The Post
It’s Oscar bait, yes
But infinitely better
Than Bridge of Spies.
Waiting for the lights to dim in small theater on a Monday night, my movie buddy Jacob verbalized what we were both thinking: we were excited to finally see “The Post,” but we didn’t have high hopes. Neither of us liked “Bridge of Spies,” Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks’s excruciatingly boring last outing that naturally set the bar for our current expectations. I knew I would also be comparing every aspect of “The Post” to the Oscar-winning “Spotlight,” one of my favorite movies of the past five years. But lesson learned: having low expectations can result in big payoffs.
From start to finish, “The Post” tells a riveting story, beginning with Daniel Ellsberg (no one told me Matthew Rhys was in this!) tagging along with soldiers in Vietnam to its (MINOR SPOILER!) hilarious kick-in-the-shins-to-Nixon ending. Maybe it’s just the journalist in me, but I was on the edge of my seat throughout a majority of the film’s 116 minute runtime. I also thought this was an exceptional return-to-form for Hanks, who I haven’t enjoyed as much since “The Terminal” (why I loved a movie about an Eastern European man getting stuck in an airport at the age of eight is beyond me, but I am what I am). And side note: I thoroughly enjoyed seeing actors from literally every TV show I’ve watched over the past few years get screen time in this movie. There was the aforementioned Rhys from “The Americans,” Sarah Paulson from “The People v. O.J.,” Bob Odenkirk from “Better Call Saul,” Carrie Coon from “The Leftovers” and Zach Woods from “Silicon Valley.” And as a side note to my side note: my biggest complaint about these casting choices was the relegation of Sarah Paulson to a minor housewife role. I mean come on, I get that this woman didn’t succeed in taking down O.J. Simpson, but she got damn close. Next time around, I’d like to see her cast as Katharine Graham.