Saturday, April 9, 2016

Stop the presses! 'All the President's Men' and great journalism movies

That was the mantra that came out of "All the President's Men," released 40 years ago Saturday. In fact, those three words became such a common saying that, these days, people assume it was part of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's book.
It wasn't. Screenwriter William Goldman essentially coined the phrase for the movie.
That wasn't the movie's only influence.
The 1976 film, which starred Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as the Watergate-exposing Washington Post reporters, was said to have inspired a generation of students to enter journalism (though some authors have doubted the claim). It was a box office success, the fourth highest-grossing movie of the year.
    And it was widely praised. It garnered eight Oscar nominations, including best picture, though it lost to "Rocky."
    Even today, it may be the gold standard of journalism movies, a rich genre in movie history.
    "All the President's Men" certainly takes care of the checklist: dogged reporters in pursuit of a big story, slammed doors, painstaking research and even a little newsroom jocularity. In addition, It portrays investigative reporting as something noble, a quality it shares with the most recent best picture winner, "Spotlight."
    Not every journalism movie does. In fact, some of the great ones cast a skeptical eye on what is supposed to be a skeptical job. But then, why should it be otherwise?
    So stop the presses. In no particular order, here are 16 news-oriented films that are fit to print -- on film stock or digital. (Warning: Some of the clips contain adult language.)
    See more at: http://edition.cnn.com/

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