Shattered Glass review

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When his career self-destructed in 1998, Stephen Glass became the poster child for the phrase 'Never let the truth get in the way of a good story'. And while, in these cynical times, you might scoff at a true tale of a fibbing journalist as hardly revelatory, step back for a moment and consider the implications: Glass wasn't working for the Little Shitley Evening Chronicle. He was the hottest young talent at America's New Republic magazine, a publication so influential for Washington policy makers that it was half-jokingly referred to as "the in-flight magazine for Air Force One"...

Credit is due to writer/director Billy Ray, as Shattered Glass is able to make you consider these wider themes while still focusing astutely on the individuals involved... And it explores just how far the influence of one trustworthy liar can spread. More impressively, this is an even-handed stare into Glass' reality-twisted world - a tale that, unlike its subject, sticks closely to the facts and manages to unspool without celebrating or castigating the porkie-spinning journo. But Ray's not afraid to be tricksy either, spending the first 20 minutes crafting a sequence that could easily be cheesy but in fact helps set the scene better than any documentary footage could hope to.

A compelling look at the world of journalism that presents a balanced look into its subject's crafty cranium. You'll be drawn in... Trust us.

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