Broadcast News
News media is a long-time favourite topic of Hollywood.
There seems to be a connection as if producing news is, somehow, closely
related to producing movies, and journalists, anchors and editors are the
heroes of that battle to keep us informed and entertained and most importantly,
keep the news media afloat. “Broadcast News” may have a different angle than “Network”,
but much is the same.
Jane Craig (Holly Hunter) is a producer at an (unnamed, but
big) network. We learn that she early on excelled at managing chaos to the
level of micromanagement, but also that she is a social wreck, likely for the
same reason. Her friend at the network is Aaron Altman (Albert Brooks), a
journalist with very high standards. They collaborate like a well-oiled machine
and off work they use each other to off-load their personal anxieties. The problem
here is that Aaron is secretly madly in love with Jane.
Tom Grunick (William Hurt) is a TV face from a local station
who is so well liked by viewers that the big network has hired him. Tom is
painfully aware that his journalistic credentials are almost non-existent and
that he is hopelessly inexperienced. He adores Jane for her skill (and to some
extent Aaron too), but Jane has fallen head over heels in love with Tom. Aaron,
however, sees Tom both a rival to Jane, but also as an insult to the
journalistic quality he represents.
The three work at the hectic network and juggle reports,
dinners and jostling for positions. Tom has success as an anchor, but only because
he is carefully fed by Jane and Aaron. Aaron gets his chance at anchoring but
despite being trained by Tom, fails dismally due to excessive sweating. When
the network goes through a restructuring (read: massive layoffs), Jane is promoted,
Tom sent to London and Aaron quits and so they all disperse.
The thing that bothered me watching “Broadcast News” was the
classic problem of the producers/director/scriptwriter not believing in the
core idea of the story and so insisting to fill in a human element (a triangle
drama) that ends up taking over the movie, sidelining what was supposed to make
the movie special. In the case of this movie there are two interesting themes:
News as information versus news as entertainment and Finding your right shelf.
Both are interesting, and strong enough to carry the story (at least for me),
but instead we get this triangle drama with a lot of shouting that is both enormously
trivial and irrelevant to the core themes. Do not get me wrong, they are going
about this triangle adventure nicely enough, it is just a very different movie
and, myself, I was much more interested in the other themes.
Tom represents the news as entertainment side. He is selling
news, he is attracting viewers to the network who are interesting in him
personally, more than in the news themselves. For the network it is a
commercial arrangement and he brings in viewers. Aaron and to some extent Jane
represent the quality of the news, the credibility and relevance of what is
presented and in their optic the network serves a public service function,
where they as providers of quality news stories are the best qualified to produce
that. That of course begs the question, what is quality news? Is it what people
wants to see or is it what people should be watching and who decides what that
is in the first place? “Broadcast News” opens that discussion but it fizzles and
it remains only as identifiers of Tom and Aaron.
Instead, this discussion morphs into the other theme, which
seems to say that everybody has their key competence and if you accept and
embrace it, you will be happier for it. The network too. When the three of them
accept their roles, they can produce quality news that sells and all is good.
“Broadcast News” does carry the label “Romantic comedy-drama”,
but whether this is the intent, in which case the triangle drama takes centre
stage, or it is a result of what it became, I do not know.
I did enjoy watching the three of them act it out, but for a
long time I was confused about what I was looking at, where this was going. It
landed, and I suppose it landed okay, but it felt a bit like an emergency
landing.
Hunter, Brooks and Hurt are all good. This was an early
appearance for Joan Cusack and Jack Nicholson has a small part as well, so, I
guess it was a bit of a Hollywood all-stars event.
“Network News” is okay. It is an eighties movie so already
there it is a win, but I felt it could have been a lot more.






