Four stars. Rated PG-13, and too harshly, for profanity and brief war violence
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 1.19.18
Although Steven Spielberg’s riveting
new film gets most of its dramatic heft from the democracy-threatening events
that swirled around the release of the Pentagon Papers in June of 1971, we’re
most emotionally involved with the plight of Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham: at the time, the only
woman in a position of power at a major national newspaper.
As the film begins, and as we’re
introduced to Graham via Meryl Streep’s thoroughly engaging performance, the
poor woman is hopelessly — helplessly — out of her depth.
We spend almost the entire film
waiting for her epiphany, and for the “Meryl Streep moment” when the actress —
Graham finally having found her spine — verbally eviscerates one of her
patronizing male colleagues.
It’s a long wait ... and well
worth the anticipation.
The Post isn’t opportune merely as a reminder — at a
time when the White House is occupied by an infantile gadfly who defends his
lies by screaming “Fake news!” — of the crucial role played by our Fourth
Estate. Scripters Liz Hannah and Josh Singer couldn’t have known, as their film
was being shaped, that its parallel focus on Graham would resonate so well at a
moment when American women have risen en
masse to challenge male hegemony.
The resulting drama serves both
mindsets, while also taking its place alongside top-drawer journalism dramas
such as All the President’s Men and Spotlight (the latter having brought Singer
— also a veteran of TV’s West Wing —
an Academy Award).
The sequence of events taking
place during just a few days in the early summer of 1971 almost defy
credibility. The film opens on a sidebar issue, as Graham prepares for a
presentation to The Washington Post
Company board of directors, in anticipation of raising badly needed capital via
a stock offering when the paper goes public, on June 15.
Streep’s Graham is nervous and
flustered, despite having solid notes prepared with the assistance of longtime
friend and confidant Fritz Beebe (Tracy Letts, nicely understated), a former
Wall Street lawyer and chairman of the board. Even before knowing anything
about this woman, we feel for her; Streep makes her anxiety palpable.
We therefore groan inwardly, when
— her moment having come — she’s too tongue-tied even to speak, and her
carefully prepared details are introduced by Fritz.
This is before Graham learns, a
few days later, that the stock offering could be scuttled by her paper’s
growing involvement in the nation-shattering spat between Richard Nixon and The New York Times: the first time, in
the history of the republic, that a U.S. president has attempted to silence a
national newspaper.