惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
I
Intezer
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
Threatpost
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
T
Tenable Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
量子位
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
Google Developers Blog
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
罗磊的独立博客
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
腾讯CDC
I
InfoQ
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
S
Schneier on Security
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Latest news
Latest news
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Security Latest
Security Latest
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
S
Securelist
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
L
LangChain Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
T
Tor Project blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
爱范儿
爱范儿
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
博客园 - Franky
P
Proofpoint News Feed
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler

Deadline

Everything We Know About ‘Wednesday’ Season 3 So Far ‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Powers To $35M Third Weekend, ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Walks To $13M – Sunday Box Office Update Joe Russo Teases ‘Avengers: Endgame’ Re-Release At Sands & Says The Film Will Feature New Footage Set Within The ‘Doomsday’ Narrative: “It’s An Opportunity To Create A Bridge” Rebel Wilson’s Legal Faceoff With ‘The Deb’ Star Charlotte MacInnes To Be Streamed On YouTube Caitlyn Jenner Appeals To Trump Over His Policy That Requires Passports List A Person’s Birth Gender: “I Don’t Think This Was Really Thought Out” Ethan Embry Joins Cast Of Prime Video’s ‘Cross’ For Season 3 As Series Regular Eva Victor On Crafting Directorial Debut ‘Sorry, Baby’ & Working With Barry Jenkins — Storyhouse ‘FernGully’ Returning As Live-Action Film; Amazon MGM Studios Sets Marielle Heller To Direct Cannes: Leïla Bekhti To Preside Over Un Certain Regard Jury ‘NCIS: New York’: How Surprise Spinoff Starring LL Cool J & Scott Caan Came Together In Record Time With ‘Pitt’ Creator, Extending CBS’ Franchise Streak Noah Wyle & R. Scott Gemmill Address Fans Asking For A ‘The Pitt’ Night Shift Spinoff Series, And What Ayesha Harris’ Future On The Show Looks Like Kathryn Newton Returns To MCU With ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ As Cassie Lang Following ‘Quantumania’ Graham Kay Sets Fourth Comedy Special ‘Pete & Me’ With Nate Bargatze’s Nateland Entertainment Hulu Developing Drama ‘Everflame’ Based On Book From Heidi Cole McAdams & Penn Cole ‘Hot Ones’ Producers Set New Series ‘Slice Joint’ Hosted by Speedy Morman ATX TV Festival Reveals 2026 Pitch Competition & Mentorship Program Finalists, Mentors ‘The Pitt’s Noah Wyle Teases Season 3 Will Explore Dr. Robby’s Rock Bottom ‘Queer Eye’s Tan France Launches ‘Honorable Gays’ Digital Series To Deliberate Reddit Threads Duffer Brothers Kick Off Paramount Era With Appearance In Star-Studded Video About Studio’s Legacy Alongside Tom Cruise & Timothée Chalamet Pluto TV Upgrade On The Way As David Ellison Reiterates Paramount’s Commitment To “Movies And Storytelling” At L.A. Upfronts HBO Max Buys Mark Gatiss Series ‘Bookish’ For Australia As Sales Pass The 100-Territory Mark Cindy Holland Reiterates Paramount+ Focus On “Female Forward Dramas” At Paramount Upfront Sandra Bullock Encourages Hollywood To “Lean Into” AI: “There’s A Place For It” Have ‘The Pitt’ Fans Seen The Last Of Supriya Ganesh? Jesse McCartney’s ‘Hacks’ Cameo Came Five Years After He DMed Hannah Einbinder: “Full Circle Moment” ‘The Pitt’ Creator R. Scott Gemmill Reveals Dr. Robby Hasn’t Hit Rock Bottom Does The New Paramount Have ANY Oscar Contenders? Maybe – CinemaCon ‘Proof’ Review: ‘The Bear’ Star Ayo Edebiri Serves Up Transfixing Broadway Debut In Mathematical Mystery Play ‘The Pitt’s John Wells & R. Scott Gemmill Share Timeline Update For Season 3 Release Pete Hegseth Roasted By Gavin Newsom & Others Over ‘Pulp Fiction’ Prayer Debacle Singer D4vd Arrested In Connection With Celeste Hernandez’s Murder After Dismembered Body Found In Tesla Who’s A Good Dog? This Dog! Zzaslow Saved So Many Lives, And Now He’s Celebrated In A Documentary Disney Announces ‘Infinity Vision’ Premium Theatrical Experience — CinemaCon ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Drops New Trailer At CinemaCon: Steve Rogers Back As Avengers Face Their Most Formidable Foe Yet Ray Romano, Denis Leary & Queen Latifah Tease ‘Ice Age: Boiling Point’: Scrat The Squirrel’s Baby, An Active Volcano & More – CinemaCon Hailee Steinfeld, Rashida Jones Set As Leads Of Disney’s ‘Hexed’ – CinemaCon ‘The Dog Stars’: First Look At Ridley Scott’s Post-Apocalyptic Thriller – CinemaCon ‘Heated Rivalry’, ‘Adolescence’, ‘Dying For Sex’, ‘South Park’ Among 19th Television Academy Honors Brian Williams To Host Podcast Series For Netflix ‘Street Fighter’ Official Trailer Shows Off The Pic’s Big Swing At A Video Game Classic Aubrey Plaza, Paul Rudd, Quentin Tarantino & More Highlight Tribeca Festival’s 25th Annual Slate; Record 103 World Premieres On Tap ‘Maigret’ Renewed For Season 2 At PBS Masterpiece Jonathan Bennett Joins ‘General Hospital’ As Joe Fitzpatrick ‘SkyMed’ Season 4 Trailer Takes Flight; Launch Date On Paramount+ Revealed Wonder Project And AI Firm Luma Launch Innovative Dreams As Home For “Hybrid Filmmaking” Pete Hegseth Invokes The Bible To Lash Out At News Media: “Our Press Are Just Like These Pharisees” Roku Passes 100M Global Streaming Households ‘Rivals’ Season 2 Full Trailer: Disney+’s “Naughtiest Show On Television” Is Back For More Next Month ‘The Mummy’ Review: Lee Cronin’s Reimagining Is Plenty Fiendish But Too Wrapped Up In Imitation Channel 4’s Chief Content Officer Ian Katz To Exit After Nine Years YMU Signs Presenter & Podcaster Vogue Williams ‘Thelma & Louise’ Musical World Premiere Set For London’s Young Vic In The Fall Amol Rajan To Deliver Edinburgh TV Fest Alternative MacTaggart How A Convicted Sex Offender Tricked His Way Through The World Of UK Theater: “I Was Terrified Of Him Because Of The Level Of Betrayal” Channel 5’s Rags-To-Riches Series ‘The Hardacres’ Unveils New Cast & First Look At Season 2 Hugh Bonneville To Narrate ‘The Hound Of The Baskervilles’ Podcast Series For Noiser ‘I Play Rocky’ First Look Takes On Backstory Of The Iconic Film – CinemaCon Amazon MGM Studios Offers First Look At Henry Cavill In New ‘Highlander’ – CinemaCon Thriller ‘Verity’ First Look: Stepping Into The Writing Life Of Someone Else – CinemaCon ‘How To Rob A Bank’ First Look: Nicholas Hoult Makes Heist-Themed Online Content In David Leitch Amazon Flick – CinemaCon Amazon MGM Committed To Theatrical, Says Mike Hopkins At CinemaCon Actor-Director Ben McKenzie On Confronting Crypto Bro Sam Bankman-Fried With A Coffee Cup For His New Documentary – Miami Film Festival ‘My 600-Lb. Life’ Star Dolly Martinez Dies At 30 Lena Dunham Reflects On Making ‘Girls’ & How Viewers Misinterpreted Adam Driver’s Character As A “Romantic Hero”: “Not What I Was Going For” ‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ On Mission To $700M WW, ‘Project Hail Mary’ Hits Half Billion Hallelujah, ‘Detective Conan’ Finds $26M+ – Global Box Office Update Bryan Cranston Sticks Up For ‘Breaking Bad’s Anna Gunn After Actress “Got A Lot Of Blowback” From Sexist Fans: “People Have Died, And She’s The Bitch” Hungary Elections: Péter Magyar Wins As Trump Favorite Viktor Orbán Concedes Defeat CinemaCon Preview: How Paramount & Warner Bros’ Crazy Plan For 30 Films A Year Could Be Taken Seriously 2026 Olivier Award Winners: Rachel Zegler, Paapa Essiedu & Rosamund Pike Take Home Prizes — Full List Scarlett Johansson Recalls Being “Pigeon-Holed” Because Of Her Looks Early In Her Career: “A Really Harsh Time” ‘Faces Of Death’, ‘Exit 8’ & ‘A Great Awakening’ Solid Trifecta At The Specialty Box Office Issa Rae Laments DEI Becoming “A Bad Word” In Hollywood: “We’re Back Where We Started” Asha Bhosle Dies: Legendary Bollywood Singer Was 92 Colman Domingo Is A Natural In ‘SNL’ Debut — Despite One-Note Material ‘Saturday Night Live’ Opens With Donald Trump And Pete Hegseth Reveling In The Prospect Of Bombing Iran Again David E. Kelley Gives Minor Update On ‘Big Little Lies’ Season 3 Robbie G.K. On Potential Scott & Kip Storylines To Explore In ‘Heated Rivalry’ Season 2 Sabrina Carpenter Apologizes For Dismissing Traditional Arabic Ululation As “Weird” After Backlash: “Could Have Handled It Better!” Turnstile Singer’s Dad Intros Band At Coachella After Surviving Ex-Guitarist’s Attack: “They’re All Sons Of Mine” ‘SNL UK’ Cold Open: Melania Trump’s Epstein Statement Parodied By The Brits Barbie Ferreira Talks ‘Faces of Death’, ‘Mile End Kicks’ Double Bill & Feeling “Creatively Fulfilled” After ‘Euphoria’: “I’m A Completely Different Person” John Nolan Dies: ‘Dark Knight Rises’ & ‘Person of Interest’ Actor Was 87 LA County Officials Meet To Secure ‘Baywatch’ Production’s Future In Venice Sabrina Carpenter’s Coachella Set Featured Sam Elliott, Susan Sarandon & Will Ferrell Cameos Frankie Muniz Crashes ‘Malcolm in the Middle’ NASCAR Truck During Bristol Race: “Not Going To Back Down” As Cuban Government Teeters, Fidel Castro’s Daughter Alina Fernández Revuelta Reflects On “Absurd” Revolution Her Father Led – Miami Film Festival ‘Nobody Wants This’ Team Wrote Timothy Simons’ Hair Into Season 3 After He Bleached It “For Fun” Labrinth Clarifies He Left ‘Euphoria’ Because He Won’t “Let People Treat Me Like Sh*t” Hello Sunshine’s President Of Film & Television Lauren Neustadter Previews Upcoming TV Shows ‘Elle’ & ‘Lucky’ And ‘The Nightingale’ Film As Production Gets Underway Eric Swalwell’s Gubernatorial Bid In Tatters As Rape Claims Made Against California Congressman Searchlight’s Nastasya Morauw Named VP Communications At Walt Disney Studios ‘Malcolm In The Middle’ Revival Star Caleb Ellsworth-Clark On Replacing Dewey: “Didn’t Want To F*ck That Up” Artemis II Crew Successfully Splashes Down Off San Diego Coast Prince Harry Hit With Libel Suit By HIV/AIDS Charity He Co-Founded; Royal Accused Of Orchestrating “Adverse Media Campaign” That Led To “Cyber-Bullying” ‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Soars To $629M WW – Sunday Box Office Update Coachella 2026: How To Watch Sabrina Carpenter, Justin Bieber, Karol G & More ‘Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping’ Promo Teases New Look At Old Faves Played By Elle Fanning, Kieran Culkin, Maya Hawke & More ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’ Star Jennifer Garner On Season 2 Finale’s Cliffhanger & Season 3 Hopes: “Just When Hannah Starts To Relax…” Paramount Acquires Yahya Abdul-Mateen II & Mark Wahlberg Pic ‘By Any Means’, Sets Labor Day Release ‘Ride Along 3’ In Early Works With Ice Cube, Kevin Hart, Director Tim Story & Producer Will Packer In Talks To Return – The Dish
‘All The President’s Men‘ At 50: Key Players Describe A Prescient Look At Today’s Dysfunctional Political Landscape
Andreas Wise · 2026-05-17 · via Deadline

In a special three-part series — including All the Presidents’ Men, Taxi Driver and Rocky — Deadline is looking back a half-century to 1976, an incredible year for movies.

“We saw this movie as something that had a different level to it. It was monumental,” says All the President’s Men’s associate producer Michael Britton. “Most movies are movies — they’re entertainment — but this felt important.”

Fifty years on, All the President’s Men remains monumental: a testament to essential filmmaking, a cautionary tale about the corruption of power, and an example of filmmakers at the top of their game channeling the excavation of political scandal into an intelligent and satisfying thriller. The film is often cited as the gold standard of movies about journalism.

Alan J. Pakula’s 1976 drama starred Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as the intrepid Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein who helped expose the Watergate scandal that led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon. The film meticulously recreated their steps in linking the Watergate break-in and Republican ‘dirty tricks’ campaign to the highest echelons of power in America. Based on Woodward and Bernstein’s book of the same name, the William Goldman-scripted film would go on to score eight Oscar nominations, winning four, and taking a hefty $70 million at the box office off an estimated $5-8 million budget.

All the President's Men feature

Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman in ‘All the President’s Men.’

[Robert Redford] never accepted things as they were and was always looking for what was under the surface.

Ann Hornaday

For many, the film’s snapshot of the scandal would go on to encapsulate the entire affair, which in reality lasted years. Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post’s longtime film critic who is now writing a book on the movie, has called it a metonym for Watergate “that from the moment it opened seemed to fuse seamlessly with private memory and collective myth.”

Jake Tapper, CNN’s lead Washington anchor, says: “I was raised in a political household, where the dirty politicians of my Philly youth were often discussed, and the Watergate hearings were watched live on the family black-and-white TV in the living room. All the President’s Men distilled this dynamic to one that was easy to understand.”

Making All the President’s Men accessible was in large part down to Redford, the driving force behind the project.

Says Hornaday, “Bob is the ultimate disruptor, and he was a disruptor almost from the very beginning of his career. The minute he started to achieve any kind of success or celebrity he leveraged it to do independent work and his own independent productions, which often were critiques of American society. Anybody who knew him, or interviewed him, knew the same thing, which is that he was always going against the grain. He never accepted things as they were and was always looking for what was under the surface.”

Britton, an employee at Redford’s production company Wildwood Enterprises and one of the last surviving crew members who worked on the film from start to finish, remembers a sense of jeopardy.

Hoffman and Redford with director Alan J. Pakula and cinematographer Gordon Willis on set. Warner Bros./Everett Collection

“There was always the element that there are folks out there who do not necessarily want this story continued. Even up until the time we did the film’s premiere. We took the big, heavy cans to the Kennedy Center, but I actually had a backup copy that I kept in my room at the Watergate just in case somebody sabotaged it.”

Redford had first become inspired to tell the story after talking to Washington journalists during the promotion of 1972 movie The Candidate. The actor splashed out on the rights to Woodward and Bernstein’s book — getting there before co-star Hoffman — recognizing the potential in a film about journalists methodically pursuing a dangerous but vital truth. Paramount turned the project down, but Warner Bros. stepped up.

“I never worked on a picture that so much thought went into,” Redford said at the time. “A lot of it was preventive thought, not so much ‘do this’ as ‘don’t do that’ — don’t make it a movie about Nixon or Watergate. Don’t take a partisan position. Don’t set out to celebrate the press. Don’t be too impressed with the history involved. Don’t be careless with facts. Don’t fall in love with The Washington Post. Do make a movie about the press, about two reporters who did a difficult job of reporting and did it well.”

It was tense at times, because Bob liked to go in fresh with the scene. Dustin wanted to try every different way to do a scene.

Michael Britton

The journalists’ process was at the heart of Redford’s vision. Leading CNN anchor Dana Bash, who later worked with Bernstein, says of the duo: “They have distinctive styles and approaches to their work, yet are sympatico in what matters — the relentless pursuit of the truth. That is true for any investigative journalist, but they obviously broke the mold.”

Also, Redford saw a dramatic opportunity in their differences, noting, “When I read an article about them, I realized one was a Jew and one was a WASP, one guy was a Republican, the other was a radical; one guy was a very good writer, the other wasn’t so good… They didn’t like each other, but they had to work together.”

Redford and Hoffman learned each other’s lines to create synergy and spontaneity, but their differences could lead to an element of friction, says Britton. “It was tense at times, because Bob liked to go in fresh with the scene. Dustin wanted to try every different way to do a scene. So, they had very different styles. As a producer, [Redford] also had to be attuned to the amount of time things were taking.”

In the mid ’70s, Redford was perhaps at the peak of his powers as a leading man, and his stardust was evident, says Alan Shayne, the film’s casting director and former WB TV President, who is now 100 years old.

Redford and Hoffman Everett Collection

“When Redford was on the set it was like there was a spotlight on him all the time; not a real one but an imagined one. He was just a big star. Light kind of followed him everywhere he went.” Hoffman, he recalls, was “brilliant” and “a genius” but could be difficult in how exacting he was.

Ultimately, it was Jason Robards, who portrayed the paper’s revered editor Ben Bradlee, who took home the film’s sole acting Oscar. According to film lore, dozens of A-list actors — from Burt Lancaster to Robert Mitchum — were considered for the part. Shayne, who had worked with Robarts before, has a different recollection. “Everybody in Hollywood makes lists. I never made a list. I met Bradlee and thought, ‘My god, it’s Jason.’ They had the same kind of voice, same kind of look. It was amazing. I remember going back to Hollywood and everyone on the picture was very excited. They said, ‘Who’s going to play Bradlee?’ I said, ‘Jason Robards’. My friend John Calley [the legendary longtime WB executive], who was head of production at the time, said, ‘We don’t want Robards, he’s washed up’. I said ‘John, that’s who it is.’ Later on, Bob [Redford] claimed he was responsible for casting Jason due to their friendship. Who knows.”

The film’s authenticity is often lauded as a major part of its success. “Pakula and Redford were constantly calling Woodward and Bernstein during the production,” says Hornaday. “They were taking scenes wholesale from the book, they looked at Bob and Carl’s notes, they interviewed them for hours.”

And Shayne saw it first-hand, saying, “With the help of the brilliant George Jenkins [who won the Oscar for Production Design], Alan recreated the whole newsroom of the Post. The wastepaper baskets were filled with real scraps of newspaper. He even wanted the extras to be real actors, which wasn’t an easy thing to pull off. There was the constant feeling of a live newsroom. Jason [Robards] would work from the newsroom office even when the cameras weren’t rolling.”

The film’s subtle yet propulsive score was the work of Oscar-winning composer David Shire, who two years earlier had composed the score for Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation. Shire recalls: “I went to see the movie in post-production, and then I almost talked myself out of doing it, because I said to Alan, ‘You know, it’s a fabulous movie, but it has such a documentary feel. Music may even hurt it.’” Shire initially struggled and Pakula rejected multiple themes. “After a time, Pakula explained to me, ‘The movie isn’t a documentary — it’s a story about two men whose hearts are beating faster and faster as they go toward their quest.’ That turned the light on for me; when I thought about a heart beating faster and faster, that pulse came to me, and the theme grew from there. Suddenly, it wasn’t a documentary anymore in my mind. That was one of the most contained and crucial notes I got from a director.”

The resonance of All the President’s Men remains as strong as ever now, even if many Deadline spoke to view Donald Trump’s presidency as being corrupt on an entirely different level to Nixon’s.

“I’ve interviewed a fair number of Watergate figures for my book, many of them Republicans,” says Hornaday. “They’re gobsmacked at what’s happening today in America.” The ‘dirty tricks’ of Republican leaders at that time have “metastasized into something profoundly anti-democratic and dangerous,” she says.

Read the digital edition of Deadline’s Disruptors/Cannes magazine here.

Actor Mark Ruffalo recently wrote about the film through the lens of Paramount’s impending deal for Warner Bros: “As we watch Hollywood barrel towards a Paramount — Warner Bros. merger, All the President’s Men should remind us of what may be lost. This movie would not have been made in a Paramount-Warner Bros.-CNN -Trump era.”

Bash notes: “The film is a reminder that the answers don’t always come quickly, and pushing for truth in the face of resistance from powerful people is scary. Having an organization that has your back is everything.”

For Tapper, “All the President’s Men is about a moment in time, because — as we’ve seen —  Presidents engaged in deception or corruption in the modern era have a Praetorian guard in partisan and ideological ‘news’ media, to say nothing of influential social media trolls. That said, the film’s message of the need for journalists, and their editors and publishers, to stand firm with those with facts on their side, even if they stand alone, is just as resonant today.” —Andreas Wiseman