The Conversation

DUSTIN HOFFMAN and Robert Redford in a scene from the 1976 film All the President鈥檚 Men.

NIGHTTIME. A dim and dingy car park. Woefully inadequate fluorescent lights flicker and buzz overhead. Two men stand in half-shadow. One is barely visible, his face almost entirely swallowed by darkness. His voice is low and gravelly:

鈥淭he list is longer than anyone can imagine. It involves the entire US intelligence community. FBI, CIA, Justice. It鈥檚 incredible. The cover-up had little to do with Watergate. It was mainly to protect the covert operations. It leads everywhere. Get out your notebook. There鈥檚 more.鈥

The other man is lost for words. He just stands there, mouth slightly open and eyes wide, trying to make sense of what he鈥檚 hearing. The exchange ends with a warning: his life, along with that of his colleague, is in grave and immediate danger.

This is a pivotal moment in Alan J. Pakula鈥檚 All the President鈥檚 Men, which has just turned 50. The film was based on the by journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, who investigated the for the Washington Post.

The man doing the talking in the scene I鈥檝e been describing is Mark Felt (Hal Holbrook), then associate director of the FBI, better known as 鈥淒eep Throat.鈥 His interlocutor, temporarily stunned into silence, is Woodward (Robert Redford).

A masterpiece of political cinema, All The President鈥檚 Men remains one of the finest films about investigative journalism ever made.

Steeped in a fog of paranoia and distrust 鈥 an atmosphere shaped in no small part by cinematographer Gordon Willis鈥 matchless treatment of light and shade 鈥 it is as relevant now as it was on first release.

UNCOVERING THE WATERGATE SCANDAL
鈥淎t its simplest,鈥 journalist writes about the scandal, 鈥淲atergate is the story of two separate criminal conspiracies: the Nixon world鈥檚 鈥榙irty tricks鈥 that led to the burglary on June 17, 1972, and the subsequent wider cover-up. The first conspiracy was deliberate, a sloppy and shambolic but nonetheless developed plan to subvert the 1972 election; the second was reactive, almost instinctive 鈥 it seems to have happened simply because no one said no.鈥

What started out as an ostensibly ordinary break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, DC during the US presidential election cycle soon revealed a broader pattern of political espionage, illegal surveillance, campaign sabotage and the systematic misuse of state power. Much of it targeted perceived political enemies.

As the indefatigable Woodward and Bernstein pursued the story, it became clear the burglary was part of a much larger operation 鈥 one that reached all the way into the heart of the White House.

Their probing would ultimately lead to the disgrace and resignation of Richard Nixon, who faced near-certain impeachment.

Redford was the driving force behind All the President鈥檚 Men.

He became interested in the Watergate story while working on The Candidate, a 1972 satire about the backstage machinations underpinning an idealistic Senate campaign that, in an instance of uncanny timing, overlapped with the unfolding scandal.

Redford followed Woodward and Bernstein鈥檚 investigation as it panned out in real time. In 1972, he reached out to Woodward directly, hoping to better understand both the facts of the case and the methods of the reporting.

Convinced that the story demanded a restrained, quasi-documentary approach, Redford initially envisioned a black-and-white film shot in a pared-back style, with an emphasis on process rather than star power.

Warner Bros., with whom he had a production deal, thought otherwise. Having already agreed to finance the film, the studio insisted that Redford take a leading role 鈥 and marketed the as yet-unmade project as 鈥渢he most devastating detective story鈥 of the century.

There were early discussions about casting Al Pacino as Bernstein, fresh from the success of The Godfather (1972), but the part ultimately went to Dustin Hoffman. Pakula then signed on to direct, bringing with him a conceptual and tonal sensibility ideally suited to the material.

A quandary remained: how do you build suspense out of a story whose outcome is already common knowledge? Film scholars suggest the filmmaking team鈥檚 response to that challenge is 鈥渢he key鈥 which unlocks the movie.

At one point, during his first meeting with Deep Throat, Woodward admits: 鈥淭he story is dry. All we鈥檝e got are pieces. We can鈥檛 seem to figure out what the puzzle is supposed to look like.鈥

We share the confusion of the reporters as they struggle to get to the bottom of things. What might, in the wrong hands, have been a disastrous mistake turned out to be a masterstroke.

The result is an endlessly watchable and quotable (鈥淔ollow the money鈥) film that generates narrative and dramatic tension through the sheer difficulty of knowing anything at all.

In age beset by disinformation, brazen political deceit, strategic obfuscation, and collapsing trust in public institutions, that lesson feels less historically distant than it does disturbingly prescient. 鈥 The Conversation via Reuters Connect

 

is a Senior Lecturer for the Discipline of English and Writing at the University of Sydney.