277 - News of the World

Eavesdropping at the Movies - A podcast by Jose Arroyo and Michael Glass

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Why this film was made... is rather beyond us. News of the World invokes the era of fake news in name only, its premise - following the Civil War, a former Confederate captain travels the American south reading out newspapers for a living - interesting in principle but almost entirely ignored in favour of a by-the-numbers, surrogate father-daughter road movie. Paul Greengrass' direction, eschewing the style and energy that made him famous, is barely an impersonation of that of classic Westerns, full of landscapes and sunsets, signifying nothing; Tom Hanks is as tediously noble and upstanding as ever, his character's supposedly shady past alluded to rather than detailed, allowing us to feel pleased for his redemption without ever having to dislike him for what he needs to be redeemed for. Helena Zengel, the German youngster who plays Hanks' mysterious companion, is a highlight, a presence you can't take your eyes off - though her character is as thinly sketched as everything else. News of the World is bad, but not offensively so. It's an unending stampede of clichés and tropes, unthinkingly employed and uncreatively executed. We don't like to advise people stay away from films, but if this is next on your list, we assume you have already seen every other film ever made. Recorded on 14th February 2021.

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