Friday, 19 February 2016

WATCHING SPOTLIGHT



SPOTLIGHT is a film about power.

Set amidst clerical child abuse, there are few children and even fewer priests. Victims are referred to in lists, court cases and newspaper clips. Their appearances, though telling, are brief. SPOTLIGHT is a film about journalists, lawyers and senior church people, lay and clerical.

The city of Boston in 2001 presents as rain sodden and grey, except for a thrilling high-colour shot of Autumn trees, ablaze in gold and umber, used to make the transition to the final sequences, playing out in a Christmas season of grubby snow. The colour palette is almost black and white. Sepias, creams and magnolia feature. The luminous green globes on the lamps in the library are eerie and talismanic of the dominant culture in the city.

The Boston Globe understandably features the film and the Spotlight team in its current on-line edition. The most obvious film echo is ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN, set in the Nixon-Watergate era. Are films about journalists in print media on the way out?

The wonders of the newspaper production facility of The Boston Globe in the early 2000s are lovingly shown. The great news room, the staff canteen, the industrial print plant, the definitive edition, carrying the big story, tumbling into bundles for loading onto the fleet of liveried trucks in the dispatch bay in the basement; these images are reminiscent of numerous American films set in the days of the dominance of print media.

The central drama is driven by the investigative Spotlight team within The Boston Globe, headed by ex-Batman, Michael Keaton as 'Robby' Robinson, alumnus of a good Catholic school and proud Bostonian. They are fired up by the arrival of a new editor, evident outsider Marty Baron, played by Liev Schreiber, who looks like Jurgen Klopp's slightly older brother. The loss of faith and, with it, the loss of an anchor of social and cultural stability, is very well portrayed as a betrayal of trust, as is the way institutional power elaborates and operates in acts of commission and omission among groups of men (largely), tied by bonds of kinship, ethnicity, social class, aspiration and religious adherence.

The principals – Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Stanley Tucci, Rachel McAdams and Brian d'Arcy James – are all excellent. Billy Crudup is a joy as a self-serving lawyer, while victim and source, Phil Saviano, is suitably edgy, hurt and fatalistic, as played by Neal Huff. Having 'the knowledge', psychotherapist Richard Sipe, never appear, yet contribute fundamental research in phone conversations, adds clandestine weight to the words of the uncredited Richard Jenkins.

SPOTLIGHT has achieved nominations and awards, great reviews, good audiences and box office returns. It will garner more and deservedly so. Best hair-piece? Stanley Tucci's as victim-supporting lawyer, Garabedian. Best scene? Garabedian talking about being an Armenian in Boston, while eating soup in a diner. Best line? Neal Huff, as victim Phil Saviano, asks

How do you say 'no' to God?”










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