"The purpose of a movie critic is to encourage good films and discourage bad ones." -- Roger Ebert.
Friday, January 24, 2014
All the President's Men
Modern day action movie makers need to study this 1976 film from director Alan J.
Pakula (Klute) to rediscover how to build tension – and maintain it – over the
course of a film. And Pakula, in telling the story of two Washington Post
correspondents who uncover a political scandal that eventually forces a
president to retire, does it without any car chases or explosions or huge
complicated stunts. There isn’t a shot fired in the entire movie. He does it,
instead, with the basic building blocks of movie narrative – pacing, plot,
believable dialogue and a talented cast who can make even asking what time it
is sound like an important clue. The extras on the DVD do a great job of
putting the film –and the historic moments it covers – into context, but the
main thing here is and always will be watching Robert Redford and Dustin
Hoffman break the news.
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