Ten years ago, I broke down this scene from Michael Mann's masterpiece "The Insider" (1999) shot by shot. It's a scene in which 60 Minutes producers Lowell Bergman (Al Pacino) and Don Hewitt (Philip Baker Hall) and consummate correspondent Mike Wallace (Christopher Plummer) are called into a meeting with the President of their CBS News division, Eric Kluster (Stephen Tobolowsky), and CBS general counsel Helen Caperelli (Gina Gershon) to answer questions about their exposé with the ultimate insider, Jeffrey Wigand (Russell Crowe), ex-employee of Brown & Williamson Tobacco who accuses his former bosses of consciously ignoring health considerations. I posted this at a moment in time, July 2016, when the notion of truth was becoming ever more specious and I was truly beginning to sense what was coming for the United States. In the decade since, both the scene and the movie have proven frighteningly prescient. Given what is currently transpiring with 60 Minutes and CBS News and its kowtower in chief, it is proving prescient again. So, I dusted it off and reposted it with just a few minor tweaks.
This is how the scene is established, with Bergman and Wallace in cozy, laugh-filled consultation while their executive producer, Hewitt, sits one chair over. This is a Bergman & Wallace world, see, until.....
Caperelli enters with a cheerful countenance by asking "Should I send for coffee?", the obligatory faux-peace offering in corporate conference room settings before figurative shots are fired.
She sits, along with Kluster to her right, while Bergman and Wallace disengage, still smiling, still in their own little world.
Notice how Gershon has Caperelli lean toward Wallace, Bergman and Hewitt, a subtle shift into attack mode. "I thought we'd get together because there's a legal concept that has been getting some new attention recently, 'tortious interference.'"
In saying "tortious interference", Hall has Hewitt snap to attention, like, 'Oh, this doesn't sound good.'
But in the ensuing wider shot, compare Hewitt's reaction with what Pacino has Bergman do in the face of "tortious interference" - utter disinterest, like, 'Oh, some more corporate b.s..'
Caperelli explains that corporate b.s. "If two people have an agreement, like a confidentiality agreement, and one of them breaks it because they are induced to do so by a third party..." and on third party Gershon has Caperelli point right at Wallace as a thinly veiled accusation, telling them if stuff happens, this is their fault.
Upon concluding her spiel, Bergman and Wallace take turns explaining that they air something only if it's in the public interest, and only after they verify and corroborate it, which is why, as Wallace notes, they "have never lost a lawsuit and run a classy show." And Plummer caps his little lecture with an "Anything else?" that is laugh-out-loud haughty.
Ah, but there is so much else, because even if Caperelli agrees that 60 Minutes has exacting verification standards, she thinks it wouldn't hurt to "make sure you're right on this one."
Hewitt asks Kluster, his boss, what the CBS News position is on this issue.
And as the CBS News President goes to answer, he looks first to Caperelli for approval, signaling the hierarchy.
And Caperelli takes the baton, explaining that they must check on this claim of tortious interference before they air the piece.
And as she explains this, Plummer has Wallace look at her like her reasons aren't worth the gum on his shoe.
But now Caperelli turns the threats from an outside party to her own, terming the segment "already rife with problems", and opening a binder as she says to visually underscore the supposed rifeness.
Now she has Bergman's attention. "What does that mean?"
"'Rife with?'" Bergman repeats as he leans forward, readying for conference room battle.

Off camera, she explains to Bergman that "unusual promises" were made to their client, which Bergman immediately disputes by saying they merely agreed to hold his story until it was ready to air.
She questions Wigand's veracity.
Bergman explains Wigand's veracity was good enough for the whole state of Mississippi.
Caperelli explains that their "standards have to be higher than anyone else's because we are the standard for everyone else."
"As a standard, I'll hang with, 'Is this guy telling the truth?'"
Gershon's smirk is the wicked rebuttal to the quaint notion of "telling the truth", which her character then explicates further. "Well, with tortious interference, the greater the truth, the greater the damage. They own the information he's disclosing. The truer it is, the greater the damage to them. If he lied, he didn't disclose their information. And the damages are smaller."
Here, in fact, is where Pacino should have won the Oscar. Confronted with the idea that telling the truth gets you into more trouble than telling lies, Pacino has Bergman pause and look around the room, a moment that cannot be fully captured in a screenshot, as if he can't believe here is here and now is now. He asks: "Is this Alice in Wonderland?"
Plummer has Wallace lean forward, quickly, like he's just seized on what he only just realized is the key to the whole case, his interviewing instincts having kicked in. "You said," he says, referring to the earlier statement made by Caperelli (see ninth screenshot), "'on this one.' What about this one?"
She explains that if they air the segment then Brown & Williamson could sue CBS. "At the end of the day, because of your segment, Brown & Williamson could own CBS." And she tops it off not with an expression conveying threat, but this expression, one that communicates a kind of "Aw shucks, if your segment was the reason for all this, gee, wouldn't that suck for your reputations?"
And Pacino has Bergman look not at Caperelli but at Wallace, as if he knows matters of "reputation" are what gnaw at Wallace like nothing else.
Caperelli's wristwatch bloops, her scheduled out. "I'm due upstairs," she says.
You can't see it in the still because it's almost imperceptible, but at what is obviously Caperelli's pre-arranged out, Pacino, brilliantly, has Bergman nod, like he's saying 'Of course.'
Caperelli tells them not to rush to any conclusions because, hey, "We're all CBS."
And as she says, "We're all CBS", Mann's handheld camera drifts ever so slightly to the left, to allow space for the CBS "Eye" to enter the frame, as if the "Eye" is watching Caperelli who is watching everyone else.
Then, Caperelli dissolves, as if into a cloud of smoke, like she was never there.
Wallace tells Bergman not to worry, and Plummer gives Pacino a pat on the hand, momentarily reverting to their jocular behavior at the scene's start. "We call the shots around here," Wallace says.
But Bergman knows that's not true. At least, not anymore, not after today, not from this moment forward. He wins, eventually, of course, he has to, he's the movie's hero, but not really, and he knows it. He gets the truth out, but the notion of truth has been compromised. "What got broken here," he says at the end, "doesn't go back together." This is the moment when it's broken.









































