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A good movie

Posted : 3 months, 4 weeks ago on 11 January 2024 09:40

I wasn’t really sure what to expect from this flick but since there was a stellar cast involved, I was quite eager to check it out. To be honest, even though I have obviously heard of Fox News, I have actually never watched it, I’m not even sure if I have access to his channel. Anyway, the reputation of Fox News in Europe might be even worse than it is in the US. On top of that, even though I had heard of some of the names involved before, I have to admit I didn’t know most of them at all and, as a result, I did struggle to get a good grip on the whole thing. Still, it was a really interesting story and, while watching this movie, I was rather surprised that they never mentioned the #MeToo campaign but it was because Roger Ailes got fired following the sexual harassment cases about a year before the Weinstein scandal actually started. Jay Roach also managed to get such a strong cast (Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, Margot Robbie, John Lithgow, Kate McKinnon and many more) and they all gave some really solid performances. Still, I found out later on that the character played by Margot Robbie was actually fictional and it was, in my opinion, a rather bewildering artistical choice. I mean, most of the people involved were real and it felt weird and rather awkward that the only victim being actively harassed by Ailes at the time was actually fake. Anyway, even if I can understand the appeal to work in the television business, it was such a vile and toxic environment where the objectification of women was basically a business-model though. The fact that I don’t share the values of this network at all probably made it even harder for me to understand why all these women would choose to undergo so much abuse. To conclude, in spite of its flaws, it was still a strong story with solid performances though and I think it is worth a look.



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Bombshell

Posted : 4 years, 2 months ago on 24 February 2020 10:28

Hmm, this is an odd to talk about. It bares a striking resemblance to the likes of Vice in which complicated, thorny material is presented with a degree of insouciance that is perhaps at odds with itself. Satire is all well and good but treating a glimpse behind the curtain with buffoonery may be a bridge too far when the story being told is that of sexual assault survivors reclaiming their power to take down the monster.

 

Yes, even if the subject matter revolves around (groan) Fox News. It seems easy to take pot shots at that institution and their ability to distort and reframe every argument as an aggrievement or political spin for conservatism, but Bombshell always does. Megyn Kelly (Charlize Theron, nearly unrecognizable) begins with a direct address to camera that explains how the sausage is made and who the main players are in short order.

 

If that didn’t clue you in, then Kate McKinnon’s liberal-in-hiding does a quick debrief that the facts don’t matter, and everything is pitched to stoke resentment and anger. Nearly every scene, no matter how serious, is deflated by a joke. The notable exceptions are the ones that stick with you for their encroaching dread and ability to empathize with the characters. Yes, the scene where Margot Robbie’s true believer gets demeaned by Roger Ailes (John Lithgow, scary good) is disturbing, but just as good as the one where Robbie’s low-level victim punches up at Kelly.

 

Bombshell needed more of these moments instead of so much insider gossip. There are fraught issues at play here that have plagued and divided the national psyche in the wake of 2016, in no small part to Fox News’ kowtowing and playing the eternal victim. This film is not interested in even looking that deeply at the material when it could more easily have scenes of its on-screen talent in-fighting and forcing pledges of allegiance to Ailes. There was enough room for both, but one of them would require deeper introspection.

 

Ailes is an easy figure to root against on paper, but Lithgow’s performance complicates that narrative by peeling back the layers to reveal the insecurity empowering his monstrous actions. We never sympathize with him, but Lithgow manages to puncture the more politely bemused concern with rage. A similar thing happens with Robbie’s hodgepodge creation, a composite character made-up of numerous disposable blondes, as we watch her go from wide-eye faithful to someone losing their religion.

 

As it is, the film is too jovial and remote too often for it to really treat its subject matter with the depth it deserves. For every scene like the one involving Kelly, Gretchen Carlson, and Robbie’s intern going on a tense elevator ride while the threat of sexual violence slowly increases there’s another where walk-ons of actors approximating Sean Hannity or Bill O’Reilly to drop sexist, clueless broadsides that render Fox News not a repressive, suffocating environment but like a very special episode of The Office.



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Bombshell review

Posted : 4 years, 3 months ago on 27 January 2020 04:04

(In theatre). All shades of sexual harrassment on a conservative environment; but there is one not too much covered. The profit and the guilt and the agenda some women have. There it is, but not too developed. They don't crash between them, but they crash nicely against system and Ailes.


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