The Day

Stop the presses!

‘The Post’ romantical­ly rouses the ideals of the fourth estate

- By ANN HORNADAY

In1971, Katharine Graham had been running The Washington Post Company for eight years, having assumed control when her husband, Philip, took his own life in 1963. Painfully shy and prone to chronic self-doubt, she was an uneasy corporate leader and an unlikely feminist pioneer. Some were skeptical when, a few years earlier, she had hired Newsweek’s Washington bureau chief, Ben Bradlee, to become executive editor of the paper.

Although the two enjoyed a warm working relationsh­ip, it would be thrown into a crucible in the summer of ‘71 with the publicatio­n of the Pentagon Papers after the New York

Times, which first broke the story, had been ordered to cease doing so by a court injunction. That bravado that would send The Post into an epic legal and existentia­l battle just as Graham was preparing to take her family’s media company public — a deal that could easily be scuttled by her potential imprisonme­nt and a Supreme Court fight, not to mention the vindictive administra­tion of president Richard M. Nixon.

Those tense couple of weeks in June form the spine of “The Post,” a fleet, stirring, thoroughly entertaini­ng movie in which Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks play Graham and Bradlee with just the right balance of modesty, gusto and expertly deployed star power. Directed by Steven Spielberg from a script by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer, “The Post” canters along with crisp pacing and straightfo­rward, unfussy clarity, its two icons-playing-icons bolstered by a superb cast of supporting players.

Unlike the Oscar-winning “Spotlight,” which Singer also co-wrote, “The Post” isn’t a subdued ode to cinematic restraint and shoe-leather reporting. Rather it’s a purposeful­ly rousing homage to the ideals of journalist­ic independen­ce, government­al accountabi­lity and gender equality that isn’t averse to underlinin­g, italicizin­g and boldfacing why those principles are more important than ever.

All of those themes are embodied by Graham, portrayed by Streep in a finely tuned, continuall­y shifting performanc­e that begins with her character literally tripping over a chair in Washington’s tony F Street Club and ends with her walking through The Post’s printing plant as a far tougher, more confident, yet still aristocrat­ically remote figure. It’s Graham’s transforma­tion from

insecure daughter and wife to journalist in her own right that gives “The Post” its narrative drive and poignancy. The film’s most memorable moments belong to Streep’s sometimes awkwardly sympatheti­c character as she enters yet another board room populated by men or, later in the story, when she emerges from the Supreme Court to find a sea of upturned faces of young women there to cheer her on.

Hanks is just as sympatheti­c in his depiction of Bradlee, a performanc­e loomed over by Jason Robards’ Oscar-winning turn in the still-andalways-supreme “All the President’s Men,” about The Post’s Watergate era. If Hanks doesn’t bring Robards’ macho sex appeal to his depiction of Bradlee, he makes up for it in authentici­ty that feels lived-in and unforced.

Unbelievab­ly, this marks the first time that he and Streep have acted together in a film. They possess an easy, gently mocking chemistry that keeps the movie aloft, even when it threatens to devolve into a series of talky arguments or “But we can’t do that!” taffy-pulling sessions.

Propelled by alarm at the election of Donald Trump last year, Spielberg and his lead actors put “The Post” in front of cameras in record time, starting production in May of this year and bringing it to theaters in a scant six months. For that kind of turnaround, a director needs actors of near-perfect chops, and he has found them in an ensemble that includes Sarah Paulson as Bradlee’s then-wife, Tony, who has a small but moving scene during a wonderful sequence while a gaggle of journalist­s and lawyers take over their house for a day-long editing session.

David Cross, sporting a prodigious comb-over and stomach paunch, is nearly unrecogniz­able as Post managing editor Howard Simons. Bruce Greenwood is well cast as former defense secretary Robert McNamara, a close friend of Graham’s who, according to Graham’s Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir, helped fashion the newspaper’s argument for publishing. If the film has an MVP, it’s Bob Odenkirk, who does a splendid and quietly amusing job of playing The Post’s unsung Pentagon Papers hero, assistant managing editor Ben Bagdikian.

As Spielberg so often does, the director tacks on an extra ending for the benefit of the cheap seats that always come first in his calculatio­ns, subtlety be damned. And subtlety is damned, for eternity, in John Williams’ shamelessl­y manipulati­ve score.

Still, that instinctiv­e sense of what it takes to connect with a mass audience — so often snobbily dismissed as “middlebrow” — is precisely what distinguis­hes Spielberg as an artist, and it allows “The Post” to go for broke with such unselfcons­cious energy, feeling and, every so often, sheer beauty. And in fairness, sometimes what seems like overkill is backed up by the facts: If Bradlee’s young daughter Marina setting up a lemonade stand at a crucial juncture strikes some filmgoers as folksy to a fault, they should know that it really happened that way.

It’s up to individual viewers to decide the present-day relevance of a story in which a touchy, overweenin­g president can be heard going after a newspaper he deems a personal enemy — “The Post” includes snippets from the actual Nixon tapes — or in which a working woman encounters endless, patronizin­g slights and condescens­ion, only to come into her own with admirable, self-effacing resolve. But few will be immune to the romance that lies at the center of a movie that takes as much delight in pneumatic tubes, linotype machines and telexes trailing like bridal veils as it does in temperamen­tal opposites finding common purpose in the institutio­n to which they’re both truly, madly and deeply devoted.

“The Post” works on many levels, from polemic and thinly veiled cautionary tale to fun period piece and rip-roaring newspaper yarn. But at its most gratifying, it’s a love story, from the lede to the kicker.

 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX ?? Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks), in foreground, confers with members of the newspaper’s staff, played by, from left, David Cross, John Rue, Bob Odenkirk, Jessie Mueller and Philip Casnoff, in “The Post.”
NIKO TAVERNISE, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks), in foreground, confers with members of the newspaper’s staff, played by, from left, David Cross, John Rue, Bob Odenkirk, Jessie Mueller and Philip Casnoff, in “The Post.”

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