Close Menu
KumbhCoinorg
    What's Hot

    Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate

    May 13, 2026

    Senate Confirms Bitcoin Friendly Kevin Warsh As Fed Chair Ahead Of Clarity Act Vote

    May 13, 2026

    ‘Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan should do age-appropriate roles’: Mohan Kapur says it’s unfair to write stars off after flops | Hindi Movie News

    May 13, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate
    • Senate Confirms Bitcoin Friendly Kevin Warsh As Fed Chair Ahead Of Clarity Act Vote
    • ‘Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan should do age-appropriate roles’: Mohan Kapur says it’s unfair to write stars off after flops | Hindi Movie News
    • IPL 2026 points table after Match 57: RCB go top after Kohli masterclass; KKR playoff hopes fade | Cricket News
    • RRB ALP CEN 01/2026 notification released for 11,127 posts, registrations begin from May 15
    • CLARITY Act News: Fresh Draft Is Out – What Next for Crypto?
    • Solana Rallies as Coinbase Adds SOL-Backed Loans
    • Watch the Moment When the Wreck of the Titanic Was First Discovered (1985)
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    KumbhCoinorg
    Wednesday, May 13
    • Home
    • Crypto News
      • Bitcoin & Altcoins
      • Blockchain Trends
      • Forex News
    • Kumbh Mela
    • Entertainment
      • Celebrity Gossip
      • Movie & TV Reviews
      • Music Industry News
    • Market News
      • Global Economy Insights
      • Real Estate Trends
      • Stock Market Updates
    • Education
      • Career Development
      • Online Learning
      • Study Tips
    • Airdrop News
      • Ico News
    • Sports
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • hockey
    KumbhCoinorg
    Home»Entertainment»Movie & TV Reviews»Cover-Up review – a film worthy of Seymour Hersh
    Movie & TV Reviews

    Cover-Up review – a film worthy of Seymour Hersh

    kumbhorgBy kumbhorgDecember 5, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Cover-Up review – a film worthy of Seymour Hersh
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    When investigative journalist Seymour ​“Sy” Hersh is asked what made him a suitable candidate to run his father’s store in Chicago, he shrugs, ​“Pizazz. Like people.” Pizazz and liking people not only equipped Sy to work front of house at Isador Hersh’s dry cleaning business, they have made him appealing to journalistic sources across an extraordinary 50+ year career and they permeate this scintillating documentary by Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus. Hersh’s language crackles with a mordant Yiddish brevity such that even when describing US war crimes and torture, he never loses his powers of speech. 

    Aged 88, his brain has lost none of its sharpness as he recalls the damning details of the atrocity that made his name. On 16 March 1968, in the Vietnamese village of My Lai, hundreds of unarmed men, women, children and babies were rounded up and shot dead, but when the Army reported the incident later they said they killed 128 members of the Viet Cong. It took another year for a sceptical young reporter to respond to a tip and begin unravelling the institutional lie, travelling up and down the country to record first-person testimonies from US Army soldiers who executed the massacre. 

    Get more Little White Lies

    Hersh tracked down Paul Meadlo, a former farmboy so unhinged by what he had been a part of that he was willing to speak on camera to CBS about shooting at babies, and the gang rapes perpetrated by US soldiers. It was Meadlo’s mother who gave Hersh the infamous line about the Army: ​“I sent them a good boy and they made him a murderer.”

    Poitras and Obenhaus illustrate Hersh’s recollections with media coverage that blew up in the public domain to become part of our collective understanding of US atrocities during Vietnam, but also – grippingly – Hersh has granted them access to his own source materials, while ferociously protecting the sources themselves. We see a vertical print sourced from the army; it’s a black and white map of My Lai annotated with blue felt pen. Over one arrow it says, ​“30−40 bodies found in ditch,“; over another, ​“Had lunch“. 

    “I don’t psychoanalyse those that talk to me, just like I don’t psychoanalyse myself, thank god,” says Hersh early doors, possibly regretting saying yes to this documentary 20 years after Poitras first approached him. Still, because he likes people and has spent his career listening to them (without necessarily believing them), he has a standard of careful insight into why things happen the way that they do. As he reflects on why no one involved in the My Lai massacre reported it earlier, he gives two possible theories: one, that it felt so terrible as to be unspeakable; the other, more likely in his view, ​“Well, that’s just another day in Vietnam.”

    These comments invoke a shiver because you could as easily say, ​“That’s another day in Abu Ghraib,” or, ​“That’s another day in Gaza”. The use of war crimes and their attendant cover-ups is presented as a matter of rinse-repeat in US foreign policy as made irrefutable by Hersh’s diligent reporting. For the film is a sprint through the stories he went on to cover, from Watergate to Iraq to Gaza today, amounting to an ironclad reason to mistrust the official US version of events.

    If Cover-Up feels more conventionally structured than Poitras’ previous works, it is worth bearing in mind that she is sharing the directing credit with Mark Obenhaus, a documentarian who has worked with Hersh before and earned the (wary) trust of a man who has witnessed the worst abuses of it. Still, Poitras’s trademark sensitivities and sophistication shine through in the inclusion of her voice during conversations with Hersh. For a professional portrait of a legacy figure who has exposed the coldest deeds, this film has a warm lifeforce, pulsing with the personality of a man whose instincts towards the truth mean that he gives more away about himself than he might have wanted to.

    A third of the way through the film, we are taken back to Hersh’s formative years in Chicago and learn in broad, economical strokes the facts of his ancestry. Neither of his parents – Eastern European Jews from Lithuania and Poland – ever spoke about the Holocaust. There is a poetry to the fact that their son has dedicated his life to speaking on state-sanctioned crimes against humanity. 

    The film gallops every onwards, wheels greased by Hersh’s brilliant and prickly voice. He has a way with words that would make a hard-boiled detective novelist jealous. ​“There was this story that seemed impossible: it was called the truth,” he says, rifling through one of many manila folders in a home office full of America’s worst kept secrets. Poitras and Obenhaus elegantly juggle focus between the stories themselves and the climate the storyteller was working in. 

    They source juicy clips to illustrate the hostile reactions to all of Hersh’s endeavours, from Nixon calling him a ​“son of a bitch” on the leaked tapes, to up-in-arms regular Americans calling talk shows to call him unpatriotic. Then there is the insidious behaviour of The New York Times. Hired in 1972 in the glow of winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1970, he quit in 1979 shortly after he discovered that the corruption he was reporting on at the conglomerate Gulf & Western Industries was uncomfortably close to home for his colleagues. Now he reports using Substack.

    Poitras questions him on the less glorious moments of his career, too, so that he emerges as a flawed human rather than a bastion of perfect judgement. This is not a perfect documentary either, with the breathless dash through his post My Lai journalism sometimes feeling overwhelming. Yet perfection is not the point when something impossible has been bottled: it’s something called the truth.

    CoverUp Film Hersh Review Seymour Worthy
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBigger Government Means Bigger Fraud: Minnesota’s Billion-Dollar Lesson in Incentives
    Next Article Walt Disney Concert Hall Architect Was 96
    kumbhorg
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    Movie & TV Reviews

    Dua – first-look review | Little White Lies

    By kumbhorgMay 13, 2026
    Entertainment

    Ajay Devgn starrer ‘Drishyam 3’ Hindi version WILL NOT completely follow Mohanlal’s Malayalam film, reveal makers | Hindi Movie News

    By kumbhorgMay 12, 2026
    Ico News

    Insipix Review – Built for the New Generation of Traders?

    By kumbhorgMay 12, 2026
    Movie & TV Reviews

    A Fond Farewell to Our Critic Monica Castillo

    By kumbhorgMay 12, 2026
    Movie & TV Reviews

    Has streaming killed Star Wars?

    By kumbhorgMay 11, 2026
    Movie & TV Reviews

    Milwaukee Film Festival 2026: Making Waves, With Movies, Along the Shores of Lake Michigan

    By kumbhorgMay 11, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Don't Miss

    Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate

    By kumbhorgMay 13, 2026

    Kevin Warsh was confirmed by the narrowest margin since the role required a Senate confirmation…

    Senate Confirms Bitcoin Friendly Kevin Warsh As Fed Chair Ahead Of Clarity Act Vote

    May 13, 2026

    ‘Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan should do age-appropriate roles’: Mohan Kapur says it’s unfair to write stars off after flops | Hindi Movie News

    May 13, 2026

    IPL 2026 points table after Match 57: RCB go top after Kohli masterclass; KKR playoff hopes fade | Cricket News

    May 13, 2026
    Top Posts

    Satwik-Chirag storm into China Masters final with straight-game win over Malaysia | Badminton News

    September 21, 2025176 Views

    SaucerSwap SAUCE Crypto Breaks Key Resistance Amid Nvidia-Hedera Deal

    July 15, 202548 Views

    Unlocking Your Potential with Mubite: The Future of Crypto Prop Trading

    September 17, 202533 Views

    Stablecoins 2025 Exchange Reserves: Insights into DeFi Trends

    September 8, 202532 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    About Us

    Welcome to KumbhCoin!
    At KumbhCoin, we strive to create a unique blend of cultural and technological news for a diverse audience. Our platform bridges the spiritual significance of the Kumbh Mela with the dynamic world of cryptocurrency and general news.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Trump's Fed chair pick Kevin Warsh confirmed by US Senate

    May 13, 2026

    Senate Confirms Bitcoin Friendly Kevin Warsh As Fed Chair Ahead Of Clarity Act Vote

    May 13, 2026

    ‘Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan should do age-appropriate roles’: Mohan Kapur says it’s unfair to write stars off after flops | Hindi Movie News

    May 13, 2026
    Most Popular

    7 things to know before the bell

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Reeves optimistic despite surprise rise in UK borrowing

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale

    January 22, 20250 Views
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    © 2026 Kumbhcoin. Designed by Webwizards7.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.