Poster
Watch

The Post

The Post

  • Status: Released
  • 22-12-2017
  • Runtime: 116 min
  • Score: 7.003
  • Vote count: 4610

A cover-up that spanned four U.S. Presidents pushed the country's first female newspaper publisher and a hard-driving editor to join an unprecedented battle between journalist and government. Inspired by true events.

Meryl Streep

Kay Graham

Tom Hanks

Ben Bradlee

Sarah Paulson

Tony Bradlee

Bob Odenkirk

Ben Bagdikian

Tracy Letts

Fritz Beebe

Bradley Whitford

Arthur Parsons

Bruce Greenwood

Robert McNamara

Matthew Rhys

Daniel Ellsberg

Alison Brie

Lally Graham

Carrie Coon

Meg Greenfield

Jesse Plemons

Roger Clark

David Cross

Howard Simons

Zach Woods

Anthony Essaye

Pat Healy

Phil Geyelin

John Rue

Gene Patterson

Rick Holmes

Murray Marder

Philip Casnoff

Chalmers Roberts

Jessie Mueller

Judith Martin

Stark Sands

Don Graham

Michael Cyril Creighton

Jake

Will Denton

Michael

Deirdre Lovejoy

Debbie Regan

Michael Devine

Copy Chief

Kelly Miller

Copy Editor

Jennifer Dundas

Liz Hylton

Austyn Johnson

Marina Bradlee

Brent Langdon

Paul Ignatius

Michael Stuhlbarg

Abe Rosenthal

Deborah Green

Ann Marie Rosenthal

Gary Wilmes

Punch Sulzberger

Christopher Innvar

James Greenfield

Luke Slattery

NY Times Runner

Justin Swain

Neil Sheehan

Robert G. McKay

NY Times Staffer

Sasha Spielberg

Woman with Package

Bryan Burton

Lafayette Protester

Coral Peña

Nancy

Dan Bittner

Government Lawyer

Kenneth Tigar

Solicitor Griswold

David Aaron Baker

Alexander Bickel

Gannon McHale

Judge Gurfein

Kevin Loreque

Waiter (F Street Club)

Francis Dumaurier

Head Waiter (Oakroom)

Stephen Mailer

Exchange President

Ned Noyes

Lazard Banker

John Henry Cox

Lazard Banker

Dan Bucatinsky

Joe Alsop

David Costabile

Art Buchwald

Johanna Day

Ann Buchwald

Annika Boras

Mrs. Alsop

Carolyn McCormick

Mrs. McNamara

Susan Blackwell

Dinner Wife

Jordan Baker

Dinner Wife

Lauren Lim Jackson

Eastern Air Stewardess

Peter Van Wagner

Harry Gladstein

Angus Hepburn

Judge Gessell

James Riordan

Vice Admiral Blouin

Kelly AuCoin

Kevin Maroney

Cotter Smith

Under Secretary William Macomber

Ben Livingston

Dennis Doolin

Stephen Rowe

Judge Robb

Rick Crom

Supreme Court Marshall

Fenton Lawless

Linotype Printer

Cullen Oliver Johnson

Linotype Printer

JaQwan J. Kelly

Watergate Security Guard

Brett G. Smith

Platoon Leader

Brett Diggs

G.I.

Anthony M Walker

G.I

Saul Alvarez

G.I.

Theis Weckesser

Military Advisor

David Beach

Robert Komer

Shawn Allen McLaughlin

Reporter (Andrews AFB)

Shaun O'Hagan

Harry Rowen (RAND)

Thaddeus Daniels

Rand Corp Guard

Brendan Burke

Rand Corp Guard

Celeste Arias

Lynda Sinay

Sonny Valicenti

Tony Russo

Patrick Noonan

LA Cop

Will Blomker

LA Cop

Amy Russ

White House Assistant

Aaron Roman Weiner

Bob Haldeman

Catherine Wolf

RAND Receptionist

Joel Nagle

Man on Phone

Tom Bair

Rehnquist (Asst AG)

Walter Brandes

18th Street Protester

Juliana Davies

Katherine

Hazel Mason

Pamela

Ginger Mason

Pamela

Sawyer Spielberg

Plaza Protester

Mark Jacoby

Chief Justice Burger

Jon Donahue

Bertram Plain

Seth Barrish

Layout Editor

Clarke Thorell

Layout Editor

Joseph Tudisco

Delivery Man

Steve Witting

NY Times Staffer

Gary Galone

NY Times Staffer

Frank Ridley

NY Times Staffer

Jeremiah Wiggins

NY Times Staffer

Alexander Sage Oyen

Protest Singer

Brittney Johnson

Protest Singer

Caleb Eberhardt

Protest Singer

Don McCloskey

Protest Singer

Estelle Bajou

Protest Singer

Kaylyn Scardefield

Protest Singer

Leslie Kujo

Protest Singer

Lilli Cooper

Protest Singer

Odiseas Georgiadis

Protest Singer

Sean Meehan

Suspicious Man

Steven Kearney

Ehrlichman

Curzon Dobell

Nixon

Matthew Piazzi

Newscaster

Armand Schultz

WTOP-AM Reporter

Jerry Lobrow

G.I. #4

Mark Pinelli

AMEX Photographer

Gimly

Firing on all Oscar-bait cylinders, _The Post_ is much more about the facts of the events than an insight into the people involved in them. It has some laughs in it, but it's far from a comedy. It's all "what" and no "why", but also, _The Post_ is built on this HUGE will-they-wont-they question with massive ramifications ("Will Nixon and LBJ be exposed") and it's what the whole 108 minute runtime is building up to, but... We already know. The things that happen in _The Post_ are real events that are common knowledge. So it's kind of... The mystery of the moral quandary was answered before you ever pressed play. I think with the state of journalism and even more so the state of politics the way it is now in America, that _The Post_ was a very timely film, and with a cast like this assembled, obviously nobody in it is bad. But does _The Post_ deserve the awards consideration it has gotten? Personally, I don't think it does. _Final rating:★★½ - Not quite for me, but I definitely get the appeal._

martina.physics

The movie is very interesting and clearly very curated in the cast and scenography. It tells an important piece of American history and is an ode to press freedom. However, I found it rather slow in development and a bit too lost in too many conversations. Lacks a bit of action/movement.

Filipe Manuel Neto

**An ambitious film, very solid and with a lot of quality, but which turned out to be forgettable.** I've honestly lost count of the movies about Nixon I've seen. And I understand that! In the history of the American presidential institution, few presidents have stirred up as much controversy. He was a president who not only was willing to use his whole power, but also who abused from its use. And the media was one of his biggest and most fearsome enemies. In this film, the point of originality is that the focus is never Nixon or Watergate, but the main figures of The Washington Post in the days before the scandal, when it was sued by the White House. It's not that kind of surprising originality, but it's enough. The script has its flaws, one of which is perhaps the attempt to insert the theme of gender equality in a corporate environment. This appears when we see all those men who are very hesitant about taking orders from a woman, even though she is undoubtedly the boss and owner of the company. The 70s were important for the feminist movement, but it was a young and rebellious layer that led the decade, and the role of mature women, like the owner of the Post, may not have been valued as it should have been. However, the theme seems to be lefting in the film, and it ends up frankly underdeveloped from the moment when she basically says “the newspaper is mine, I am the one who gives orders and I answer for them, and whoever does not want to obey can leave”. This strong attitude simply closes the matter. As for factual accuracy, I'm not the best person to talk, I can't say if the film does justice to the events. The strongest point of this film is, without a doubt, the talent gathering. Steven Spielberg ensures an impeccable direction and manages to give us a solid film, which will always, however, be a considerably minor work in his filmography. In addition, we still have a cast of cast-iron strong actors, led by Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep. And I don't think I need to say that this film isn't a particularly memorable piece of work for either of them. Perhaps, the film represented a good financial fit for them, just as it certainly represented a privilege for the rest of the cast, who had the opportunity to see them work and, eventually, learn something more, some of those things that are not learned in dramatization courses, but through practical experience. Technically, it's a pleasantly warm film. That third cup of tea that waited too long in the pot and ended up colder, but also thicker. It's the best metaphor to let you understand what I think: the environment and the theme give it density and tension, which, however, does not make it unnerving because it is done in a very moderate way, served cold. There is a period re-enactment effort that looks good, but it was necessary and could not be ignored. The soundtrack, by Williams, is forgettable, not to say mediocre (taking into account the composer's ability). There is a certain ambition in the project. The producers knew they were making a strong film, but the final product was not as good as they would have liked, nor was it memorable.

CinemaSerf

This is essentially a film about the freedom of the press - and how that terrifies even the most "democratic" of institutions. Disillusioned military analyst (Matthew Rhys) discovers the extent to which the US military had been misleading the government and population about the Vietnam War and takes some sensitive information to the Washington Post (initially, this is more about who gets the scoop - them or the New York Times) but rapidly the Post - edited by Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks) decides it must get there first and with the support of it's ballsy publisher Kay Graham (Meryl Streep) they take on the political and judicial establishment to win the right to publish their story. The performances, under Steven Spielberg's direction, are fine - nothing much to write home about. The film is about journalism and the right of all of us to know what's being done in our name (and with our troops/money etc.), and is told in a adequate fashion.