One of the leaders of this stand was renowned journalist
Edward R Murrow (David Straithairn). Famous for his broadcasts from London
during the Blitz, Murrow hosted an investigative journalist programme See It
Now. A passionate believer in the power of television to educate and
inform, Murrow and his producer Fred Friendly (George Clooney) are appalled
when Air Force officer Milo Radulovich is condemned to be discharged, based on members
of his family being communists and a sealed envelope of charges he was never
allowed to see. Despite the worries of network CBS, Murrow, Friendly and their
team run an episode of the show that exposes McCarthyism and its injustice, the
first of several investigating McCarthy. But what price will they pay?
Clooney’s well-made, heartfelt film, is an impeccably
liberal piece of film-making that is a very sincere tribute to the potential of
television to be more than just an idiot’s lantern. Clooney frames the film
with Murrow accepting a lifetime achievement award in 1958: he uses the
opportunity to make a speech rebuking the room full of executives and
journalists for squandering the potential of television to inform rather than
just entertain. Murrow would of course be horrified by what TV became. Good
Night, and Good Luck is a rose-tinted view of television journalism at its
pioneering best: just as the end result of See It Now being gutted by cuts
is a realistic look at where the scales will fall if entertainment and money
are balanced with principles and education.
Clooney’s father was a TV journalist, while Clooney himself
majored in journalism. The cut-and-thrust of the newsroom is as intrinsic to
him, as is a desire to investigate and inform as part of a healthy political debate.
Good Night, and Good Luck captures the mood of a newsroom with a
convincing confidence. Journalists debate the fine point of stories, editors
rush to assemble films and executives balance the pros and cons. It’s all shot
in a beautiful monochrome, that exquisitely captures the haze of cigarette
smoke all this takes place in. It’s a shot with a handheld urgency, sharply
cut, that puts us into this world of cut-and-thrust media decisions.
And it makes clear what TV news can be. Not agenda led, but
facts led. Not kotowing to power, but challenging it to justify itself. Looking
into matters that are important, not sensational. Wanting to inform people and
expand their understanding, rather than pander to the lowest common
denominator. Murrow’s shows are scrupulously fact-checked, and allow full
rebuttal from their subject. He comes at story not with a pre-supposed
position, but based on where the facts and his editorial judgement leads him.
It all takes place in a TV set that’s really striking in its
humbleness, compared to the operatic news sets we see today. The 1950s studio
is small, cramped and simple – and by contrast the ideas are large, expansive
and complex. Murrow’s set is little more than a chair with a TV monitor. His
producer Fred Friendly, literally sits at his feet to hand him notes and cue
him in with announcements and VT. The See It Now set contrasts vividly
with the more grandiose sets for Murrow’s other show, a series of puff piece
interviews with popular stars like Liberace. (While Murrow learns his scripts
by heart for See it Now, he professionally reads through a series of cue
cards for these for-the-money interviews).
Murrow and Friendly also won’t compromise. They defend their
right to make the show to CBS President William Paley (a brilliant performance
from Frank Langella), who prides himself on no direct intervention on the news
but pushes for a less controversial line. The entire team is consulted on every
issue. The newsroom is a place where our better angels can come out.
But it’s still happening in an America where people are
careful about what they say and do. A subplot concerns reporters played by
Robert Downey Jnr and Patricia Clarkson: secretly married – contrary to CBS
policy – like those suffering from McCarthyism, they must live a lie in order
to protect what they have. See It Now is in danger of criticism,
cancellation and attack. Another CBS anchor, Don Hollenbeck – perfectly played
by Ray Wise (and few actors are better at suppressed desperation than Wise) –
is dealing with constant media persecution for his perceived communist
sympathy. Murrow and Friendly are not perfect: they sometimes dodge the fights
they can’t win and Murrow in particular shrugs off or ignores Hollenbeck’s concerns
with tragic results.
But, as Clooney makes clear, the good outweighs all the
rest. As Murrow, David Straithairn (Oscar-nominated) has never been better. He
perfectly captures Murrow’s mannerisms, but mixes it with wonderful measure of honesty
and decency, mixed with a degree of pride and self-righteous certainty. He
dominates the film (with Clooney as a generous foil) and carries much of the
film’s liberal message that smart, intelligent, dedicated men can change the
world.
Good Night, and Good Luck might be the most soft-left
liberal film made in Hollywood in the last fifteen years. But it is a fine
example of film-making craft and the earnest honestness with which it is made
in its own way inspiring. It’s Clooney’s finest film and it’s grounded in his
strengths: fine actors and writing carrying a sincerely told message.
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