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Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford in All the President's Men (1976)

Metacritic reviews

All the President's Men

84

Metascore

18 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 100
    EmpireIan Nathan
    EmpireIan Nathan
    One of modern American film’s most intelligent and provocative accounts of a nation’s political failings, and a near-perfect depiction of journalism at its purist and most inspired. To be more succinct, it is quite brilliant.
  • 90
    The Guardian
    The Guardian
    Despite the twists, turns and exceptionally complex detail of the Watergate scandal, All the President’s Men manages to make it both comprehensible and watchable – with a few flashy fictional touches to gussy up the facts.
  • 90
    The New York TimesVincent Canby
    The New York TimesVincent Canby
    The manners and methods of big-city newspapering, beautifully detailed, contribute as much to the momentum of the film as the mystery that's being uncovered. Maybe even more, since the real excitement of All The President's Men is in watching two comparatively inexperienced reporters stumble onto the story of their lives and develop it triumphantly, against all odds.
  • 89
    Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
    Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
    Drawn from the true adventures of the Washington Post reporters and their illustrious editor Ben Bradlee, the movie heroically recounts the dogged journalistic sleuthing that cracked the story of the Watergate break-in and cover-up.
  • 88
    Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
    Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
    It provides the most observant study of working journalists we're ever likely to see in a feature film. And it succeeds brilliantly in suggesting the mixture of exhilaration, paranoia, self-doubt, and courage that permeated the Washington Post as its two young reporters went after a presidency.
  • 88
    Slant MagazineWes Greene
    Slant MagazineWes Greene
    All the President’s Men’s masterstroke is how it rejects mythologizing the pivotal history behind it, appropriately forgoing a climax by closing on a simple telex furiously relaying messages. The film doesn’t present two underdogs bringing down a president; it’s two reporters doing business as usual.
  • 80
    TV Guide Magazine
    TV Guide Magazine
    The film features a host of fine character portrayals and a compelling climax that compensates for its length.
  • 70
    Washington PostGary Arnold
    Washington PostGary Arnold
    Within the stylistic limits and shortened time span the filmmakers have decided to use, All the President's Men is an exceptionally well-made film. It's simply impossible to suppress the feeling that a more involving and satisfying movie would have emerged from a less restrictive framework.
  • 70
    The Hollywood Reporter
    The Hollywood Reporter
    One has the impression that Goldman realized you can push a good thing just so far, or that audiences will follow reportorial plotting just so long.
  • 70
    Time OutGeoff Andrew
    Time OutGeoff Andrew
    Inevitably softened by hints of self-congratulation concerning the success of Woodward and Bernstein's uncovering of the Watergate affair, Pakula's film is nevertheless remarkably intelligent, working both as an effective thriller (even though we know the outcome of their investigations) and as a virtually abstract charting of the dark corridors of corruption and power.
  • See all 18 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for All the President's Men

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