Good Night, and Good Luck.

We will not walk in fear of one another.

7.1
20051h 32m

The story of journalist Edward R. Murrow's stand against Senator Joseph McCarthy's anti-communist witch-hunts in the early 1950s.

Production

Logo for Warner Independent Pictures
Logo for 2929 Productions
Logo for Redbus Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Cast

Photo of David Strathairn

David Strathairn

Edward R. Murrow

Photo of Patricia Clarkson

Patricia Clarkson

Shirley Wershba

Photo of George Clooney

George Clooney

Fred Friendly

Photo of Jeff Daniels

Jeff Daniels

Sig Mickelson

Photo of Frank Langella

Frank Langella

William Paley

Photo of Ray Wise

Ray Wise

Don Hollenbeck

Photo of Robert John Burke

Robert John Burke

Charlie Mack

Photo of Reed Diamond

Reed Diamond

John Aaron

Photo of Tate Donovan

Tate Donovan

Jesse Zousmer

Photo of Grant Heslov

Grant Heslov

Don Hewitt

Photo of Tom McCarthy

Tom McCarthy

Palmer Williams

Photo of Matt Ross

Matt Ross

Eddie Scott

Photo of Rose Abdoo

Rose Abdoo

Mili Lerner

Photo of Robert Knepper

Robert Knepper

Don Surine

Photo of Dianne Reeves

Dianne Reeves

Jazz Singer

Photo of Glenn Morshower

Glenn Morshower

Colonel Anderson

Photo of Don Creech

Don Creech

Colonel Jenkins

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

There's a brief clip at the start of "Sink the Bismarck" (1960) that illustrates the impact of Edward R. Murrow's potent and succinct style of broadcasting that eventually led to him receiving an award from his peers at the beginning of this film. It's his acceptance speech that sets the tone for a retrospective that focuses on his time attempting to stand up for the civil liberties of many American people during the investigations by Senator Joseph McCarthy of Minnesota into the alleged infiltration of just about all aspects of society by communists and their allies. David Strathairn delivers one of his best performances here as the man whose stance earns him plaudits from some quarters, but enmity from others who accuse him of being an appeaser - or worse. Determined, he nevertheless becomes dependant on the good will of his network chief executive (Frank Langella) and stalwart producer Fred Friendly (George Clooney) as he issues a challenge to the politician and risks his career. In many ways these men had similarities of character. The use of archive footage of McCarthy and the pieces-to-camera from Strathairn offers us two contrasting styles, attitudes and sets of beliefs and though clearly the editorial is pro-Murrow, it still allows us to experience and evaluate some of the frenzy that prevailed at the time when the cold war was very much at it's height. Director Clooney uses a documentary style of intense monochrome photography to quite chillingly expose us to the perils of free reporting at a time when swimming agains a tide that would stop at nothing to rubbish it's opponents was no small gamble. It packs lots to think about into ninety minutes and emphasises the still quite dangerous scenarios that dogma coupled with a strong cult of personality can deliver to an unwitting population.

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