Hildy, You're a Newspaperman: Collecting Screen Scribes
This I-hope-it's-useful page is in response to a journalism educators'
e-mail list discussion of films that might help inform students about
the culture of journalism and newsrooms. Rather than continue the discussion in 600 e-mail boxes, here's a Web space to keep it going:
Read (or add) comments to this page here...
A few people have put a lot of time and energy into creating Web
sites about journalism-related films, so I'm providing a few links
to them, then my own list.
- The Detroit Free Press's resource page for interns and students has a well-illustrated short list:
http://www.freep.com/jobspage/club/movies.htm
- Paul Schindler has a larger collection, with comments...
http://www.schindler.org/movie.shtml
- The
Journalism History Jhistory e-mail list has discussed this topic more than once, and has searchable archives going
back to 1997 at "h-net.org." You can search by going to http://www.h-net.org/logsearch/,
picking "jhistory" from the list, and
adding a key word or two. There was a healthy discussion of
both novels and movies in January '99, if you want to browse by date.
- The Image of the Journalist in Popular Culture project at
Annenberg/USC has a members-only database of 26,000 items at http://www.ijpc.org/introdatabase.htm
Bob's own list (and notes):
- All the President's Men
- Absence of Malice
- The Year of Living Dangerously
- Broadcast News
- Network
- The Paper
- Teacher's Pet
- The Front Page
- His Girl Friday
- Five Star Final
One film I never see on anyone's list is "Doctor X," an uneven
1930-something thriller in which the reporter not only
climbs a drainpipe to look in a window, but crawls under a sheet to
impersonate a corpse (complete with toe-tag) and eavesdrop on conversations at the
morgue. Skills to remember!
More seriously, my own suggestions to journalism students are "All the President's Men" to dramatize investigative work
and high purpose, followed by "Absence of Malice" for discussions of
libel law and press responsibility. (On the international-news
and broadcast side, I'd go for "The Year of Living
Dangerously," "Broadcast News" and "Network.")
"The Paper" does a good job at capturing a page-one ethical
dilemma, and provides a pretty good snapshot of newsroom profanity and
weirdness. Some of the older films
are as good or better reminders that not all editors are as wise and
just as Ben
Bradlee (or Jason Robards). "Teacher's Pet" also might be fun for
students, with a
learned-it-all-on-the-job city editor (Clark Gable) facing off with a
young journalism professor played by Doris Day.
I also like the original "The Front Page" -- and the "His Girl
Friday" remake, which involved a sex change for reporter Hildy Johnson
from Hildebrand to Hildegarde, but kept the mile-a-minute give-em-Hecht
dialogue. (The heading on this page is a slight misquote.)
Personal cult (of one?) favorite: Turner Classics has
"Five Star Final" (1931) with Edward G. Robinson as a
compulsively-hand-washing editor and Boris Karloff as his star
scandalmonger, complete with fake Roman collar... based on a play by
the second editor of the Evening Graphic, my favorite Roaring Twenties tabloid. (http://stepno.com/unc/graphic/) One of the first editor's novels, Hot News, also became a movie, called either "Hot News" or "Scandal for Sale." If you ever see a copy of the film, tell me where!
Turner Classics has plenty of other films with newspaper people in
them. For example, these were scheduled for a 12-hour broadcast
marathon Sept. 19, 2003. (Other than the first, the descriptions are
Turner's):
- Five Star Final (1931) Tabloid revives old scandal to boost circulation. Edward G. Robinson, Boris Karloff.
- Front Page Woman (1935) Rival reporters try to
scoop each other while covering a fire. Bette Davis, George Brent,
Roscoe Karns.
- Back In Circulation (1937) A reporter tries to win her editor's heart by solving a murder case. Pat O'Brien, Joan Blondell.
- Front
Page, The (1931) A crusading newspaper editor tricks his retiring star
reporter into covering one last case. Pat O'Brien, Adolph Menjou.
- Libeled
Lady (1936) When an heiress sues a newspaper, the editor hires a gigolo
to compromise her. Jean Harlow, Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy.
- Nothing
Sacred (1937) When a small-town girl is diagnosed with a rare,
deadly disease, an ambitious newspaper man turns her into a national
heroine. Carole Lombard, Fredric March, Walter Connolly.
- Meet
John Doe (1941) A reporter's fraudulent story turns a tramp into
a national hero and makes him a pawn of big business. Gary Cooper,
Barbara Stanwyck, Edward Arnold.
- Philadelphia Story, The (1940) Tabloid reporters crash a society marriage. Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, James Stewart.
Read (or add) comments and additions to the list here...
http://stepno.com http://aejmc.net/newspaper
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© Copyright
2007
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
8/6/07; 12:02:45 PM. |
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