She Said-2022

She Said-2022

Director Maria Schrader

Starring Zoe Kazan, Carey Mulligan

Scott’s Review #1,353

Reviewed April 7, 2023

Grade: B

Telling a highly relevant story that also happens to be topical, She Said (2022) is a film I champion people to see for its powerful message. The importance of its mere creation with the added urgency of a female director being tied to it is critical.

The #MeToo movement and uncovering sexual harassment in liberal-minded workplaces like Hollywood only make this project more relevant.

As dynamic as the story is the overall package could have been a bit better as I evaluate the encompassing project. Director, Maria Schrader, mostly goes the safe route choosing to carefully craft the message but hardly in a dark way.

The film at times feels almost wimpy and lacks some crucial elements that might have made it more impactful. The screenwriter is Rebecca Lenkiewicz, who deserves much credit but plays softball rather than hardball.

The film is good but not great and unsurprising it completely whiffed of any Academy Awards nominations. There are a few clear misses which leave She Said with a courageous yet unfulfilling feeling.

Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan star as New York Times reporters Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor respectively, who together break one of the most important stories in a generation, a story that helped propel the #Metoo movement.

The revelations and eventual conviction of multi-millionaire film production mogul Harvey Weinstein shattered decades of silence around the subject of sexual assault in Hollywood and altered American culture forever. This led to a needed examination of the industry.

Mulligan and Kazan are terrific, carrying strong and charismatic lead performances as female reporters with a vested interest in getting to the truth. It’s tough to say who is the lead since both characters’ personal lives and sympathetic husbands run parallel.

I’m a bigger fan of Mulligan’s and I’m still smarting from her Best Actress loss for Promising Young Woman in 2020. Hers is the more hardened of the two characters and her one gritty scene in a local bar when she angrily rebuffs the advances of a jock is great.

One other impressive facet of She Said is the appearance of Ashley Judd as herself. News junkies will recall that Judd was instrumental in coming forward and telling her story when she could have kept hidden as other victims did.

Finally, the jarring first sequence sets the tone quite well as disgraced former President Donald J. Trump is examined pre-2016 election when sexual harassment allegations were hurled at him.

The point of this is to show that powerful men have historically gotten away with sexual abuse against women.

She Said tones down too considerably when it never shows Trump, Weinstein, or the pivotal actress Rose McGowan. Only their voices and the back of Weinstein’s head are used.

This sparks a peculiar feeling and a watered-down approach. It’s unclear why real video footage or actors to play these roles couldn’t or wouldn’t be used but it elicits a weird feeling.

It’s nice to see the legendary Patricia Clarkson in any film but her role as news reporter Rebecca Corbett is limited and one-dimensional.

Finally, the climactic wrap-up when finally one of Weinstein’s abused victims agrees to go public feels anti-climactic and is better served for a Hallmark Movie of the Week moment.

Ouch!

The film is overall good with the message being the most important takeaway. She Said might serve as a warm-up act to the much meatier yet similarly themed All the President’s Men from 1976 or the recent Bombshell from 2019.

Based on the vitality of the real-life events that She Said (2022) is created from I expected something much more than I was served. It’s like trying for a grand slam home run and instead flying out to the shallow center field.

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