☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Spotlight
(2015) – T. McCarthy
Investigative journalism can be exciting
-- and Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, and Michael Keaton, among others, help to
make it so. Taking a page from All the
President’s Men (1976), director Tom McCarthy tells us the story of the Boston
Globe’s Pulitzer Prize winning exposure of the Catholic Church’s cover-up of an
epidemic of paedophile priests. The
story is still reverberating today and around the world. Despite the absorbing nature of the hunt for
clues, evidence, or a smoking gun, at its heart this is a profoundly depressing
story. After all, it is child sexual
abuse we are talking about. Howard
Shore’s music is suitably downbeat and ruminative. The actors temper their zeal with
gravity. Yet, is the issue really given
enough of a serious treatment? Viewers may
be able to focus on the newspaper room without having to think too carefully or
clearly about abuse, even though we hear victims describe their experiences and
are told that many have committed suicide or engaged in self-defeating
behaviour. Not that I’d want to watch a
more harrowing version of this – so perhaps the journalistic thriller genre is
the best way to bring the issues into the public eye (if they weren’t
already). McCarthy and Josh Singer won
the Oscar for their screenplay, which is all talk but engaging and not
sensationalistic, and of course the film won the Best Picture Oscar as well.
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