Bombshell
Directed by Jay Roach
Staring Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman & Margot Robbie
In cinemas now
Nominated for three Oscars, this powerful drama is based on the real-life sexual harassment scandal and the women who brought down Roger Ailes, the infamous head and creator of Fox News, laying the foundations for the Me Too and Time's Up movements that were to come.
It's told through the eyes of former Fox News presenters Megyn Kelly (Charlize Theron) and Gretchen Carlson (Nicole Kidman), along with the fictional Kayla (Margot Robbie), an evangelical millennial eager to follow in their footsteps.
Under Jay Roach's skillful direction, Charles Randolph's complex and disturbing screenplay, full of conflicted characters, conveys the sexism, harassment and toxic atmosphere women were subjected to at Fox — Carlson reveals how Ailes would tell her: “if you want to get ahead you need to give a little head” — along with their guts and bravery in denouncing them.
Women who refused his sexual advances were demoted and/or fired but, in the summer of 2016, Carlson filed a sexual-harassment lawsuit against Ailes. This resulted in more than 20 women coming forward, including Kelly.
Although the film does not show the sexual abuse in any graphic detail, a scene in which Kayla is asked by Ailes, given a transformative performance by John Lithgow, to give him a “twirl” portrays it to alarming effect.
It makes for very difficult viewing, along with a scene in which the three, having been summoned by Ailes, are all heading up in a lift to see him. Not a word is uttered but, as they look at each other, it's evident they know exactly what is coming. Chilling.
The film is driven by powerhouse performances from the three female leads, with Theron looking and sounding exactly like Kelly. She can tell her side of the story but Carlson cannot, having signed a gagging clause after agreeing to a reported US$20 million settlement.
Yet while Fox paid $50 million to the victims of sexual harassment in the year Ailes and top presenter Bill O'Reilly were fired, they paid both men $65 million in severance pay. Where is the justice in that?
[Reposted from Morning Star Online.]