By James Bowman on 10.12.05 @ 12:01AM
George Clooney doesn't dare to tell the truth.
Why I should have expected anything other than an exercise in
media triumphalism from Good Night and Good Luck, I don't
know, but I did. Silly me. If I had seen the advertising tagline
before I saw the movie, I'd have known better. "In A Nation
Terrorized By Its Own Government, One Man Dared to Tell The Truth."
What nation would that be, I wonder? Oh, right, of course it's the
United States of Amerika. And such nonsense is not only in the
tagline. The film's hero, Edward R. Murrow (David Strathairn), a
once famous CBS newsman, explains his broadcast attack on Senator
Joseph McCarthy in March of 1954 by saying he's "going to go after
him because the terror is right here in this room." Yeah, right.
The real Murrow made his name reporting to Americans on the Blitz
in London. It's a little hard to believe that he didn't have a
better idea than this of what "terror" meant.
At any rate, the film's director, George Clooney, and his
co-writer, Grant Heslov, don't. They have completely and
uncritically bought into the official Hollywood version of the
McCarthy era. It's hardly surprising, but it's quite false. Not by
the wildest caprice of imagination was "A Nation Terrorized" by
McCarthy. A few screenwriters, actors, and directors with a strong
sense of their own entitlement to keep on writing, acting, and
directing were denied that opportunity. Some diplomats, military
men, and other government officials also lost their jobs. Some were
not hired. Most of those who were seriously affected had been and
in some cases still were communists or communist sympathizers --
which in those days meant agents or would-be agents of Joseph
Stalin or his heirs, foreign dictators whose massive military might
was geared for war against America, whose proxies were or had
recently been killing American soldiers in Korea, and who were
responsible for what at the time were the greatest mass-murders in
history.
In that context, to talk of the junior senator from Wisconsin as
"terrorizing" anybody is a form of hysteria. There are plenty of
things to regret about the career of Senator McCarthy, but to
regard him as a terrorist amounts to a willful refusal to
understand "The Truth" that the film and the media culture it
represents here characteristically claim as their own property.
Murrow and his producer at the network, Fred Friendly (Mr.
Clooney), are presented as a sort of Woodward and Bernstein
avant la letter. They're up against McCarthy, all right,
but McCarthy himself never appears except on the television screen.
Nor does anything else outside the claustrophobic CBS newsroom. The
only human drama the film bothers to present us with comes as
Murrow and Friendly attempt to persuade William Paley (Frank
Langella), the president of CBS, to let them go on with their
political campaign in spite of the hostility of advertisers.
Spoiler alert! They are successful.
Because his heroes are so perfect -- always right, as McCarthy
is always wrong -- Mr. Clooney must have seen the need to qualify
his admiration in some way, lest his film become mere hagiography.
This he does, or rather tries to do, by stressing its period feel.
Not only is it in black-and-white, so that it will blend in easily
with the kinescopes of the period that he uses with some frequency
(and exclusively to represent Senator McCarthy), but he portrays
people as being of their times in ways calculated to make them
stand out to us. They are constantly smoking and drinking, for
example, and their attitudes towards women in the workplace -- here
represented mainly by Patricia Clarkson as Shirley Wershba -- are
gratifyingly Neanderthal.
Scene: a Manhattan bar in the small hours. Murrow and Friendly
and the whole CBS staff are knocking them back after his famous
broadcast attack on McCarthy, waiting to see what the papers will
say about it. The air is thick with smoke and male camaraderie.
"Shirley, hon," says Murrow to the only woman present, "will you
just go across the street and get the early editions?"
In another scene we see Murrow interviewing Liberace and asking
him if there is any immediate prospect of his marrying and settling
down. It is perhaps not quite clear whether we are meant to laugh
at Murrow's naivete or at the hypocrisies of the time which made it
necessary to keep up the pretense that everybody in the public eye
was heterosexual. There is also the strange subplot about the
discovery of the secret marriage -- because CBS had a policy
prohibiting two of its employees from being married to each other
-- between Shirley and her husband Joe (Robert Downey Jr.). What, I
wonder, is the point of this? That CBS had issued such a
puritanical edict on account of McCarthy? All these things are not
really humanizing details. Even when we see an actual commercial
for Kent cigarettes which stresses that the manufacturer has chosen
Murrow's show for its advertising because the people who watch it
are more intelligent than the average, it is not really a fault of
Murrow's so much as a way of being patronizing towards his
period.
But the movie itself is evidence that we have no right to
patronize. For the questions that anyone without Hollywood's and
the media's vested interests in self-mythologizing would want to
have answered -- and that the real-life 1950s, for all their
benightedness, were obsessive about trying to answer -- are these:
were there, in fact, any communists in Hollywood, the media or the
government and were they a real danger to the Republic? These
questions the movie never thinks it worth its while to ask, let
alone answer, save in one brief scene where Shirley and Joe are in
bed and one of them asks: "What if we're wrong? Can we be sure that
we're not going to look back and see that we were protecting the
wrong side?" Happily for them, they decide that they can be
sure.
One line of Murrow's attack on McCarthy stands out for a Truth
that is more, one hopes, than mere advertising hype. It is that
"mature Americans can engage in the clash of ideas without being
contaminated." That may have been true in the 1950s. But a movie
like this one, which feels it necessary to protect us from any
genuine controversy, suggests that it is so no longer.
topics:
Television, Hollywood, Military, NATO, Oil