Shattered Glass
Review by Clint Morris
As
they say, looks can be deceiving. On the outside young Stephen
Glass [Hayden Christensen] looks like he'd be an ambitious,
trustworthy, assiduous youthful journalist.
What others don't see is that within, he's merely a fraught
young man who'll do anything - as long as it doesn't make
him look bad on face-value - to get where he wants.
Glass went from minor-league Washington magazine contributor
to feature writer in a range of magazines, notably "The
New Republic", the official magazine of 'Air Force One'.
Thanks to some groundbreaking, exclusive feature stories,
by the mid 90's the twenty-something writer was one of the
world's most influential penners, winning acclamation every
which way he scribed.
When an online technology website starts to find inaccuracies
in one of Glass's stories about an internet whiz kid who got
snapped up by an exalted corporation, they hit the editor
of "The New Republic" magazine with a circumlocutory
claim that their star writer might have fluffed the whole
article.
Is it the first?
Besides an indiscernible book of journalistic code of ethics,
writers don't really have a guideline to turn to when they
start to question whether how they're reporting is right.
From here on in, Billy Ray's Shattered Glass might
serve as such a guide - even if only a "Do Not"
guide to journalism.
Glass was obviously determined to get ahead in the field
with lying from the get-go, and as tempting as it might've
been - and as attractive as it might even look early on in
the movie - ultimately it doesn't pay off.
To anyone else, Shattered Glass is merely going to
be an intriguing portrait of one unremitting pretender who
rose to the top and then got caught.
Like
a shapely jumper that's got early signs of a loose thread,
director Bill Ray lets the audience explore the real side
of Glass as his co-workers do, unraveling the truth periodically.
Ultimately, we too have been seduced by the mysterious but
plausible writer, and feel as betrayed as his editor and cohorts
had by film's end.
Hayden Christensen, best known as Anakin Skywalker in the
"Star Wars" prequel films, is astonishingly good
in his portrayal as the bookish wanna-be Glass, combining
a performance of vulnerability, likeability and vital sneakiness.
If anything, it proves Lucas demands the most wooden performances
possible from his "Star Wars" cast - because Christensen
seems to be determined to act here. And he wins us over almost
immediately.
Equally as impressive is Peter Sarsgaard (Boys Don't Cry)
giving a multi-layered performance as the less-than-popular
"New Republic" editor who - despite appearances
- might be the better man of the tale, ultimately ridding
his place of work from the rat that eats away at its pages,
thinning status issue after issue.
And in a smaller, but no less important role, the always
underrated Hank Azaria ("The Simpsons") gives one
of the straightest, most compassionate and likeable turns
of his career as the highly ethical former editor of "New
Republic", who always remains a constant thought in Glass
and his colleagues' minds.
Whilst not an A-grade psychological profile by any means,
Ray has still crafted a meticulously enjoyable film. It's
as gripping as it is disturbing, and as well performed as
it is mysterious.
One for every writer to see, and a lesson for every budding
one to learn.
4 out of 5
Shattered Glass
Australian release: Thursday February 12th
Cast: Hayden Christensen, Peter Sarsgaard, Rosario Dawson,
Chloe Sevigny, Melanie Lynskey, Steve Zahn, Hank Azaria.
Director: Billy Ray.
Website: Click
here.
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