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Good Night and Good Luck [2005]

Good Night and Good Luck [2005]
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List Price: £19.99
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Manufacturer: Lions Gate Home Ent. UK Ltd
Starring: David Strathairn, Jeff Daniels, Tate Donovan, Tom McCarthy, Robert Downey Jr.
Directed By: George Clooney
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

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Audience Rating: Parental Guidance
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5060052410740
Format: Black & White
Label: Lions Gate Home Ent. UK Ltd
Manufacturer: Lions Gate Home Ent. UK Ltd
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Lions Gate Home Ent. UK Ltd
Region Code: 2
Release Date: 2007-09-10
Running Time: 89
Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. UK Ltd
Theatrical Release Date: 2005

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Editorial Reviews: Considering Good Night and Good Luck is only the second time he’s stepped behind the camera, George Clooney has already marked his card as a director of real talent to watch. He also acts in this particular film, but generously leaves centre stage to the superb David Strathairn.

Set in the 1950s and based on true events, Strathairn plays news reporter Edward R. Murrow, who finds himself increasingly uncomfortable with the tactics used by Junior Senator Joseph McCarthy (of whom Clooney chooses to use real archive footage rather than getting an actor to play his role). The film finds McCarthy in the midst of his infamous crusade against communism, and Strathairn and Clooney lead the CBS news team who choose to report the other side of the story. Naturally, this ruffles more than a few feathers, and the film follows the investigation as it goes about stirring up a proverbial hornet’s nest.

The reason it works so well is its beautiful simplicity. Clooney shoots his film in black and white, with no flashy effects, no distractions, just a wise and worthwhile focus on telling a very good story in a very good way. Drawing quality performances not just from Strathairn but also from a strong supporting cast (including Jeff Daniels, Robert Downey Jr and Patricia Clarkson), this is compelling, important movie making that leaves you thirsting for whatever Clooney elects to direct next. And if you’re in the mood to check out another piece of highly-charged movie making, albeit with Clooney in front of the camera this time, then Syriana makes an ideal companion piece.--Simon Brew


Spotlight customer reviews:
Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: A Wonderful Critique, If Not The One You Expect
Comment: George Clooney freely admits that "Ocean's Twelve" was made in order to ensure that both this and "Syriana" saw the light of day. Perhaps this is a case of making a silk purse out of a sow's ear. It is heartening to see something of use coming out of that.

"Good Night & Good Luck" seems, on the surface, to be a film about the witch hunts of Joseph McArthy against perceived threat of communism in America. The film traces journalist Ed Murrow's televisual campaign to discredit the committee set up to investigate this and also McArthy himself. Using newsreel footage to illustrate McArthy's interrogations highlights his approach excellently and also highlights the film's liberal tendencies, but this film isn't a critique on paranoia from invisible threats. It could be argued that the modern equivalent is the war on terror but this is merely the context.

The film opens with a speech delivered by Murrow 5 years after the central action of the film takes place. Here Murrow warns of the potential for television to abandon the prinicples of a high-minded media for mere trivia. The description of a possible future televisual landscape obsessed with the mundane seems to quite adequately describe the current state of the media. The film nicely illustrates the tensions of producing bold campaigning issue based programmes in prime time. Essentially this is a better, more intellgent, serious minded version of "Broadcast News".

David Strathairn's Murrow is excellent. He captures a real sense of the purpose and drive of a man who not only sees McArthy as a narrow-minded bully but a threat to democratic and free speech. Supported by a large cast of uniformly excellent actors, this is not star vehicle it well could have been. The likes of Ray Wise as a beleguared anchorman, Robert Downey Jr. as slick reporter, and Frank Lingella as the CBS chief executive shining through as jewels in this richly well acted crown.

That doesn't mention Clooney who both performs in, writes, and directs here. His performance is good but it's the direction which shines. The film looks just right with the rather bleached black and white tones of cinematographer Robert Elswit effectively evoking a sense of the past. This is extremely taught and sharp. Not only does he get the excellent cast performing but he keeps the film moving nicely. It slips by nicely seeming longer than its rather spare 89 minutes. The pace is partly due to the lovely musical contributions of jazz singer Dinanne Reeves. The opening song, "Come Dance With Me", has never sounded better.

The film won't please all, it's the story of the brave man facing down his detractors in the name of integrity, wearing its liberal credentials on its sleeve. Yet it's also probably the best critque of the morality of television since "Quiz Show".


Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: communism = terrorism
Comment: world didnt change much after WWII under the USA (they had bombarder 48 countries since UN was created), before threath was the Communists, now the threat is us; potential terrorists!!!!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Skilfully crafted and thought provoking
Comment: Skilfully crafted and thought provoking. Small in scale and tightly made, but all the better for it. I don't think the hi-def versions at twice the price would add anything over the standard, very crisp black and white picture. If you're not familiar with the antics of Senator Joseph McCarthy then brief yourself beforehand because you will miss much of the context of the film. If you like 50s jazz then you'll also appreciate the soundtrack, a nice bonus.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A nice history lesson
Comment:
Ed Murrow was an important figure in American television during the 50s and at the time of the Un-American Activities Committee of the Senate was courageous enough to speak out against the despicable McCarthy, a paranoid drunk who chaired the committee. McCarthy ran this rather on the lines of Soviet show trials, with rules of evidence and judicial procedures generally shown little respect. McCarthy's activities broke the lives of hundreds of people, many greatly talented, or drove them into exile. This film shows Murrow taking the decision, with the somewhat fractious support of his boss, to editorialise at the end of his show, criticising McCarthy's methods. That a large broadcasting corporation like CBS allowed this says something good about those times and is something that would not happen today. An interesting thing was the way Morrow and his colleague pay for the advertising slot the sponsor refused to pay for given Murrow's controversial stance. In the USA, it is the advertisers that are the censors.

That George Clooney produced this film at this time suggests he is making parallels with Bush's America. Since 9/11, the media in the USA has been timid in criticising the government. Instead of Communists, the enemy has become the liberals (what we would call moderates or centrists). The Patriot Act (how often is the word 'patriot' or 'patriotic' linked to repressive policies?), massive phone tapping and replacement of the management of Public Service Broadcasting by 'politically acceptable' personnel are just a few examples of repression. Meanwhile, Fox News editorialises non-stop for the political right. McCarthy had a very broad idea of what a Communist was and included anyone with leftish tendencies. It is my view that Clooney sees the two eras as showing different manifestations of political intolerance by the far right which could progress to unthinkable changes to the governance of the USA if not vigorously opposed.

Murrow is shown, correctly, as a chain smoker. This led to his untimely death from lung cancer a some years later.

The acting in the film is first rate. Much of the cinematography was done with a hand-held camera but this has been used judiciously to get into small spaces. There is none of that jerking and wobble put in for 'artistic effect' by many 'creative' cameramen. There are times, though, when part of the field is obscured by intruding heads or bits of the studio structure. The dialogue is naturalistic, with people talking across each other but this can make it difficult to pick out the important bits. The general atmosphere is a bit claustrophobic but wasn't the whole country claustrophobic in those days.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Interesting take on McCarthyism.
Comment: George Clooney's second film from behind the camera focuses-sorry,couldn't resist the pun!!-on the bad old days of McCarthy's hysterical anti-communist crusade in the early 1950s.It centres on the reporting of Ed Murrow(played by David Strathairn),and the reaction against it by the right(not just McCarthy)and Murrow's struggles with the suits at CBS trying to get and keep his reporting on the air.
Clooney plays a producer for Murrow-well acted,but he keeps a low profile in most of the film.The parallels between the anti-communist hysteria of the 1950s and the flagwaving jingoism post 11/09/01 are obvious,and Clooney dosen't strees them,they emerge naturally as the film goes on.
Let's hope Clooney continues to be interested in making odd,non-Hollywood films-if the suits at the studios let him!!!



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