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Shattered Glass
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Directed by Billy Ray.
Before Jayson Blair made headlines for his plagiarized New York Times reporting, Stephen Glass defamed the weekly current events magazine The New Republic with a series of eye-catching, entertaining, and completely fabricated stories. Now Glass' trail of lies gets the big-screen treatment in writer/director Billy Ray's Shattered Glass, featuring Hayden Christensen in the title role. The film chronicles Glass' time at the magazine in the late '90s, when his colorful coverage of a hedonistic Young Republican convention, superstar web hackers, and the circus surrounding the Bill Clinton/Monica Lewinsky scandal made him the toast of the publishing world, garnering attention from such national publications as George and Rolling Stone. Barely out of college, the eager Glass ingratiates himself with the office staff, including his mentor, managing editor Michael Kelly (Hank Azaria). But when Kelly is unceremoniously fired and replaced with editor Chuck Lane (Peter Sarsgaard), Glass' pieces come under a greater degree of scrutiny, until one in particular threatens to expose his tall tales to the rest of the world. Based in part on a Vanity Fair article by journalist Buzz Bissinger, Shattered Glass premiered at the Telluride and Toronto film festivals before its limited fall theatrical release. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
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gahnzzgahnzz M.A.D. #001 - Shattered Glass
by gahnzz in M.A.D. by Gahnzz - (Movie A Day)
liked it.
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"I was turned onto this film after hearing about it on a Podcast... ( I think it was Cinebanter but not completely sure.) The main critique that intrigued me was that it was apparently good casting for Hayden Christensen. Well, that turned out to be very true. Which, while good for the movie, is not necessarily a good thing for Christensen.Shattered Glass is the story of of Stephen Glass, a writer for the New Republic magazine in the late 1990's. He enjoyed a meteoric rise at the magazine and had quite a healthy dose of respect from his colleagues until it all came crashing down after it was revealed that one of his stories had facts that were "suspect" after some cursory examination.Turns out that Glass had fabricated almost all of the facts of his stories during his entire career at the New Republic, which had long reaching impact on both himself and the magazine. The movie, which stars Christensen, Peter Sarsgaard, and Chloe Sevigny, covers that last few months of his care ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 Journalism Movies
by Risselada in Filmspotting
loved it.
"Some of these movies feature journalism more centrally some more incidentally.1. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - Gonzo Journalism at it's most iconic2. Citizen Kane - Journalism as a theme and part of the structure3. Shattered Glass - true story of fake stories4. All The President's Men5. No Man's Land - how journalism doesn't just report on wars, but often affects wars, and sometimes even starts them Runner's up - Shock Corridor, The Hudsucker Proxy, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Good Night, and Good Luck. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The world of bookish, passive-aggressive reporters doesn't seem like the stuff of compelling drama, but Billy Ray's Shattered Glass manages to make one egghead's pathetic desperation a rousing time at the movies. Comparisons to The Paper Chase or even All the President's Men aren't that far out of line: Glass presents a sad, late-'90s alternate universe to Woodward and Bernstein, where journalists -- ostensible purveyors of truth -- have to scramble to ferret out the lies in their own offices. Unlike Steven Spielberg's jocular Catch Me If You Can, Shattered Glass doesn't offer a pat explanation for its anti-hero's pathological lying. He isn't abandoned by a parent, and it isn't implied by anyone other than Hayden Christensen's Stephen Glass that he's attempting to live up to stratospheric expectations "back home." Instead, the character's rationale is inherent in Christensen's cagey, live-wire performance: He's a composite of every dog-ate-my-homework brown-noser that ever walked into a newsroom, classroom, or job interview, desperate for approbation and willing to stroke any ego to get it. A-list screenwriter Ray takes some liberties of his own in the name of cinema -- conflating a character here and there, and focusing almost solely on the piece that brought Glass down -- but the result is a tightly crafted, swiftly edited exposé that never curries obvious audience sympathy. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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