Spotlight, 2015
Directed by Tom
McCarthy, 128 minutes
Mark Ruffalo, Michael
Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery, Stanley Tucci
Review by Katherine Scheetz
Review by Katherine Scheetz
In
the slew of iconic Bostonian movies,
Spotlight sits among those that embody the grey-cloud intensity that is
more than a movie set in Boston but
one that is, in essence, Boston. Think Good
Will Hunting (1997) and The Departed
(2006).
The
narrative takes us in, immediately, to the freshly wounded: small children
coloring in a police station room, guarded closely by their mother. Enter
well-dressed, overpaid, Catholic lawyer, swinging around the familiar terrain
as green police officers mutter about arraignments and trials. Fast forward 15 years and dart down the fluorescent hallways of the Boston Globe to the
“Spotlight” special reporting team office, coffee brewing and desks peppered
with papers to be piled and filed.
The
catalyzing event is the entrance of Schreiber, quietly commanding as Marty
Baron, the brand new, non-Catholic, Editor-in-Chief who assigns them the
project of following up on a case of a child-molesting priest. One priest turns
into three which turns into 14, which turns into, well you get the idea. It’s
an investigative journalism avalanche.
Writers
Josh Singer (The Fifth Estate) and Tom McCarthy (Up) have crafted a script with
words chosen as meticulously as a newspaper article. Every character on the
page matters. This intention is not lost on the glowing cast. Ruffalo is
dynamite as Mike Rezendes, down to his parted hair, Neanderthal eating habits
and slouch, determined under the weight of his shoulder bag. His interactions
with Mitchell Garabedian played by the brilliant Stanley Tucci unfold with
desperate grace. Tucci, as with all projects he touches, only enhances. Whether
an enigmatic TV personality in a dystopian future, quirky husband to the
colorful Julia Child or dry-humored liason to Anne Hathaway into the fashion
world, Tucci lights up the characters around him. Spotlight is no exception. He nails Garabedian as the fed-up
representation to the targeted victims with a nuanced and compassionate rage.
McAdams slips out of her skin as Sasha Phieffer, particularly in her interviews
with and connection to the survivors.
By
way of costuming, the simplicity of the gender neutral, monochrome and functional
early 2000s wardrobe is effective. It eliminates any distraction from the story
the reporters are following. Except for the intentional smear of red adorning
Cardinal Law’s garb. Nothing hints at villainy like costuming. McCarthy’s
functional decisions are reflected throughout in minimal set design and glaring,
artificial lighting. Every visual component has been considered carefully.
In
a surprising score from Howard Shore we hear hints of the millennial music
against a grey-rain piano canvas. Shore sprinkles the clacking of computer
keystrokes in every once in a while to ground us again in the looming belly of
the Boston Globe: the Spotlight team’s home base. The breath of a church pipe
organ has a sobering effect in the score as well.
McCarthy
has allowed the story to percolate through, playing the role of host to
fast-paced, flawless writing and a strength that ripples through the cast in
execution. It’s a film – and a story – that deserves the front page.
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You've made me want to see it!
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