Saturday, August 9, 2025
NewsWave
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
Login
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
Login
No Result
View All Result
Login
NewsWave
No Result
View All Result
Home World UK

Netflix depiction of Prince Andrew interview is a welcome addition to the journalism film canon

5 April 2024
in UK
0
Netflix depiction of Prince Andrew interview is a welcome addition to the journalism film canon
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
How does this make you feel?


The car crash interview with Prince Andrew was indeed a scoop for then BBC Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis. Its depiction in the new Netflix film Scoop is a reminder of the power of the one-to-one interview where, as in a courtroom drama, the subject has nowhere to hide from a well-informed investigator.

The 2019 interview led directly to Andrew’s withdrawal from royal duties. But the Netflix version focuses less on the consequences for the royals, and more on the scaffolding that supports a great news story.

Gillian Anderson gives us a small glimpse of Maitlis’ brilliance as an interviewer. Although, beyond the uncanny physical resemblance, Anderson plays her far too steely and lacking in any warmth, doing her no favours.

Advised, just before the cameras roll, to go for the jugular, Maitlis is instead shown carefully paying out rope, yard by yard, allowing the over-indulged and spoilt Andrew to hang himself with his famous references to sweating and pizza.

The behind-the-scenes story is told from the point of view of Newsnight’s interview booker, Sam McAlister. Played by Billie Piper, McAlister is the middlebrow outsider who struggles to be taken seriously. The film lays bare the clashing egos and tensions in any news team. It’s refreshing to see how many cogs and wheels it takes to make a great piece of journalism, not just the heroic reporter or news anchor.

Scoop is highly watchable, but without serious jeopardy for Maitlis or McAlister, it doesn’t quite measure up to the greats in the history of journalism on screen. There is no “gotcha” moment – just confirmation of what we already suspected about the character of the late queen’s favourite son.

A long history

There is a long and honourable tradition of filmmakers turning real-life journalistic scoops into feature-length movies. By sprinkling cinematic stardust over otherwise dull procedurals – hours of careful note-taking, sleepless nights of patient watching and listening – directors have transformed newspaper and television investigations into mythic David and Goliath dramas.

The foundational All the President’s Men (1976) recreates Washington Post journalists Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward’s diligent investigation into presidential complicity in the Watergate break-in. It inspired a generation of investigative journalists, and a “-gate” suffix is now appended to any modern scandal.

The most recent Hollywood iteration of the genre, She Said (2022) depicts New York Times reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, who spent years investigating the predatory sexual behaviour of Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein. The film introduced long-overdue female leads into a film about journalism, and gave Weinstein’s victims a voice.

These films reveal a perennial fascination by film directors, screenwriters and producers for a profession often mired in controversy, and frequently criticised for failing in its primary duty of holding power to account. Scoop is notable in this regard for highlighting the limitations of journalism as well as its strengths. Andrew, although now much-diminished, is still a prince. And we never got a confession as we did in the David Frost interviews with Richard Nixon, which inspired the Oscar-nominated Frost/Nixon, Scoop’s nearest comparator.

In both the UK and the US, journalists are among the least trusted of professionals. And yet, much time and money been spent on converting the “rough old trade” into celluloid.

One reliable database lists some 17,800 films, from 1890 to the present which feature journalists, or the news media. Even if we whittle these down to films where journalists and journalism are a primary or secondary focus of the plot, there are more than 2,000, most of them made in Hollywood.

Many of these, like Billy Wilder’s Ace in the Hole (1951) and the more recent, creepy Nightcrawler (2014) starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a ruthless salesman in human misery, show journalism’s dark side. Heroes or scumbags, journalists are ciphers through which the consequences of human morality are explored on the big screen.

The business of journalism on screen

Like most journalism dramas since All the President’s Men, Scoop contains echoes of that first and greatest forebear. Much of the action takes place in the newsroom, an open-plan space humming with conversation, ringing phones and the (today much quieter) clacking of keyboards. The cast of committed public watchdogs analyses the latest revelation or piece of evidence with hushed urgency.

But the Newsnight newsroom is much depleted of staff compared to the well-resourced Washington Post of the 1970s, where no fewer than eight reporters contributed to writing up that first story about the break-in at the Watergate complex.

In Scoop, the opening scenes at the BBC are framed by announcements of 450 job cuts among the news staff. Since the interview, both McAlister and Maitlis have left the BBC, which does seem to be careless with its talent.

As the theatre director John Tiffany said, about his own dramatic contribution to the cultural image of journalism, the National Theatre of Scotland play Enquirer (2012): “As a nation, we are fond of throwing the baby out with the bathwater. But journalism is one of the parents of democracy and it needs looking after so that it can look after us.”

Every so often we need to be reminded of this, and for that reason alone, Scoop is a welcome addition to the genre.



Source link

🪄 Creating a simple explanation...

Tags: additionAndrewcanondepictionFilmInterviewjournalismNetflixPrince
Previous Post

School results, smoking rates, shop closures? New statistics tool helps you compare local areas in the UK

Next Post

megafarms are being set up to produce camel milk on industrial scales

Related Posts

Four members of same British family killed in head-on crash at start of Portugal holiday
UK

Four members of same British family killed in head-on crash at start of Portugal holiday

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

Four members of a British family, including two 20-year-old twins, their 55-year-old father, and 51-year-old mother, were killed in a head-on car crash in Portugal while traveling from the Algarve to Mourao. The accident also claimed the life of a 19-year-old girlfriend and a Portuguese man, leading local officials to declare two days of mourning. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
Everything you need to know about new Europe travel rules coming within weeks
UK

Everything you need to know about new Europe travel rules coming within weeks

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

The EU will implement a new Entry and Exit System (EES) starting October 12, aimed at replacing passport stamping with digital checks using biometric data at border crossings for non-EU nationals. The system will be rolled out gradually across 25 EU countries and Schengen members, with specific checks at the Port of Dover, St Pancras International, and Folkestone, while manual stamping will remain in Ireland and Cyprus. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
Hundreds of food delivery drivers arrested to stop asylum seekers working
UK

Hundreds of food delivery drivers arrested to stop asylum seekers working

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

Hundreds of arrests were made during a UK government crackdown on asylum seekers working illegally in the gig economy, with 1,780 individuals stopped and 280 arrested from July 20 to 27. Authorities are reviewing support for over fifty asylum seekers, issuing penalties to businesses hiring undocumented workers, and increasing enforcement funding to combat illegal working practices. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
More than 50 arrested at central London protest in support of Palestine Action
UK

More than 50 arrested at central London protest in support of Palestine Action

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

More than 50 people were arrested in central London during a protest supporting Palestine Action, labeled a terror organization by the UK government. Organized by Defend Our Juries, the demonstration saw up to 700 attendees in Parliament Square, where participants held placards and faced police warnings against expressing support for the group, which is subject to a ban under anti-terrorism laws. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
Grandad who was ‘happiest he had been’ since wife’s death dies on holiday
UK

Grandad who was ‘happiest he had been’ since wife’s death dies on holiday

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

A British grandad, Craig Bloomer, 54, tragically died in a moped accident while on holiday with his family in Corfu on July 26. His daughters described him as a "much-loved" family man who had been happiest since the death of his wife two years ago; his family has since set up a GoFundMe page to help with costs following his unexpected passing. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
Farmer who sprayed manure on hundreds of squatting campers speaks out
UK

Farmer who sprayed manure on hundreds of squatting campers speaks out

by My News Wave
9 August 2025
0

A farmer in France, Pierre Richard, defended his decision to spray liquid manure on campers who illegally set up their caravans on his land after police refused to intervene. The group, consisting of up to 250 caravans, reportedly ignored a nearby designated site, leading to a confrontation where Pierre claimed he acted to protect his land and prevent further encampments. Want More Context? 🔎

Read more
NewsWave

News Summarized. Time Saved. Bite-sized news briefs for busy people. No fluff, just facts.

CATEGORIES

  • Africa
  • Asia Pacific
  • Australia
  • Business
  • Canada
  • Entertainment
  • Europe
  • India
  • Middle East
  • New Zealand
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • UK
  • USA
  • World

LATEST NEWS STORIES

  • Meteorite that ripped through Georgia homeowner’s roof is 20 million years older than Earth, scientist says
  • New Zealand post record Test win against Zimbabwe
  • Four members of same British family killed in head-on crash at start of Portugal holiday
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 News Wave
News Wave is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • USA
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology

Copyright © 2025 News Wave
News Wave is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In