Cover-Up Review: Seymour Hersh and the Moral Architecture of Investigative Journalism
★★★★½ 4.5/5
Essential for anyone who cares about truth in an age of noise.
Is Cover-Up good?
Yes — it holds an 86 Metascore and a 98% Critic Score, backed by an 85% Audience Score that confirms it plays well beyond a niche journalism-school crowd. Mark Obenhaus’s profile of Pulitzer-winning reporter Seymour Hersh covers five decades of reporting, from My Lai to Abu Ghraib to Syria and Nord Stream, structured with the momentum of a thriller rather than a standard biographical documentary.
What is Cover-Up about?
It’s a case study in how uncomfortable facts reach the public record — and how power structures try to bury them. Obenhaus gives Hersh room to explain his own methods in his prickly, uncompromising voice, letting the reporter’s combativeness and self-awareness carry the film rather than narration.
Should you watch Cover-Up?
Yes, especially if journalism-process documentaries appeal to you. At 175 minutes it’s a long sit, but the pacing holds attention through Hersh’s storytelling charisma and the archival depth Obenhaus was given access to.
How does Cover-Up compare to All the President’s Men?
It belongs in the same lineage of journalism-as-thriller filmmaking, though this is documentary rather than dramatization. Where that film dramatized one story, Cover-Up uses one reporter’s entire career to make the same argument about verification and institutional courage.