, but a sum the Hollywood Reporter described as one of the worst results in years for a studio film opening on more than 2,000 screens.

I wasn't personally taken with the film at all — with the exception of the scorching supporting performanc­es from Samantha Morton and Jennifer Ehle as two crucial sources, I found it dramatical­ly inert and often maddeningl­y smug. But among critics, at least, I'm in a clear minority, as its 87 per cent score on Rotten Tomatoes attests.

So why are cinemagoer­s so much less enthusiast­ic? A producer friend has a compelling theory: everyone who could possibly want to see a film about Weinstein's fall would already know the plot inside out, since every last detail was combed through in the media for years. In purely dramatic terms, its narrative is missing the naturally thrilleris­h twists and turns of the film on which it's clearly been modelled, the 1977 best picture nominee All the President's Men (which was also adapted from a book by the two journalist­s at its centre).

It also lacks the unfamiliar­ity of the 2016 best picture winner Spotlight, which revisited a 12-year-old scandal with which many viewers were only glancingly aware, particular­ly outside of the U.S. Weinstein was very recent global news — still is, in fact, with a second trial continuing in Los Angeles — so it's perhaps unsurprisi­ng that few of us are in the mood for a recap.

But perhaps there's another factor at play here, rooted in the mere fact of She Said's existence — or rather, its existence as an Oscar-chasing, studio-backed picture, overtly made in the style of the acclaimed newsroom dramas above. Essentiall­y, there's some moral sleight of hand going on: by manoeuvrin­g itself onto the opposite side of the story, Hollywood is quietly letting itself off the hook.

At the film's Los Angeles première last month, the closing onscreen captions detailing Weinstein's conviction­s were met with whoops and cheers.

But Los Angeles was the town that sustained Weinstein's career for four decades, and where his behaviour (as the New York Times itself reported), was relatively common knowledge.

In fact, Hollywood itself doesn't even appear in She Said as a location, let alone a visible entity of which Weinstein is a part. There are two or three glimpses of the Los Angeles skyline, usually at the start of scenes involving Ashley Judd, the first actress to go on the record about Weinstein, and who plays herself here. But otherwise the action is mostly confined to a strikingly unglitteri­ng New York, with Carey Mulligan's Megan Twohey and Zoe Kazan's Jodi Kantor making phone calls, having very measured conversati­ons with their editor (Patricia Clarkson) and visiting former Weinstein employees at their homes around the state.

As for Weinstein himself, he appears in just one sequence

— a fraught visit to the New

York Times office, in which he attempts to browbeat them out of running the story — and even then is seen only from behind. That decision feels revealing of the industry's continuing reluctance to reckon with Weinstein head on: here he's still the hidden bogeyman, rather than the monster operating in plain sight.

“If you want a happy ending,” Orson Welles once declared,

“that depends, of course, on where you stop your story.”

She Said concludes with a mouse pointer clicking on a button marked “publish”: the investigat­ion runs and the dragon is slain. It's a very convenient point for the business to declare the matter closed.

 ?? UNIVERSAL STUDIOS ?? She Said, starring Carey Mulligan, left, and Zoe Kazan, explores the work of New York Times journalist­s looking into the history and allegation­s of sexual abuse by Harvey Weinstein.
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS She Said, starring Carey Mulligan, left, and Zoe Kazan, explores the work of New York Times journalist­s looking into the history and allegation­s of sexual abuse by Harvey Weinstein.

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