320 out of 390 people found the following comment useful :- Come back Mr. Murrow!, 18 September 2005
Author:
abelardo64 from United States
My hat to George Clooney. He doesn't take the easy way out. His
seriousness of purpose is undeniable and his talents as a filmmaker a
concrete reality. This, his second feature, is a no frills account of a
period in American history that left visible scars but, as it happens,
many have forgotten. History repeats itself but its protagonists seem
diluted in this modern obsession with political correctness. David
Strathairn - best actor at the Venice Film Festival - is chillingly
perfect as Edward R Murrow, reminding us that TV times have changed in
an unrecognizable way. The space for real thought on network news has
been replaced by the circus atmosphere of 24 hour cable shows with loud
mouths, sound effects and video graphics. The inter-cutting between
Murrow/Strathairn and the real Senator McCarthy creates the perfect
illusion of a startling reality. The timing of the film couldn't be
more perfect. I hope we can all fill in the voids and connect the dots.
It's time to look back and think before our past becomes our future.
Thank you Mr Clooney, thank you very much.
249 out of 290 people found the following comment useful :- "You got it right.", 15 October 2005
Author:
bparker225 from United States
I don't know where to begin. If one judges a film by its ability to
literally transport the viewer to another time and place, this film
succeeds. If one judges a film by the cinematography, the composition
of the scenes, whether the characterizations are well drawn, this film
succeeds. If one judges a film's merits on integrity, truthfulness,
honesty, this film succeeds. Good Night and Good Luck captures a moment
in time.We look back on the fifties as a simpler time, our period of
innocence. This film tells us straight and true that it was no simpler
and no more innocent than our lives today.In fact, the sharpest
contrast drawn between today and back then is the intelligence and the
literacy, the erudition and the commitment to the tenets of good
journalism of Edward R. Murrow and his crew.I cannot picture a Brian
Williams or anyone else telling the owner of the network, as Murrow
tells Bill Paley, "I can't make it to the game tonight. Thanks for
inviting me, but I'm busy tearing down your network." A flawlessly
executed film, the acting ensemble well cast, the point clearly and
eloquently made, this film should be nominated for an Oscar, a Golden
Globe and anything else that's out there. Thank you George Clooney.
Your father is correct. "You got it right." Thank you Steven
Soderburgh. Thank you, Mr. Murrow.
266 out of 329 people found the following comment useful :- Clooney's presentation of McCarthy, 13 October 2005
Author:
bagloon from United States
The film does not - as some have suggested - unfairly portray McCarthy
as a sub-human monster. Its presentation of McCarthy is limited
strictly to the thread of the storyline and never does it waver toward
name-calling or character assassination. This is particularly striking
given that MCarthy was a well-seasoned alcoholic and clearly suffered
from a narcissistic personality disorder. He was ripe for parody
because his eccentricities were so pronounced, but this film is
remarkably even-handed about the Senator's deeds and behavior. There
are no allusions either to his peculiar friendship with Roy Cohn, whose
notorious homosexual relations with private G. David Schine eventually
led to McCarthy's demented charge that the Army was infested with
Communists. Some have even suggested that McCarthy was no stranger to
gay trysts. All of this could have made for an explosive - and typical
- "Hollywood" movie and would indeed have been propagandistic, shallow
and simple-minded. Instead Clooney has made an intelligent, cogent,
fair-minded film about ethics, high standards and integrity.
180 out of 215 people found the following comment useful :- America on Trial in GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK, 12 October 2005
Author:
seaview1
Actor/Director George Clooney pays tribute to truth and decency amid
distrust and uncertainty in the Communist witchhunts with his
recreation of its greatest hero, the newsman of newsmen, Edward R.
Murrow, in Good Night, and Good Luck.
In the early 1950's, the Communist scare and the subsequent subversion
of citizens' rights was at its apex with blacklists and rampant
accusations resulting in ruined lives and careers. Edward R. Murrow
(David Strathairn) was the grand master of the news airwaves in the
infantile medium of television. With his show's director, Fred Friendly
(George Clooney) and his production team, he picks one obscure news
item regarding an Air Force serviceman who is dismissed due to
unspecified charges. Murrow and CBS essentially take on the US Air
Force amid this climate of suspicion and presumed guilt. Later,
Murrow's team takes on Senator Joseph McCarthy by making critical
comments of the senator's own words and contradictions. McCarthy
retaliates with accusations of Murrow's supposed association with
un-American groups just as the parent network, CBS, reels under
sponsorship pressure and the unpredictable whims of network president
William Paley (Frank Langella). As Murrow and his own staff come under
tense scrutiny by McCarthy and even CBS, public reaction and the
response of the print media come to the forefront.
Nothing can compare to the words that were written and spoken with such
conviction and honesty as those uttered by Murrow. The title of the
movie is a direct quote that Murrow employed to sign off each week at
the close of his interview shows. The filmmakers (including director
Clooney and writers Clooney and Grant Heslov) were wise to let the text
stand on its own. They also benefit from good performances from a cast
headed by Strathairn (L.A. Confidential, A League of Their Own), a
journeyman actor who has finally found a core role to call his own, and
he makes the most of it. He gets the mannerisms and cadence down quite
convincingly, and while Strathairn may not look exactly like Murrow, he
has the persona nailed. Frank Langella (Dave) is excellent as the
mercurial Paley whose support of Murrow was tenuous at best. Ray Wise
(Twin Peaks) registers in what could have been a more defined role as a
doomed newsman whose guilt by association triggers some life changing
events. Patricia Clarkson (The Station Agent) and Robert Downey Jr.
(Chaplin) as secretly married staffers, Joe and Shirley, round out the
cast. Ironically, perhaps the best performance can be attributed to
McCarthy himself as newsreels offer a fascinating, perverse glance at
the infamous politician whose flamboyance and dogged theatrics doomed
the careers of many government officials and film or television actors.
The duel between Murrow and McCarthy seems like two heavyweights going
at it verbally in the public arena.
The cinematography by Robert Elswit (Magnolia) is crisp and starkly lit
in black and white to evoke the past. The production design and
costumes are consistent with the period. Just the sight of newsmen
typing on old style typewriters or production assistants carrying
around film reels instead of videotape or discs is amusing. The editing
by Stephen Mirrione (Traffic, 21 Grams) is tight and well paced. At
times the studio broadcasts of a female blues singer bridges various
sequences in theme and mood. The broadcast of a live network news
program is staged with realism and with the frenzy and excitement that
only live television could bring. One wonders what TV veterans like
Sidney Lumet or Robert Altman could have brought to the table.
Murrow's show was kind of a precursor to the current granddaddy of all
prime time news shows, 60 Minutes. It was interesting to see that his
was not a perfect career having to mix fluffy showbiz interviews with
such personalities as Liberace on his Person-to-Person show with
legitimate news reports. At 93 minutes, the film surprisingly seems a
bit short. You almost feel like this is a big budget episode of the
famous You Are There reenactment shows. The story ends almost abruptly
as it begins being bookended by a formal event honoring Murrow in 1958.
A couple of things don't quite work in the film. The characters of Joe
and Shirley must come to terms with the network's policy forbidding
marriage among its coworkers, but this subplot doesn't significantly
serve to move the story forward. Clooney shows a workman-like approach
to directing the film but it just doesn't grab you as emotionally as
you would like. You sit there entranced by the history but are never
fully given to the pathos of its characters. Instead, the film becomes
almost a quasi-documentary bereft of much feeling.
As previous films have dealt with the Red Scare and blacklists, this
film compares favorably with The Front and the great television movie
Fear on Trial. Although the Soviet Union was a major threat to the
United States during the Cold War, the accusatory enemy from within was
perhaps as great a menace. The implications and parallels to today's
political climate and the role television has in shaping perception are
clearly the point Clooney and gang are trying to make. Murrow's formal
speech, which begins and ends the film's story, is itself a prophetic
and sobering commentary and indictment of the possibilities of
television and foreshadows the future with amazing prescience. It shows
that one man made a difference. Such is the testament to a heroic
reporter whose integrity this film manages to capture, albeit in a
brief history lesson.
110 out of 140 people found the following comment useful :- One of the very best films of the year., 11 October 2005
Author:
jsemovieman from St. Louis, MO
"Good Night, And Good Luck" is one of the best films of the year.
Beautifully directed by George Clooney (who also co-stars), this is a
film that exercises a powerful message and social commentary that
remains relevant today. Filmed in tight frames of black and white,
"Good Night, And Good Luck" also brings back the smoke-filled
atmosphere of broadcast journalism and television in the 1950s. The
film focuses around CBS journalist Edward Murrow and his attempts to
take down Senator Joseph McCarthy through his news program, "See it
Now." David Strathairn, playing Edward Murrow, gives one of the best
performances of the year and is surely swimming in Oscar territory.
Clooney makes his biggest leap in the film industry yet. He, too, may
join Strathairn for an Oscar nomination, but in the Best Director
category. Filming in black and white, and interspersing news
conferences with actual footage of McCarthy, Clooney is an emerging
talent worth watching. The ending and the very last frame lets "Good
Night, And Good Luck" stay with those who watch it. It ends very
abruptly, as if Clooney wants to show the failing, yet lasting effort
Murrow had--how he stands as a symbol for the continuation of truth and
who is willing to bring it out to the public. The end has a very honest
bleak tone to it--we want to see Murrow continue to let the public know
what's actually going on in the country, but one man's fight isn't good
enough. Clooney chooses a perfect and powerful ending. He makes a bold
statement on how public interest in television has contributed to the
decay of society, whether it is 1950 or 2005.
94 out of 123 people found the following comment useful :- Strathairn and documentary footage produce a winner, 16 October 2005
Author:
reddpill from Northridge, CA, USA
This film was a real treat, with Strathairn's dead-on performance as
legendary journalist Edward R. Murrow a sure bet for at least an Oscar
nomination. Perhaps the best decision by writer-director George Clooney
was to cast no one in the role of Senator Joseph McCarthy. Instead,
Clooney uses actual footage of McCarthy in the HUAC hearings and press
conferences. Movies based on actual historical events often
sensationalize events, but the extensive use of documentary footage
brings home the reality of this movie's story line.
In addition to Strathairn's best performance to date, the entire cast
delivers, from Clooney himself as Murrow's producer Fred Friendly, to
Frank Langella as CBS chairman William Paley, to Ray Wise as the
insecure anchorman Don Hollenbeck. If there is a weak point in the
cast, it is Jeff Daniels, who was given little to do in the role of
news director Sig Mickelson and did little with it.
As most people today are acquainted with the 1950s through
black-and-white images, the decision to film in black-and-white also
feels appropriate, and helps the documentary footage to blend in
seamlessly with the filmed actors. The only real failing of the movie
is the lack of real drama. Throughout, Murrow and the gang are seen to
have the upper hand, although they sweat about the potential
consequences of every action. The slice of history, the ideas presented
concerning the proper role of news media, and the terrific performances
all more than make up for this, however, and I strongly recommend this
film to those who lived through the McCarthy era and to those, such as
myself, who only have witnessed it in the rear view mirror.
81 out of 101 people found the following comment useful :- Broadcast news, 21 October 2005
Author:
jotix100 from New York
"Good Night, and Good Luck" is the kind of film that has elicited
strong opinions in the IMDb forum. In fact, most of the critics point
out at the manipulation of the actual events and what they perceive as
character assassination of the late Joseph McCarthy and the role he
played during the "witch hunt" conducted by the late senator from
Wisconsin. Whether these points are right, or wrong, in the minds of
the contributors, most seem to disregard the film on that criteria,
alone.
In fact, "Good Night, and Good Luck" shows a time in the American past
that served as the model in the way television introduced the format in
which the news was going to be shown to the country using the emerging
technology to keep people informed. As such, CBS under William Paley's
leadership, amassed a lot of talent and it became the yardstick in
which other news programs were going to be judged against. George
Clooney, in his second directorial job, recreates what he and his
co-writer, Grant Heslov, thought about that period at the beginning of
the era of television news.
The film has a documentary style that serves well to illustrate the
story being told. Most of it occurring in the CBS studios in New York
during the fifties. The crisp black and white cinematography, by Robert
Elswit, gives the movie a nostalgic look to the way things were done in
those days. Mr. Clooney has inserted scenes where a black jazz singer
interprets some standard songs as though it might have been the next
program following the actual news hour, and act as a buffer in the
events being presented.
At the center of the story is Edward R. Murrow, the CBS anchor at the
time. Mr. Murrow was greatly admired for his contributions during WWII
and his broadcasts from London bringing commentaries about the war to
America. Mr. Murrow was a giant in the field, most admired by all
Americans because his integrity and the way he presented his stories,
which ranged from the sublime, to the ridiculous, as it is the case
with the interview with Liberace in Sherman Oaks where he asked the
entertainer about his future wedding plans.
The strong cast assembled for the film is excellent. David Strathairn,
one of our most versatile actors plays the leading role. His take on
Murrow's mannerisms and the way he spoke to his audience in front of
the camera is captured with great detail. Mr. Strathairn gives a good
performance, but one never really knows much about the man in the way
the screen play has been written. Yes, one gets the impression of Mr.
Murrow's high ethics, but as far as what made him tick, one has to wait
for another biopic to find out.
The ensemble cast plays well under Mr. Clooney's direction. Robert
Downey Jr., Patricia Clarkson, Ray Wise, Frank Langella, Jeff Daniels,
and George Clooney are seen in the newsroom as they portray their
models under Mr. Clooney's direction.
92 out of 134 people found the following comment useful :- A terrific film, 16 October 2005
Author:
evo8mr from United States
I just saw this film, and I have three words to sum it up: A terrific
film.
Yes, there were people who thought this was just leftist propaganda but
they all walked out in agreement that 'Good Night' was a very well made
movie about a person who exploited fear in the people of the united
states in 1953.
David Strathairn gives the performance of his career as Edward R
Murrow, a legendary 1950's news reporter. His performance has the
complexities, mannerisms and subtleties that you would expect from
Murrow. His performance does for Murrow for what Adrien Brody did for
Wladyslaw Spilzman, you truly do believe him. Count on a Oscar
nomination.
George Clooney's direction, writing and acting are all very strong this
side of Roberto Benigni's 'Life is Beautiful'. Clooney may direct
himself to his first Oscar.
Another revelation in this movie is Frank Langella, who plays Bill
Paley (the head of CBS). He backs Murrow and Friendly to the end, but
also tells them the cold, hard truth . He tries so hard not to
jeopardize the both of them.
All that being said, this may be the underdog movie at this year's
Academy Awards. Strathairn and Clooney both give outstanding
performances but this year their competition is stiff. Straithairn
going after Philip Seymour Hoffman for his performance in ' Capote '
and Clooney going after Peter Sarsgaard for his performance in
'jarhead'.
A very good film and worth the 90 minutes of your time.
57 out of 74 people found the following comment useful :- When Things Were Black and White, 13 November 2005
Author:
schappe1 from N Syracuse NY
I've had the "Edward R. Murrow" Collection from CBS for years and have
enjoyed watching it's biography of Murrow, the complete Milo
Radulovich, McCarthy and Annie Lee Moss shows many times. I'm sure
George Clooney must have these as well as he used the actual footage
extensively in his fine drama "Good Night and Good Luck". As a previous
poster said, by concentrating on what was actually presented, Clooney
is able to focus on the ethical issues that were the real substance of
the broadcasts, rather than the tragicomic personalities involved. He
wants us to see that the same issues are in our lives today, (Clooney
has had his own battles with would-be modern McCarthys like Bill
O'Reilly), but he isn't going to force the issue. He's doing exactly
what Murrow and Friendly did with the McCarthy broadcast: using the
actual record to tell the story.
There are minor, but significant embellishments, mostly an impressive
cast of actors who can tell us more with one look than an entire
speech. Leading the way is David Straithairn as Murrow. Except for
possessing a higher pitched voice than the original, he's got his man
down cold. I would pick Frank Langella as William Paley, here presented
as a man with ideals but who is rooted in the realities of business,
the sort of guy who has to make the tough decisions the idealists like
Murrow don't have to or want to deal with. Then there is Ray Wise as
the vulnerable Don Hollenbeck, who was one of the co-creators of "You
Are There", a program this film somewhat resembles. He wound up being
"there" when he didn't really want to be.
What really enhances the show is the black and white photography,
(actually, according to the notes, it was "The film was shot on color
film on a grayscale set, then color-corrected in post" whatever that
means). Not only does it heighten the drama, (magazine photographers,
in the days when they had a choice, said "black and white for drama,
color for excitement"), but the tremendous resolution seems to bring
out each furrow and poor on each person's face, allowing the viewer to
see into their souls.
29 out of 33 people found the following comment useful :- Got smoke?, 31 October 2005
Author:
fred-287
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The brilliance of George Clooney's "Good Night and Good Luck" lies in
it's very tight (almost claustrophobia-inducing) evocation of an early
1950's news studio with all those clean-cut button-down white guys (the
few women on hand tend to get sent on errands) with their horn-rimmed
glasses and their bottles of Scotch and their ubiquitous cigarettes.
There is so much smoke wafting around that it becomes the element in
which these guys function, like the water in a fish tank. Clooney
didn't need to pound the point home by showing the ad for Kent
cigarettes but I did get a chuckle out of it. The heady mixture of
nicotine and testosterone palpably drives the news crew toward their
fateful piece on Sen. Joe McCarthy which, for all they know in advance,
may be the cliff over which their lives and careers plunge. Clooney has
impressed me hugely with his ability to keep this great ensemble cast
(including himself, not as the "star") on pace. I avoided his
"Confessions of a Dangerous Mind" (having had my fill of that "Gong
Show" guy back in the Seventies) but I look forward to his future
directorial efforts. D. Strathairn is quietly masterful as Edward R.
Murrow; I look forward to being disappointed when the Academy snubs him
for an Oscar nomination. The comparison between the anti-communism
crusade then and the anti-terrorism crusade now is merely made
available to be observed, not trumpeted to the heavens. The line
"Dissent is not disloyalty" sums it up pithily.
Given what "Night" does so well, it seems almost churlish on my part to
mention some things it doesn't do and probably couldn't have done
without disrupting it's artistic confines. I personally would have
liked a sense of how the "Red scare" permeated the populace as a whole;
I would recommend Cedric Belfrage's book "The American Inquisition"
which includes annual "fever charts" detailing that in 1953 the town of
Moscow, Idaho demanded that the capital of the Soviet Union change it's
name, or when citizens in Wisconsin were asked "What is a Communist"
responses included "A crook, I suppose" or "A person who wants war." In
1954 a woman legally changed her name from Allred to Allgood and a high
school in Idaho expunged the word "comrade" from the school song. Sound
a little silly? Does anyone remember "freedom fries" recently? It also
would've been a big mouthful to chew if "Night" had made the point that
"Tailgunner Joe" was essentially a figurehead. He himself had little
interest in communism until it became a ticket to fame; he got most of
his headline-grabbing tidbits from the American Reichsfuehrer J. Edgar
Hoover (McCarthy was a frequent guest in Hoover's private box at the
local racetrack) and he was tolerated by General Eisenhower until he
"went too far" and denounced the army as "pinko." ("Night" mentions
several real persons whose names were besmirched but not Major Irving
Peress, the "pink dentist," whose family received threatening letters
and phone calls and rocks thrown through their windows. "Night" just
barely hints at the anti-Semitic undercurrent of the phobia,
culminating in the "public burning" of the Rosenbergs for "giving away
the Bomb" based on evidence that would get laughed out of most courts
today.) After McCarthy was allowed to "twist in the wind" and drink
himself to death, Hoover continued his police-state activities with
other allies, but we never heard about any of this until "Watergate."
Read "The Boss" by Athan Theoharis and John S. Cox for the whole sordid
story.
By all means see "Night" which deserves a ton of credit for getting
people thinking about this again if nothing else. By the way, beware of
revisionists like Ann Coulter claiming that McCarthy was validated by
the "Venona Project," the secret program to intercept and decode Soviet
diplomatic telegrams. Only a fraction of the cables were decrypted
(some only partly) and their meaning is still debated by scholars. (The
Soviets apparently did have two sources within the Manhattan Project,
"Quantum" and "Pers," who are still unidentified.) To assert, like
Coulter, that "hundreds of agents of an enemy foreign power were
working for the U.S. government" is the kind of logical leap much
favored by the Far Right .never mind where that lands.
I wish that "Night" had ended with a brief text mentioning that Murrow,
a true American hero, died of lung cancer, thus completing the
cigarette motif. I'm sure he would have ruefully allowed that there
too, "the fault lies not within our stars but within ourselves "
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Good Night, and Good Luck. (2005)
320 out of 390 people found the following comment useful :-

Come back Mr. Murrow!, 18 September 2005
Author: abelardo64 from United States
My hat to George Clooney. He doesn't take the easy way out. His seriousness of purpose is undeniable and his talents as a filmmaker a concrete reality. This, his second feature, is a no frills account of a period in American history that left visible scars but, as it happens, many have forgotten. History repeats itself but its protagonists seem diluted in this modern obsession with political correctness. David Strathairn - best actor at the Venice Film Festival - is chillingly perfect as Edward R Murrow, reminding us that TV times have changed in an unrecognizable way. The space for real thought on network news has been replaced by the circus atmosphere of 24 hour cable shows with loud mouths, sound effects and video graphics. The inter-cutting between Murrow/Strathairn and the real Senator McCarthy creates the perfect illusion of a startling reality. The timing of the film couldn't be more perfect. I hope we can all fill in the voids and connect the dots. It's time to look back and think before our past becomes our future. Thank you Mr Clooney, thank you very much.
249 out of 290 people found the following comment useful :-

"You got it right.", 15 October 2005
Author: bparker225 from United States
I don't know where to begin. If one judges a film by its ability to literally transport the viewer to another time and place, this film succeeds. If one judges a film by the cinematography, the composition of the scenes, whether the characterizations are well drawn, this film succeeds. If one judges a film's merits on integrity, truthfulness, honesty, this film succeeds. Good Night and Good Luck captures a moment in time.We look back on the fifties as a simpler time, our period of innocence. This film tells us straight and true that it was no simpler and no more innocent than our lives today.In fact, the sharpest contrast drawn between today and back then is the intelligence and the literacy, the erudition and the commitment to the tenets of good journalism of Edward R. Murrow and his crew.I cannot picture a Brian Williams or anyone else telling the owner of the network, as Murrow tells Bill Paley, "I can't make it to the game tonight. Thanks for inviting me, but I'm busy tearing down your network." A flawlessly executed film, the acting ensemble well cast, the point clearly and eloquently made, this film should be nominated for an Oscar, a Golden Globe and anything else that's out there. Thank you George Clooney. Your father is correct. "You got it right." Thank you Steven Soderburgh. Thank you, Mr. Murrow.
266 out of 329 people found the following comment useful :-
Clooney's presentation of McCarthy, 13 October 2005
Author: bagloon from United States
The film does not - as some have suggested - unfairly portray McCarthy as a sub-human monster. Its presentation of McCarthy is limited strictly to the thread of the storyline and never does it waver toward name-calling or character assassination. This is particularly striking given that MCarthy was a well-seasoned alcoholic and clearly suffered from a narcissistic personality disorder. He was ripe for parody because his eccentricities were so pronounced, but this film is remarkably even-handed about the Senator's deeds and behavior. There are no allusions either to his peculiar friendship with Roy Cohn, whose notorious homosexual relations with private G. David Schine eventually led to McCarthy's demented charge that the Army was infested with Communists. Some have even suggested that McCarthy was no stranger to gay trysts. All of this could have made for an explosive - and typical - "Hollywood" movie and would indeed have been propagandistic, shallow and simple-minded. Instead Clooney has made an intelligent, cogent, fair-minded film about ethics, high standards and integrity.
180 out of 215 people found the following comment useful :-

America on Trial in GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK, 12 October 2005
Author: seaview1
Actor/Director George Clooney pays tribute to truth and decency amid distrust and uncertainty in the Communist witchhunts with his recreation of its greatest hero, the newsman of newsmen, Edward R. Murrow, in Good Night, and Good Luck.
In the early 1950's, the Communist scare and the subsequent subversion of citizens' rights was at its apex with blacklists and rampant accusations resulting in ruined lives and careers. Edward R. Murrow (David Strathairn) was the grand master of the news airwaves in the infantile medium of television. With his show's director, Fred Friendly (George Clooney) and his production team, he picks one obscure news item regarding an Air Force serviceman who is dismissed due to unspecified charges. Murrow and CBS essentially take on the US Air Force amid this climate of suspicion and presumed guilt. Later, Murrow's team takes on Senator Joseph McCarthy by making critical comments of the senator's own words and contradictions. McCarthy retaliates with accusations of Murrow's supposed association with un-American groups just as the parent network, CBS, reels under sponsorship pressure and the unpredictable whims of network president William Paley (Frank Langella). As Murrow and his own staff come under tense scrutiny by McCarthy and even CBS, public reaction and the response of the print media come to the forefront.
Nothing can compare to the words that were written and spoken with such conviction and honesty as those uttered by Murrow. The title of the movie is a direct quote that Murrow employed to sign off each week at the close of his interview shows. The filmmakers (including director Clooney and writers Clooney and Grant Heslov) were wise to let the text stand on its own. They also benefit from good performances from a cast headed by Strathairn (L.A. Confidential, A League of Their Own), a journeyman actor who has finally found a core role to call his own, and he makes the most of it. He gets the mannerisms and cadence down quite convincingly, and while Strathairn may not look exactly like Murrow, he has the persona nailed. Frank Langella (Dave) is excellent as the mercurial Paley whose support of Murrow was tenuous at best. Ray Wise (Twin Peaks) registers in what could have been a more defined role as a doomed newsman whose guilt by association triggers some life changing events. Patricia Clarkson (The Station Agent) and Robert Downey Jr. (Chaplin) as secretly married staffers, Joe and Shirley, round out the cast. Ironically, perhaps the best performance can be attributed to McCarthy himself as newsreels offer a fascinating, perverse glance at the infamous politician whose flamboyance and dogged theatrics doomed the careers of many government officials and film or television actors. The duel between Murrow and McCarthy seems like two heavyweights going at it verbally in the public arena.
The cinematography by Robert Elswit (Magnolia) is crisp and starkly lit in black and white to evoke the past. The production design and costumes are consistent with the period. Just the sight of newsmen typing on old style typewriters or production assistants carrying around film reels instead of videotape or discs is amusing. The editing by Stephen Mirrione (Traffic, 21 Grams) is tight and well paced. At times the studio broadcasts of a female blues singer bridges various sequences in theme and mood. The broadcast of a live network news program is staged with realism and with the frenzy and excitement that only live television could bring. One wonders what TV veterans like Sidney Lumet or Robert Altman could have brought to the table.
Murrow's show was kind of a precursor to the current granddaddy of all prime time news shows, 60 Minutes. It was interesting to see that his was not a perfect career having to mix fluffy showbiz interviews with such personalities as Liberace on his Person-to-Person show with legitimate news reports. At 93 minutes, the film surprisingly seems a bit short. You almost feel like this is a big budget episode of the famous You Are There reenactment shows. The story ends almost abruptly as it begins being bookended by a formal event honoring Murrow in 1958.
A couple of things don't quite work in the film. The characters of Joe and Shirley must come to terms with the network's policy forbidding marriage among its coworkers, but this subplot doesn't significantly serve to move the story forward. Clooney shows a workman-like approach to directing the film but it just doesn't grab you as emotionally as you would like. You sit there entranced by the history but are never fully given to the pathos of its characters. Instead, the film becomes almost a quasi-documentary bereft of much feeling.
As previous films have dealt with the Red Scare and blacklists, this film compares favorably with The Front and the great television movie Fear on Trial. Although the Soviet Union was a major threat to the United States during the Cold War, the accusatory enemy from within was perhaps as great a menace. The implications and parallels to today's political climate and the role television has in shaping perception are clearly the point Clooney and gang are trying to make. Murrow's formal speech, which begins and ends the film's story, is itself a prophetic and sobering commentary and indictment of the possibilities of television and foreshadows the future with amazing prescience. It shows that one man made a difference. Such is the testament to a heroic reporter whose integrity this film manages to capture, albeit in a brief history lesson.
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One of the very best films of the year., 11 October 2005
Author: jsemovieman from St. Louis, MO
"Good Night, And Good Luck" is one of the best films of the year. Beautifully directed by George Clooney (who also co-stars), this is a film that exercises a powerful message and social commentary that remains relevant today. Filmed in tight frames of black and white, "Good Night, And Good Luck" also brings back the smoke-filled atmosphere of broadcast journalism and television in the 1950s. The film focuses around CBS journalist Edward Murrow and his attempts to take down Senator Joseph McCarthy through his news program, "See it Now." David Strathairn, playing Edward Murrow, gives one of the best performances of the year and is surely swimming in Oscar territory. Clooney makes his biggest leap in the film industry yet. He, too, may join Strathairn for an Oscar nomination, but in the Best Director category. Filming in black and white, and interspersing news conferences with actual footage of McCarthy, Clooney is an emerging talent worth watching. The ending and the very last frame lets "Good Night, And Good Luck" stay with those who watch it. It ends very abruptly, as if Clooney wants to show the failing, yet lasting effort Murrow had--how he stands as a symbol for the continuation of truth and who is willing to bring it out to the public. The end has a very honest bleak tone to it--we want to see Murrow continue to let the public know what's actually going on in the country, but one man's fight isn't good enough. Clooney chooses a perfect and powerful ending. He makes a bold statement on how public interest in television has contributed to the decay of society, whether it is 1950 or 2005.
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Strathairn and documentary footage produce a winner, 16 October 2005
Author: reddpill from Northridge, CA, USA
This film was a real treat, with Strathairn's dead-on performance as legendary journalist Edward R. Murrow a sure bet for at least an Oscar nomination. Perhaps the best decision by writer-director George Clooney was to cast no one in the role of Senator Joseph McCarthy. Instead, Clooney uses actual footage of McCarthy in the HUAC hearings and press conferences. Movies based on actual historical events often sensationalize events, but the extensive use of documentary footage brings home the reality of this movie's story line.
In addition to Strathairn's best performance to date, the entire cast delivers, from Clooney himself as Murrow's producer Fred Friendly, to Frank Langella as CBS chairman William Paley, to Ray Wise as the insecure anchorman Don Hollenbeck. If there is a weak point in the cast, it is Jeff Daniels, who was given little to do in the role of news director Sig Mickelson and did little with it.
As most people today are acquainted with the 1950s through black-and-white images, the decision to film in black-and-white also feels appropriate, and helps the documentary footage to blend in seamlessly with the filmed actors. The only real failing of the movie is the lack of real drama. Throughout, Murrow and the gang are seen to have the upper hand, although they sweat about the potential consequences of every action. The slice of history, the ideas presented concerning the proper role of news media, and the terrific performances all more than make up for this, however, and I strongly recommend this film to those who lived through the McCarthy era and to those, such as myself, who only have witnessed it in the rear view mirror.
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Broadcast news, 21 October 2005
Author: jotix100 from New York
"Good Night, and Good Luck" is the kind of film that has elicited strong opinions in the IMDb forum. In fact, most of the critics point out at the manipulation of the actual events and what they perceive as character assassination of the late Joseph McCarthy and the role he played during the "witch hunt" conducted by the late senator from Wisconsin. Whether these points are right, or wrong, in the minds of the contributors, most seem to disregard the film on that criteria, alone.
In fact, "Good Night, and Good Luck" shows a time in the American past that served as the model in the way television introduced the format in which the news was going to be shown to the country using the emerging technology to keep people informed. As such, CBS under William Paley's leadership, amassed a lot of talent and it became the yardstick in which other news programs were going to be judged against. George Clooney, in his second directorial job, recreates what he and his co-writer, Grant Heslov, thought about that period at the beginning of the era of television news.
The film has a documentary style that serves well to illustrate the story being told. Most of it occurring in the CBS studios in New York during the fifties. The crisp black and white cinematography, by Robert Elswit, gives the movie a nostalgic look to the way things were done in those days. Mr. Clooney has inserted scenes where a black jazz singer interprets some standard songs as though it might have been the next program following the actual news hour, and act as a buffer in the events being presented.
At the center of the story is Edward R. Murrow, the CBS anchor at the time. Mr. Murrow was greatly admired for his contributions during WWII and his broadcasts from London bringing commentaries about the war to America. Mr. Murrow was a giant in the field, most admired by all Americans because his integrity and the way he presented his stories, which ranged from the sublime, to the ridiculous, as it is the case with the interview with Liberace in Sherman Oaks where he asked the entertainer about his future wedding plans.
The strong cast assembled for the film is excellent. David Strathairn, one of our most versatile actors plays the leading role. His take on Murrow's mannerisms and the way he spoke to his audience in front of the camera is captured with great detail. Mr. Strathairn gives a good performance, but one never really knows much about the man in the way the screen play has been written. Yes, one gets the impression of Mr. Murrow's high ethics, but as far as what made him tick, one has to wait for another biopic to find out.
The ensemble cast plays well under Mr. Clooney's direction. Robert Downey Jr., Patricia Clarkson, Ray Wise, Frank Langella, Jeff Daniels, and George Clooney are seen in the newsroom as they portray their models under Mr. Clooney's direction.
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A terrific film, 16 October 2005
Author: evo8mr from United States
I just saw this film, and I have three words to sum it up: A terrific film.
Yes, there were people who thought this was just leftist propaganda but they all walked out in agreement that 'Good Night' was a very well made movie about a person who exploited fear in the people of the united states in 1953.
David Strathairn gives the performance of his career as Edward R Murrow, a legendary 1950's news reporter. His performance has the complexities, mannerisms and subtleties that you would expect from Murrow. His performance does for Murrow for what Adrien Brody did for Wladyslaw Spilzman, you truly do believe him. Count on a Oscar nomination.
George Clooney's direction, writing and acting are all very strong this side of Roberto Benigni's 'Life is Beautiful'. Clooney may direct himself to his first Oscar.
Another revelation in this movie is Frank Langella, who plays Bill Paley (the head of CBS). He backs Murrow and Friendly to the end, but also tells them the cold, hard truth . He tries so hard not to jeopardize the both of them.
All that being said, this may be the underdog movie at this year's Academy Awards. Strathairn and Clooney both give outstanding performances but this year their competition is stiff. Straithairn going after Philip Seymour Hoffman for his performance in ' Capote ' and Clooney going after Peter Sarsgaard for his performance in 'jarhead'.
A very good film and worth the 90 minutes of your time.
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When Things Were Black and White, 13 November 2005
Author: schappe1 from N Syracuse NY
I've had the "Edward R. Murrow" Collection from CBS for years and have enjoyed watching it's biography of Murrow, the complete Milo Radulovich, McCarthy and Annie Lee Moss shows many times. I'm sure George Clooney must have these as well as he used the actual footage extensively in his fine drama "Good Night and Good Luck". As a previous poster said, by concentrating on what was actually presented, Clooney is able to focus on the ethical issues that were the real substance of the broadcasts, rather than the tragicomic personalities involved. He wants us to see that the same issues are in our lives today, (Clooney has had his own battles with would-be modern McCarthys like Bill O'Reilly), but he isn't going to force the issue. He's doing exactly what Murrow and Friendly did with the McCarthy broadcast: using the actual record to tell the story.
There are minor, but significant embellishments, mostly an impressive cast of actors who can tell us more with one look than an entire speech. Leading the way is David Straithairn as Murrow. Except for possessing a higher pitched voice than the original, he's got his man down cold. I would pick Frank Langella as William Paley, here presented as a man with ideals but who is rooted in the realities of business, the sort of guy who has to make the tough decisions the idealists like Murrow don't have to or want to deal with. Then there is Ray Wise as the vulnerable Don Hollenbeck, who was one of the co-creators of "You Are There", a program this film somewhat resembles. He wound up being "there" when he didn't really want to be.
What really enhances the show is the black and white photography, (actually, according to the notes, it was "The film was shot on color film on a grayscale set, then color-corrected in post" whatever that means). Not only does it heighten the drama, (magazine photographers, in the days when they had a choice, said "black and white for drama, color for excitement"), but the tremendous resolution seems to bring out each furrow and poor on each person's face, allowing the viewer to see into their souls.
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Got smoke?, 31 October 2005
Author: fred-287
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The brilliance of George Clooney's "Good Night and Good Luck" lies in it's very tight (almost claustrophobia-inducing) evocation of an early 1950's news studio with all those clean-cut button-down white guys (the few women on hand tend to get sent on errands) with their horn-rimmed glasses and their bottles of Scotch and their ubiquitous cigarettes. There is so much smoke wafting around that it becomes the element in which these guys function, like the water in a fish tank. Clooney didn't need to pound the point home by showing the ad for Kent cigarettes but I did get a chuckle out of it. The heady mixture of nicotine and testosterone palpably drives the news crew toward their fateful piece on Sen. Joe McCarthy which, for all they know in advance, may be the cliff over which their lives and careers plunge. Clooney has impressed me hugely with his ability to keep this great ensemble cast (including himself, not as the "star") on pace. I avoided his "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind" (having had my fill of that "Gong Show" guy back in the Seventies) but I look forward to his future directorial efforts. D. Strathairn is quietly masterful as Edward R. Murrow; I look forward to being disappointed when the Academy snubs him for an Oscar nomination. The comparison between the anti-communism crusade then and the anti-terrorism crusade now is merely made available to be observed, not trumpeted to the heavens. The line "Dissent is not disloyalty" sums it up pithily.
Given what "Night" does so well, it seems almost churlish on my part to mention some things it doesn't do and probably couldn't have done without disrupting it's artistic confines. I personally would have liked a sense of how the "Red scare" permeated the populace as a whole; I would recommend Cedric Belfrage's book "The American Inquisition" which includes annual "fever charts" detailing that in 1953 the town of Moscow, Idaho demanded that the capital of the Soviet Union change it's name, or when citizens in Wisconsin were asked "What is a Communist" responses included "A crook, I suppose" or "A person who wants war." In 1954 a woman legally changed her name from Allred to Allgood and a high school in Idaho expunged the word "comrade" from the school song. Sound a little silly? Does anyone remember "freedom fries" recently? It also would've been a big mouthful to chew if "Night" had made the point that "Tailgunner Joe" was essentially a figurehead. He himself had little interest in communism until it became a ticket to fame; he got most of his headline-grabbing tidbits from the American Reichsfuehrer J. Edgar Hoover (McCarthy was a frequent guest in Hoover's private box at the local racetrack) and he was tolerated by General Eisenhower until he "went too far" and denounced the army as "pinko." ("Night" mentions several real persons whose names were besmirched but not Major Irving Peress, the "pink dentist," whose family received threatening letters and phone calls and rocks thrown through their windows. "Night" just barely hints at the anti-Semitic undercurrent of the phobia, culminating in the "public burning" of the Rosenbergs for "giving away the Bomb" based on evidence that would get laughed out of most courts today.) After McCarthy was allowed to "twist in the wind" and drink himself to death, Hoover continued his police-state activities with other allies, but we never heard about any of this until "Watergate." Read "The Boss" by Athan Theoharis and John S. Cox for the whole sordid story.
By all means see "Night" which deserves a ton of credit for getting people thinking about this again if nothing else. By the way, beware of revisionists like Ann Coulter claiming that McCarthy was validated by the "Venona Project," the secret program to intercept and decode Soviet diplomatic telegrams. Only a fraction of the cables were decrypted (some only partly) and their meaning is still debated by scholars. (The Soviets apparently did have two sources within the Manhattan Project, "Quantum" and "Pers," who are still unidentified.) To assert, like Coulter, that "hundreds of agents of an enemy foreign power were working for the U.S. government" is the kind of logical leap much favored by the Far Right .never mind where that lands.
I wish that "Night" had ended with a brief text mentioning that Murrow, a true American hero, died of lung cancer, thus completing the cigarette motif. I'm sure he would have ruefully allowed that there too, "the fault lies not within our stars but within ourselves "
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