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Sinopsis(1)

Estamos en plena campaña a las elecciones presidenciales. Es el año 2004 y todo apunta a que George W. Bush va a ser reelegido presidente de los Estados Unidos. El país se encuentra inmerso en la guerra contra Iraq y Afganistán. En este contexto político, surge el escándalo que se dio a conocer como Rathergate. El veterano presentador del programa de noticias 60 Minutos de la CBS, Dan Rather, y su productora Mary Mapes descubren una historia que podría cambiar el curso de las elecciones. Existen pruebas que confirman que George W. Bush había evitado participar en la Guerra de Vietnam por las influencias de su padre. La emisión de un programa especial sobre esta noticia desata una tormenta informativa. La consecuencia del escándalo es que Mary Mapes es despedida como productora del programa, y Rather, un año después, deberá renunciar como presentador de las noticias de la CBS, puesto que ostentaba desde hace 24 años. Ambos periodistas deberán pelear entonces para demostrar la veracidad de su noticia y defender la verdad por encima de los intereses políticos y económicos. (DeAPlaneta)

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Reseñas (4)

Malarkey 

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inglés I had no idea that during the presidency of George Bush, America dealt with the things they dealt with in this movie. Interesting. The movie shows the painstaking work of certain journalists and even though it can look boring at first the movie is nothing like that. That’s certainly because of the good directing work but also A-list actors which this movie is full of. The best of all of them is without a doubt Cate Blanchett, who seems perfectly unaffected, just like Elizabeth Moss. Interesting piece of movie-writing, it is almost surprising that this came from America. ()

Othello 

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inglés Of last year's trinity of meeting-room-true-events-drama, which includes Oscar-winning Spotlight and the apt Big Short, Truth whizzed through American cinemas to the least acclaim and no nominations, which is a bit unfair because it complements the other two nominated films in the trio perfectly. While the party bus through America's credit crisis conceived of the subject matter as an amoral trip, Spotlight appeals to mainstream audiences with its themes of old-school journalism and the "safe controversy" of pedophile priests while Truth does the best job of depicting in as much detail as possible the fact that if you want to expose the truth to the world, you need to deal with every even if self-serving detail. Thus, the big emotions and grandiose music can be humorous, underlining the fact that the film "just" has the characters figuring out if it was possible to write a the after the number in ‘78, essentially addressing primarily things that other adaptations skip over with montages. Along with the depressing denouement, it breaks down a bit the illusion of the bold journalistic dinosaurs we're supposed to be grateful to for policing democracy for us by actually watching journalists who simply screwed up, no matter how brilliant their motivations were. Despite this, however, we feel sympathy for them because we are not evaluating their results, but their work and dedication, which we believe is already alien to contemporary journalism. Plus of course anti-Bushism, but that isn’t so much a question of opinion as of good upbringing. ()

Necrotongue 

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inglés The US may be democratic through and through, but there is a limit to everything. No one dare disrespect Mr. President, or there will be hell to pay! Truth is an extremely intriguing drama about the plight of the free press in a country that will gladly teach the Greeks that the word democracy comes from the American language. A well-written screenplay, Cate Blanchett and Robert Redford as the leads – an intimate drama, which was way more engaging than I’d expected it to be. ()

kaylin 

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inglés Robert Redford is such a great actor that you simply devour every second he is on the screen. There isn't as much of him as you would have liked, but Cate Blanchett surprised me with an incredibly natural yet heartfelt performance that I enjoyed. She grabs your attention and allows the story of a woman who was just trying to uncover something she believed to be true to shine. The world will reward her for that, that's for sure. ()