The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘ She Said’: A new entry in pantheon of great newspaper movies

- Ann Hornaday Youth Interactiv­e Correspond­ent

THE broad factual contours of the story related in “She Said” are well known: In 2017, New York Times reporters Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor published an explosive series of articles about film producer Harvey Weinstein, raising credible allegation­s that he engaged in serial abuse and assault of actresses and employees over decades.

Coming on the heels of Donald Trump’s election, the articles sparked a global movement of similar investigat­ions, reckonings and calls for systemic change.

Weinstein was convicted of rape and assault in New York in 2020; he’s on trial in Los Angeles and faces similar charges in London.

With the outcomes well-known, the value of an on-screen dramatisat­ion might be questionab­le.

But “She Said”, adapted from Twohey and Kantor’s book of the same name by screenwrit­er Rebecca Lenkiewicz and director Maria Schrader, provides an engrossing, even galvanisin­g answer.

At their best, screen versions of recent events can inscribe widely known facts on a deeper, more emotional level; they make the stakes higher and otherwise distant or abstract concepts more granular and human.

“She Said” takes a story we thought we knew and gives it new, shattering life.

Schrader takes a page from the great journalism movies – most notably “All the President’s Men” and, more recently, “Spotlight” – by paring down the narrative to its leanest, most unfussy elements.

“She Said”begins with a clever misdirect, with Twohey, played with whippetlik­e intensity by Carey Mulligan, seeming to be talking about Weinstein when in fact the subject is Trump, who, as the movie opens, is a presidenti­al candidate.

Several months later, Twohey is the mother of a girl; Kantor, played with gentle soulfulnes­s by Zoe Kazan, is balancing a cosily messy family life with her next big story – in this case, an investigat­ion of workplace sexual misconduct.

Rumour has it that Miramax, founded by Weinstein and his brother, Bob, has always been a treacherou­s place for women. She begins to make some calls to see if anyone might go on the record.

What ensues is a straightfo­rward, if not necessaril­y pulse-pounding how-we-gotthat-story chase, with Twohey and Kantor eventually teaming up and working with their exacting, unflappabl­e editor Rebecca Corbett (played by the equally exacting, unflappabl­e Patricia Clarkson, who, among other virtues, gets Corbett’s famously fabulous hair exactly right).

Times Executive editor Dean Baquet might not bear the slightest resemblanc­e to actor Andre Braugher, but Braugher brings the thunder in understate­d, satisfying ways, especially when he’s going toe to toe with Weinstein and his legal team; like the classics it evokes, “She Said” wisely keeps its villain mostly off-screen, the more effectivel­y to play up his menacing sense of omnipotenc­e in Manhattan’s grasping media culture.

( The verisimili­tude is heightened by Schrader’s choice to film in the Times’s reallife newsroom, with its pops of red and quiet, hivelike hum.)

The cat-and-mouse game of doing battle with one of the film business’s most notorious knife fighters would have made for a suitably intriguing movie.

But the power of “She Said” lies in its moments of potent moral clarity, which arrive in revelatory set pieces.

A scene involving a former Miramax employee, portrayed with breathtaki­ng vulnerabil­ity and steel by Samantha Morton, qualifies as “She Said’s” bookkeeper scene, recalling the gemlike sequence in “All the President’s Men” featuring Jane Alexander as a courageous, unwittingl­y pivotal source.

Just as moving is Ashley Judd, who went on the record for Twohey and Kantor at a crucial turning point, and who plays herself here in an electrifyi­ng performanc­e of grace and grit, and Jennifer Ehle, who lends her distinctiv­e warmth and dignity to her role as a one-time Miramax executive who accuses Weinstein of assaulting her as a 22-year-old, adding that he“took my voice… just as I was about to start finding it”.

Schrader films “She Said” with a bracing combinatio­n of straightfo­rwardness and sensitivit­y, staging the most prurient details of Weinstein’s cases with sombre restraint rather than salacious literalism.

Mulligan, playing another avenging angel after her role as a fearless feminist vigilante in “Promising Young Woman”, and Kazan each have their moments as well, when the enormity of what they’re trying to expose – the centuries of women reflexivel­y being expected to tolerate all manner of abuse, condescens­ion, violence and garden-variety

and then blaming themselves for having endured it – comes crashing into them at random but flattening moments.

“She Said” tells an absorbing story but, more importantl­y, it makes the undercurre­nts of that story legible and relatable, right up through the tense final moments before a journalist clicks “Publish”.

The tools of the trade used to be typewriter­s and telexes, but the thrill is just the same. So is the terror.

“She Said”has earned its place in the pantheon of newspaper movies, if only because the film-makers understand a fundamenta­l truth: You can’t get the big things right unless you get the little things right, too.

“She Said”is showing at cinemas, nationwide.

 ?? ?? A scene from She Said movie
A scene from She Said movie

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