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The Post


The Post is a well-told story of bold journalism that led to the ousting of President Richard Nixon on multiple charges involving abuse of power. The Watergate Scandal revealed how Nixon had launched his personal vendetta against his critics using the FBI, the CIA and the IRS.

The movie however restricts itself to the Vietnam War part of the Watergate Scandal, appealing to an audience who still have wet dreams about the only long fought war the US lost during the Cold War times. All the President's Men (1976), Nixon (1995) and Frost/Nixon (2008) are other good movies that centre around Watergate. The movie has been scripted wisely, the idea of how Kay talks highly of her husband without hinting on Phil Graham's extra-marital affair (with Robin Webb) that pushed him to commit suicide - is the right approach to writing this story. Too much of information sharing usually spoils the craft, even if the genre be biography.

The Post would make you laugh, give you chills, leaving you with a warm heart and a reassurance that truth would triumph in the end. With names like Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks and Bob Odenkirk on the cast, Spielberg has delivered a wonderful movie that has rightfully grabbed two Academy Award nominations for the year.

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