Spotlight: A thorough investigation
Cast: Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Michael Keaton
Rated: 7/10
When a group of investigative journalists of the Boston Globe get down to probing the sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests (70 of them eventually in Boston alone!) and the Church recycling the culprits into the system despite the bigness of their crime, an engaging film like Spotlight happens.
Spotlight is not just about the enormity of the issue. It is a hell of a film because it is thorough and because it captures the routineness of the work at hand with amazing alacrity. This, when the investigation itself is as slow as spreading over one whole year. The back and forth, the interviews of the emotional victims, the backgrounding, the digging away, the not breaking with time, the decision to hold on to the story till the system and not just the priests get nailed, and not hyping it at all (actually underplaying it) — is what thorough journalism is all about.
All this may sound a misnomer and an impossible achievement in today’s shallow journalistic world of “breaking news” but Spotlight shows how big stories need time and energy, honesty and correctness, hard work and patience to become really big after being published. The Boston Globe got the Pulitzer Prize for this report on the systematic sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests and it deserves kudos for having published it despite having a more than a 50 per cent devout Catholic readership.
A slow thriller that can’t be missed.
Source: Sunday Pioneer, 21 February 2016
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