MOVIE REVIEWS | The Paper (1994)

in Movies & TV Shows2 years ago

imdb

About this time to film - yet away my favorite actor is that Michael Keaton's , one of the masterpieces - is The Paper (1994). Michael Keaton is probably the actor who has played most of the journalist or newspaper exec roles. The only films I remember are "The Paper (1994)," "Live from Baghdad (2002)," and "Spotlight (2015)" , only The Paper is not based on a true story, the other two films are based on real events. . In particular, "Live from Baghdad (2002)", which was considered only a small and medium-sized cable news channel, exclusively reported the live coverage in Gulf War in 1992, and The World's No. It's a movie that depicts the process of rising to 1 (CNN like this is now down to mid-stream, so it's very difficult to maintain it).

This isn't the story of The Paper (1994), the movie I'm talking about today, but Michael's 2015 film Spotlight won the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay. The movie starring (more or less a supporting role) Mr. Keaton appeared in the film as the editor-in-chief (Henry). But this role is Mr. Not unfamiliar to Keaton, he also appeared as a journalist in the 1994 film "The Paper". Coming back to The Paper (1994), this film is set in a fictional newspaper in New York, about writing the right articles, i.e. real journalists working for a newspaper, not a "RAG" (downstream newspaper). Pre-2000's American portrayal of the movie stars Michael Keaton, Glenn Close, the always attractive Marisa Tomei, Randy Quaid and Robert Duvall , who are top-line actors , and other famous actors who were unknown at the time. It was directed by Ron Howard. This was, in my opinion, one of the best films of Glenn Close - her acting in this movie was amazing.

There are a lot of great lines - it's a media related movie, so the dialogue is quick and witty. Among them, the conversation between Alicia (Glenn Close), a senior newspaper executive and managing editor, and Henry (Michael Keaton), a metro section editor, is impressive. Here's a conversation where Henry fights with Alicia while trying to stop printing to fix a bad article, which is cool:

Alicia: No way! We run what we got.
Henry: It's wrong!
Alicia: Given the information we had, it's right.
Henry: Yeah, but it's not right. It's wrong.
Alicia: Not today. Tomorrow it's wrong.
We only have to be right for a day.
Henry: People will read this, and
they'll believe us. No! Not tomorrow!

If you can find it, please take a look.