

By Ilana Novick
โYou will be muzzled,โ the lawyer for Gretchen Carlson (Nicole Kidman) warns her at the end of โBombshell,โ (directed by Jay Roach) as the former Fox News anchor signs a $20 million settlement in a sexual harassment suit against her former boss, Roger Ailes. She might just as easily have been talking about the movie itself, which exposes the former Fox News CEOโs sexual harassment and abuse while still letting its heroines off the hook.
In 2016, Carlson sued Ailes, leading several others including fellow anchor Megyn Kelly (Charlize Theron) to reveal that he had assaulted them as well. โBombshellโ unfolds over late 2015, in the lead-up to Carlsonโs decision to go public, and continues through Ailesโ firing in 2016, telling the stories of three of his perky, blond victims. They are Carlson, Kelly and the fictional up-and-coming producer Kayla Pospisil (Margot Robbie), an ambitious but wide-eyed young evangelical who tells a manager that she wants to become โan influencer in the Jesus space.โ
Theronโs Kelly is our first guide to the cable news channel. In a tight shot through the officeโs narrow hallways, we see her breezily brushing off catcalls from male colleagues. (โHeโs not horny, heโs just ambitious,โ she assures herself of one.) Kelly is clear-eyed in her assessment of the sexism at the heart of the network, from its refusal to let women wear pants to Ailesโ insistence that the desks of his on-air talent remain pristine. Itโs reflective of the way in which the movie treats the channel: taking care to applaud the female employees for taking down a bad man while all but ignoring how Fox News has championed racism, torn families apart and generally made the U.S. a harder, more sadistic country.
Theronโs resemblance to Kelly is uncanny, her jaw clenched so straight and tight that it seems to be holding her entire body together. One of the filmโs pivotal scenes occurs during the first Republican debate of 2015, when she improbably emerged as a feminist ally for questioning then-candidate Donald Trumpโs treatment of women. โYou once told a contestant on โCelebrity Apprenticeโ it would be a pretty picture to see her on her knees,โ Kelly began. โDoes that sound to you like the temperament of a man we should elect as president?โ
Ailes applauds her for her combative line of questioning, but when Trump takes aim at Kelly on social media, he fails to come to her defense. With the Kelly-Trump feud drawing huge ratings, why would he? Instead, the Fox News chief sends her on vacation for several weeks. The film similarly asks its audience to sympathize with Carlson after she dares to do a news segment without wearing makeup. In a state of rage, Ailes bellows, โNobody wants to watch a middle-aged woman sweat her way through menopause.โ
Kellyโs question to Trump during the debate was an important one, and she deserves credit for publicly challenging him. By the same measure, Ailesโ reaction to Carlsonโs segment was disgusting, and her decision to appear on air as she did was a brave choice. But these rah-rah moments are not the full story of Megyn Kelly and Gretchen Carlson as journalists, just as Roger Ailes does not singularly embody the toxicity of Fox News.
Carlson stoked Islamophobic conspiracy theories about President Barack Obama and made no secret of her disdain for the LGBTQ community. Kelly used precious network time to harangue viewers about Jesus and how Santa must be white, called a teenager slaughtered by police โno saint,โ and claimed that Sandra Bland might have survived her imprisonment had she complied with police, among other racist comments.
Fox News has a long, sordid history of promoting Trumpโs birtherism, along with countless other conspiracy theories. A 2012 study from Farleigh-Dickinson University found that the networkโs viewers were generally less informed on current events compared to non-Fox viewers. โBombshellโ alludes to these issues in the briefest of video clips but otherwise fails to grapple with the complexity of the characters with whom itโs asking its audience to identify. Countless anchors and executives, including owner Rupert Murdoch, have made it one of the most destructive forces in American life.
Virtually all of Ailesโ abuses of power occur off-screen, but โBombshellโ features one truly infuriating moment when he pressures the fictional Kayla to reveal her underwear during a meeting about her career prospects. His jowls heavy and eyes practically swollen with greed, John Lithgow is not just sleazy but genuinely menacing, especially when he forces Robbieโs character to pretend as though her sexual harassment never happened.
When Kayla does attempt to tell somebodyโJess (Kate McKinnon), a producer on Bill OโReillyโs โThe OโReilly Factorโโsheโs immediately shut down. Jess says itโs better she not get involved because sheโs โa lesbian at Fox News,โ and, as weโre informed, a Hillary Clinton supporter. Unfortunately, โBombshellโ repeatedly reminds us of these facts in lieu of any kind of character development. (As an aside, Fox News fired OโReilly in 2017 amid reports that he had settled multiple sexual harassment claims totaling tens of millions of dollars.)
Still, Jessโ near-instantaneous refusal to help provides one of the filmโs most powerful moments, illustrating the ways in which Fox News built a corporate environment that pitted women against each other. Indeed, โBombshellโ is most effective when it portrays Carlsonโs building fury as her current and former colleagues refuse to join her lawsuit, despite her entreaties. Ailes has robbed them of their dignity and bought their silence. The energy draining from her eyes, her forced smile turned downward, Kidman eventually gives way to despair. Itโs the highlight of her performance.
Roger Ailes was a sexual predator who terrorized dozens of women over the course of his long and ignominious career. Kelly and Carlson were the public faces of his demise, but they also spent years poisoning American culture at his and othersโ behest. A more explosive โBombshellโ might have recognized that you canโt capture one story without telling the other.
Published by Common Dreams, 12.30.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
