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The Form of Paranoia in All the President’s Men

Eric Freeman

Woodward and Bernstein

All the President’s Men is rightfully known as the best movie about journalism ever made, but it’s most notable for not focusing its paranoia in the form of several nefarious people. The last film in director Alan Pakula’s “paranoia trilogy” (which includes Klute and The Parallax View), All the President’s Men is notable in the genre for never depicting the agents of paranoia that torments reporters Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman). Yes, we know them to be agents of the Nixon Administration, but because they’re never seen in the movie, it’s never clear exactly what constitutes a victory in the fight against corruption. We know that the reporters’ lives are in danger, but from whom? The CIA? FBI? Deep Throat says “everybody is involved,” after all. Woodward and Bernstein’s reports eventually result in the imprisonment and resignation of Nixon and his cronies, yet Pakula downplays it with the perfunctory rattling off of punishments on The Washington Post’s press in a manner fitting the lack of closure of lenient punishments for a few solitary figures. The institutional rot went deeper and will persist as long as culprits remain identified. You may not see anyone over your shoulder, but that doesn’t mean they’re not somewhere.  – Eric Freeman

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