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‘She Said’ covers the dogged reporting behind breaking the Harvey Weinstein story | CNN

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‘She Said’ covers the dogged reporting behind breaking the Harvey Weinstein story | CNN



CNN
 — 

The onerous work of journalism doesn’t all the time readily translate to the display, an issue magnified as doorways slammed in faces has been supplanted by cellphone hang-ups and ignored texts. “She Mentioned” nonetheless joins a protracted custom of films about dogged reporters exposing injustice, and on this case serving to spawn a sweeping motion.

The movie is customized from the e-book by New York Occasions reporters Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor, which could clarify why the work of Ronan Farrow is talked about however conspicuously shortchanged. Not solely did Farrow get there first, however he needed to grapple with NBC Information administration earlier than finally publishing within the New Yorker. It’s a pointed reminder to recollect who’s telling the story.

Setting that apart, the center of “She Mentioned,” which begins with Twohey (Carey Mulligan) reporting on Donald Trump, facilities on her collaboration with Kantor (Zoe Kazan) to put naked the predatory habits of Harvey Weinstein. Whereas the reporters themselves don’t exhibit a lot character, the film hums with the concern and apprehension of the ladies who spoke up, typically after a lot prodding, pleading and soul looking out.

The Oscar-winning “Highlight” is the latest instance of this explicit style, however “She Mentioned” owes a stronger debt to “All of the President’s Males,” solely with a female-centric standpoint versus editorial conferences stuffed with White guys in white shirts. Each reporters are additionally proven attempting to steadiness their residence lives with the all-consuming nature of the job, illustrating all these weekend cellphone calls and aircraft flights reducing into household time.

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Working from a screenplay by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, director Maria Schrader has opted to not present Weinstein aside from a obscure glimpse, however his presence is felt by way of really audiotape and cellphone calls. The truth that his second trial presently underway in Los Angeles provides to the timeliness of the movie’s launch, however it’s an applicable determination that retains the main target squarely on the reporters and people victimized.

The latter checklist notably contains Ashley Judd, who portrays herself, and flashbacks exhibiting the aftermath of the alleged assaults with out venturing contained in the room. All through, there’s a palpable sense of the way in which nondisclosure agreements, settlements and different technique of coercion had been used to silence potential accusers, permitting the Hollywood mogul to proceed to behave with impunity. (The movie’s producers embody Brad Pitt, who has spoken of confronting Weinstein again when he was courting Gwyneth Paltrow.)

There’s a dutiful high quality to the storytelling that blunts the portrayal of the reporters, and “She Mentioned” doesn’t deliver a lot that’s distinctive to presenting the interior workings of the Occasions. Patricia Clarkson and Andre Braugher, as editors Rebecca Corbett and Dean Baquet, respectively, get largely relegated to only telling the intrepid duo to maintain reporting and attempting to get somebody to talk on the document time and again.

In a way, the film is one other a kind of titles that derives an outsized portion of its resonance from the closing crawl, providing a reminder of what the #MeToo motion has completed since Twohey and Kantor broke the Weinstein story in 2017.

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At a time when journalism is commonly beneath siege, there’s worth in displaying its noblest qualities and loftiest aspirations. Even with hiccups and quibbles, “She Mentioned” achieves that central mission.

“She Mentioned” premieres in US theaters on November 18. It’s rated R.

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Movie Reviews

Shashtipoorthi Movie Review: A relatable relationship drama, held back by a plodding screenplay

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Shashtipoorthi Movie Review: A relatable relationship drama, held back by a plodding screenplay
Story: Set in the semi-urban Telugu heartland, Shashtipoorthi revolves around Sriram (Rupeysh Choudhary), a morally upright public prosecutor whose life takes a personal turn when he helps Janaki (Aakanksha Singh) with a land dispute. Their encounter sparks a subtle romance, but Sriram’s real battle lies closer to home. His parents, Diwakar (Rajendra Prasad) and Bhuvana (Archana), are on the verge of separation ahead of their Shashtipoorthi (60th birthday celebration).

Review: Shashtipoorthi, directed by Pavan Prabha, follows a familiar yet heartfelt path, exploring themes of estrangement, reconciliation and the quiet resilience of familial bonds. Ilaiyaraaja’s soulful score and a couple of evocative songs, paired with the director’s nostalgic treatment of community life, give the film a warm and intimate texture.

The screenplay, however, falters. The narrative takes too long to reach its emotional centre, with several scenes in the first half feeling random. The core premise, which revolves around an earnest attempt to heal a fractured family, truly comes alive only in the latter half, which may test the patience of some viewers.

While the emotional arcs in the second half strike a chord, the film misses the opportunity to make the most of its veteran actors. Rajendra Prasad and Archana, though impactful when they appear together, are underutilised in the first half. Their dynamic needed more screen time and depth, given the emotional weight their characters carry.

Rupeysh Choudhary delivers a committed performance, and Aakanksha Singh supports him well. The supporting cast helps build the world convincingly, especially through community interactions that evoke a gentle nostalgia reminiscent of old-school Telugu family dramas.

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Visually, the film is pleasing. The cinematography is clean and unobtrusive, capturing the grounded environment with sincerity. Production values are decent, lending authenticity to the narrative setting.

Despite its slow start and inconsistent screenplay, Shashtipoorthi redeems itself with moments that touch the heart. It’s a modest yet meaningful watch for those who enjoy reflective family dramas rooted in tradition and culture.

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Review: 'The Mortician' revisits Pasadena's Lamb Funeral Home and a family's ghoulish crimes

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Review: 'The Mortician' revisits Pasadena's Lamb Funeral Home and a family's ghoulish crimes

It was the early 1980s when residents of a Pasadena neighborhood noticed something amiss at the nearby crematorium. The facility was suddenly operating round the clock, smoke billowing from its chimney well after business hours.

Fellow morticians were also alarmed at the uptick in the number of bodies cremated by the Lamb Funeral Home, a respected, family-run establishment and pillar of the Southern California mortuary business for generations. It wasn’t long before allegations of organ harvesting, mass incineration of bodies and murder made the local and national news. A new L.A. crime noir story was born.

Premiering Sunday and airing weekly, HBO’s three-part docuseries “The Mortician” chronicles the ghoulish offenses of David Sconce, great-grandson of the mortuary‘s founder and son of owners Jerry W. Sconce and Laurieanne Lamb Sconce. He was the picture of Southern California affluence and privilege: a blond-haired, blue-eyed high school quarterback with professional football aspirations until his hopes were dashed by a torn ligament.

Sconce found his calling running the family’s crematorium, where he maximized profits by incinerating multiple bodies in the same chamber. Unsuspecting survivors of the deceased were none the wiser when they scattered the ashes of a loved one at sea, but in fact the cremains were of several different people.

And that’s just the tip of the macabre in this docuseries from director and producer Joshua Rofé (“Lorena”).

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Sconce also harvested organs and body parts for profit, pulled teeth to extract the gold from fillings, and was investigated for allegedly contracting a hit on a rival and poisoning another competitor who was trying to expose the crimes at the Lamb funeral home.

Sconce eventually pleaded guilty to 21 criminal counts — including for mutilating corpses, holding mass cremations and hiring hit men — and was sentenced in 1989 to five years in prison. However, he was released in 1991 after serving two and a half years, then sentenced to 25 years to life in 2013 after violating probation. He was released on parole in 2023.

“The Mortician” reveals fresh angles into the decades-old case via a bevy of interviews with those who were there. But it’s Sconce himself who provides the most insight into his crimes when he alternately denies and then brags about his transgressions (he appears proud of his ability to stuff as many bodies as possible into a crematory chamber, sometimes by breaking bones or cutting off limbs). Now 68, he’s speaks at length in the documentary about the events that landed him in jail, appearing more aggrieved than remorseful.

“I don’t put any value on anybody after they’re gone and dead,” he said of mixing remains. “As they shouldn’t when I’m gone and dead. Love ‘em when they’re here.” He then justifies his actions as a practical business decision: “I could cremate one guy in two hours, or you could put 10 of them in there and take two and a half hours. So what would be the difference? There is none.”

Also interviewed are former funeral home employees, former L.A. Times journalist Ashley Dunn and former Pasadena Star-News reporter David Geary. Several victims who were duped by Sconce also offer testimonials about the deception. Former law enforcement officials who busted Sconce’s second crematory facility in Hesperia — an old ceramics factory replete with kilns — recall the canals installed below the repurposed kiln doors that were used to catch the human fat drippings coming from the packed chambers.

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“The Mortician” is not the cable network’s first series about a family of undertakers operating a Pasadena funeral home. The dark dramedy “Six Feet Under” also revolved around a dysfunctional family generations in the embalming business. But all similarities stop there. There is nothing remotely funny about the twisted world of the Lambs, but in “The Jinx” fashion, Sconce’s own words at the end of this docuseries may come back to burn him.

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Movie Review: BRING HER BACK

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Movie Review: BRING HER BACK
Rating: R Stars: Billy Barratt, Sora Wong, Sally Hawkins, Jonah Wren Phillips, Mischa Heywood, Sally-Anne Upton, Stephen Phillips Writers: Danny Philippou and Bill Hinzman Directors: Danny Philippou & Michael Philippou Distributor: A24 Release Date: May 30, 2025 BRING HER BACK begins with a jolting sequence in a filthy room, where people are being tortured and murdered. A woman with a video camera calmly wanders through the chaos, recording the goings-on. We gradually find out what bearing this has on the main action in BRING HER BACK. We meet young step-siblings Piper (Sora Wong) and Andy (Billy Barratt) at a bus […]Read On »
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