If you need a serious hit of newspaper movies, check out Richard R.
Ness' "From Headline Hunter to Superman." This 808-page tome, published in
1997, catalogues 2,100 feature films dealing with journalism. Here are a
few more titles:
The Final Extra 1927
Big News 1929
Copy 1929
Five Star Final 1931
Scandal Sheet 1931
Platinum Blonde 1931
I Cover the Waterfront 1933
It Happened One Night 1934
Front Page Woman 1935
The Libeled Lady 1936
Inside Story 1939
Foreign Correspondent 1940
Confirm or Deny 1941
Nine Lives are Not Enough 1941
Meet John Doe 1941
They Got Me Covered 1943
It Happened Tomorrow 1944
Night Editor 1946
The Big Clock 1948
Call Northside 777 1948
Big Town 1950
Ace in the Hole (The Big Carnival)
Come Fill the Cup 1951
The Captive City 1952
It Happens Every Thursday 1953
Front Page Story 1953
Slander 1956
Sweey Smell of Success 1957
Between the Lines 1977
The Journalist 1979
City News 1982
The Year of Living Dangerously 1982
Under Fire 1983
The Killing Fields 1984
Not for Publication 1984
Mean Season 1985
Fletch 1985
Jack and Mike 1986
Salvador 1986
Newsies 1992
The Public Eye Heads (TV) 1993
Madman of the People 1994
Welcome to Sarajevo 1997
Never Been Kissed 1999
Paul
Schindler's journalism movies
The Internet Movie Database
About > Movies
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Newspaper movies
Looking to escape the rigors of a day at the newsroom? How about a nice
newspaper movie? That's sick! You need to get a life.
We can't help you with that, but if you haven't had your fix for the
day, here are some of the best newspaper movies of all time (and a few
clinkers) to help you unwind -- if that's what you call it. (It seems that
a certain amount of obsessiveness can be an occupational hazard.)
Are we missing one of your favorites? Tell us.
|
| Citizen
Kane |
A classic, not just among newspaper movies,
but among all American movies ever made. In June, 1998, a panel of
the American Film Institute chose it as the best American feature
film ever. Orson Welles directs this parallel to the life of William
Randolph Hearst. The flashbacks and camera angles were ahead of the
times for the 1940s. Starring Welles and Joseph Cotten. Black and
white, 1941, 119 minutes |
FOUR
PACK The Front Page |
The first of four comedic takeoffs on the 1928
Hecht and Macarthur play. The formula is simple and true: ace
reporter and editor battle with each other and with corruption. This
classic stars Pat O'Brien, Adolphe Menjou and Mary Brian. The first
three end with one of the play's best lines. But you won't read it
here. You'll have to wait for the movie. Black and white, 1931, 99
minutes |
| Sequel: His Girl
Friday |
| A clever twist takes the lead from two males and
gives it to Cary Grant (as the editor) and Rosalind Russell (the
retirement-bent reporter) for a battle of the sexes. Quick wit and
repartee make this movie the fastest of the four -- and, some say,
the best. Black and white, 1940, 90 minutes |
| Threequel: The Front
Page |
Slower
paced than its predecessors, but still very funny. Jack Lemmon and
Walter Matthau in the lead roles, Carol Burnett and Susan Sarandon
support. Here, Lemmon and Matthau are in the same predicament as
O'Brien and Menjou in the scene above. 1974, 105 minutes |
| Nyquil: Switching
Channels |
Apparently, three times was a charm. The fourth
is not charming. This version updates "His Girl Friday" and sets it
at a TV station. It doesn't cut it. (Or, is this a reflection of
newspaper arrogance? Compare and decide for yourself.) Kathleen
Turner and Burt Reynolds at left, as well as Christopher Reeve and
others. 1988, 113 minutes |
| Deadline
USA |
| Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Greene once called
this the best newspaper movie of all time. Disagree? YOU tell him.
Humphrey Bogart, as editor of The Day, has his hands full trying to
stave off an attempt by the founder's daughters to sell out to the
competition, orchestrate an expose on a murderous crime empire and
save his marriage. Can anyone, even Bogie, manage all that? Learn
the answer -- and how a running press can be used as a murder
weapon. High marks for authenticity and adventure. Black and white,
1952, 87 minutes |
| Teacher's
Pet |
So, you think that the gulf between newsroom and classroom
is a fairly modern invention? Check out this 1958 flick. Hard-boiled
New York Evening Chronicle City Editor Clark Gable, right, is
invited to speak to a college journalism class. Here's part of his
RSVP: "If you've ever been inside a real, live newsroom, you'll
remember that a city editor's job is to get out a daily paper.
Unfortunately, that doesn't leave him much time for such pleasant
diversions as bridge luncheons, guided tours through Rockefeller
Center, the canning of crab apples and lectures to journalism
classes.'' Soon, Mr. Hard-Boiled sees the light of day -- as in
Doris Day, journalism teacher. They begin to close the chasm between
profs and professionals. 1958, 120 minutes |
| Blessed
Event |
| Daily Express gossip columnist Al Roberts makes
his living and a name for himself by writing about broadway stars
and, often, the passage of time between matrimony and maternity.
When he picks on a hood, the hood sends Frankie to have a little
talk with Roberts about his work. The columnist gets a confession
out of Frankie and turns him into his own bodyguard. Al seems pretty
smart, until he takes on a crooner. Starring Lee Tracy and Dick
Powell. 1932, black and white, 89 minutes |
-30- (a.k.a.
Deadline Midnight) |
| Ever dream of having Joe Friday as your managing
editor? Joe Friday IS your managing editor? See Jack Webb at his
Friday-best in this film set at a metro daily, apparently in Los
Angeles. He both directs and stars. "The Motion Picture Guide" calls
this, "one of the most accurate and most memorable newspaper films
ever made, and one of Webb's best productions.'' The clueless copy
boy? That's David Nelson (son of Ozzie and Harriet). 1959 |
| All
the President's Men |
We know how this one turns out, but a good
script and authentic acting by Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford
keep things rolling. Redford, at right, not only bought the film
rights to the book, co-produced the film and acted in it, he also
suggested that the book be written in the first place. Find out why
all those Baby Boomers wanted to become Carl Bernsteins and Bob
Woodwards in the mid-70s.1976, 136 minutes |
| Absence of
Malice |
| This is a sentimental Free Press favorite,
written by former Freep executive editor Kurt Luedtke. Forever
fretful Miami reporter Sally Field ties an innocent Paul Newman to
the disappearance and possible murder of a union leader. A
suspenseful examination of newspaper ethics. 1982, 116 minutes
|
| Continental
Divide |
John Belushi plays Ernie Souchak, a cigarette-smoking,
hat-in-the-office-type Chicago reporter who gets enough dirt on the
Mob that they blow up his apartment. Soooo, as often happens in
newsrooms, his editors send him out of town -- to Colorado -- to
investigate an eagle researcher, played by Blair Brown. They clash,
they kiss, they fall in love, and Belushi is called back to Chicago
when one of his sources gets wasted. We know, happens all the time.
1981, 103 minutes |
| A Case of
Libel |
| You've seen Ed Asner as a journalist; he's
powerful as an attorney in this re-enactment of the libel trial over
columnist Westbrook Pegler's smear campaign against Quentin
Reynolds. Regarded as one of the best courtroom dramas ever. 1984,
92 minutes |
| The Pelican
Brief |
In this adaptation of John Grisham's
bestseller, a smart law student (Julia Roberts), in the course of
doing her homework, trips over evidence that high government
officials conspired in the assassination of two Supreme Court
justices. Realizing that there is more riding on this than her
semester grade, she enlists the help of an investigative reporter
(Denzel Washington) in a dangerous race to get the story out. No
word on her grade. 1993, 141 minutes |
| I Love Trouble
|
It's a comedy! It's a romance! It's an
adventure film! What it wasn't, was all that great. Nick Nolte and
Julia Roberts personify a Chicago-style, David-and-Goliath newspaper
war. Smug star reporter Nolte and cubbie Roberts pursue the same
story -- and each other -- and wind up on the same side when things
get dangerous. (Some of the same energy as Teacher's Pet.) Fun, but
hardly a hit. Some serious journos panned it for its romance and
lack of authenticity. But, HEY, it's a MOVIE! 1994, 123 minutes
|
| The
Paper |
| The rush to report and publish a story about a
double homicide with racial overtones propels us through 24 hours of
the life of the New York Sun and its scrappy assistant managing
editor, played by Michael Keaton. Being courted by some other,
arrogant newspaper in town (we wonder whose?), dueling with an
avaricious managing editor (Glenn Close) and keeping his very
pregnant reporter-wife (Marisa Tomei) waiting, Keaton takes us
pell-mell to an ending where everything is tied up with a neat
little bow. Roger Ebert wrote, "you get cocooned in a tight little
crowd of hyperactive competitors, and eventually your view of
normality begins to blur." Now, THAT sounds familiar! Ron Howard
directs, 1994, 112
minutes | |