"Network" - The state of things to come
The Oscar-winning drama from Paddy Chayefksy and Sidney Lumet debuts on Blu-ray
"Network" (Warner)
"Paddy Chayefsky's Network," reads the opening credits of the 1976 drama, an almost unheard of possessive for an original screenplay and in this quite appropriate. The elder statesman of live TV drama pours all of his bile over the dirty little business of television into this incredibly entertaining screed. Yet the scathing satire of TV news as just another three-ring circus played for ratings by bottom-line corporate overlords is so caricatured that it likely would have sunk into self-parody but for the direction of Sidney Lumet, perhaps the perfect director for such material.
Faye Dunaway gets star billing as the ruthlessly ambitious programming executive inspired by the on-air breakdown of news anchorman Finch to fold news into the entertainment programming umbrella and William Holden plays the old-school news executive as appalled by the changes as he is fascinated with the ferocious Dunaway, who doesn't differentiate between shop talk and pillow talk.
Lumet watches the news turn into a prime-time variety show like a documentarian with the story of a lifetime. Its a veritable sideshow with fortune tellers, scandal-mongers and the ringmaster anchorman (Peter Finch) as the Mad Prophet of the Airwaves playing for applause from his live audience. But behind the scenes, Lumet plays out the business dealings as a more realist (if flamboyant) piece of corporate theater, viewing the bitter farce through the lens of modern America and in the process saves Chayefsky from sinking under his own pretentions. Well mostly. The rarified dialogue is more theater than seventies cinema, too precious and pointed to give any human dimension to the corporate gamesmanship and ethical collisions. Dunaway's insistence on discussing relationships as if it were a scripted serial makes its point the first time around. By the third go-round, it's simply tired.
It's entertaining, thanks to the self-conscious theatrics of Chayefsky ("I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore!"), the terrific performances (especially Holden as the only human left at the end of this profit-ringing process) and Lumet's steady eye keeping the real world into perspective as the circus comes to town and stays. And yes, it is prescient in its own absurdly exaggerated way, anticipating the era of tabloid and reality TV as well as the blurring of the lines between opinion and news. Plus it brings a whole new meaning to the act of "negotiating with terrorists." These guys bargain syndication and overseas rights.
Nominated for ten Academy Awards, it won four, including Oscars for Chayefsky's screenplay, Best Actor Finch, Best Actress Dunaway and Best Supporting Actress Beatrice Straight. Robert Duvall is the corporate hatchet man who sees news as a drain on the bottom line and Ned Beatty is the CEO who sees the news as his own platform to spread his philosophy.
The Blu-ray features all the supplements from the 2006 DVD special edition. Director Sidney Lumet provides an intelligent and engaged commentary track. "The Making of Network" is an in-depth six-part documentary that runs close to 90 minutes. "Private Screenings with Sidney Lumet" is an 54-minunte interviews with the director conducted by Robert Osborne for Turner Classic Movies, and there is an excerpt from Chayefsky's 1977 appearance on "Dinah!," discussing the film with Dinah Shore.
about the blogger

Sean Axmaker is MSN's DVD columnist and the editor of Parallax View. He writes for Turner Classic Movies Online and his work has appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Seattle Weekly, The Stranger, Senses of Cinema, Asian Cult Cinema, Psychotronic Video and "The Scarecrow Video Guide."
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