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The Paper

The Paper 1994

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The Paper Plot Summary

Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for The Paper (1994). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.


Henry Hackett, Michael Keaton the metro editor of The New York Sun, loves his job but the grind of long hours and low pay wears on him. He fears becoming like Bernie White, his editor-in-chief who puts the paper first at the expense of his family. Bernie reveals a diagnosis of prostate cancer and, with a sense of urgency, tries to track down his estranged daughter to reconcile before his time runs out.

Facing dire financial straits, the paper’s owner has Alicia Clark Glenn Close, Henry’s nemesis and the managing editor, impose unpopular cutbacks. Henry’s pregnant wife Martha Marisa Tomei, a fellow Sun journalist on leave, worries that he won’t be around to help raise their child. She urges him to consider a job at the prestigious New York Sentinel, a move that would mean more money, more respect, and fewer hours—yet also more distance.

That same morning, a hot story erupts: the murder of two white businessmen in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. A pair of African-American teenagers are arrested, but Henry and columnist Michael McDougal Spalding Gray grow skeptical after overhearing cops criticizing the arrest on the newsroom police scanner. The case pulls Henry in, and he becomes obsessed with digging deeper, pushing his staff to chase every lead.

As the pressure builds, a source tells Martha that the murdered bankers were involved in stealing money from a reputed New York mobster, which strengthens Henry’s conviction that the Brooklyn youths were wrongly accused. His dedication threatens his standing and his chances at the Sentinel when he cannot resist secretly obtaining information from the Sentinel newsroom while interviewing for the job.

Henry fights to extend the deadline to give the story more time, but Alicia refuses, citing the costs of overtime for the press workers and the delivery trucks. With time running out, Henry and Michael McDougal secure the help of a police detective to verify the suspects’ innocence — they were in the wrong place at the wrong time, and the truth seems within reach for a big, undeniable scoop.

Back at the Sun, Henry confronts Alicia, who resists stopping the presses to publish the truth. A tense, awkward fistfight follows, and Alicia ultimately fires Henry. After sharing a drink with McDougal at a journalist hangout, Alicia experiences a change of heart when McDougal tells her this would be the Sun’s first knowingly false story, and she begins to reconsider the direction the paper is taking.

Yet fate intervenes in a brutal way: before she can reach the presses, a stray bullet from a drunken city official who had come to confront McDougal strikes her leg. The incident shifts the momentum of the day, as the hospital becomes the new center of action and decision.

Meanwhile, Henry arrives home just as Martha is rushed to the hospital for an emergency cesarean section. Doctors prepare Martha for surgery, and in another part of the hospital, Alicia insists on contacting The Sun to change the front page before the doctors treat her own wounds. The next morning, Alicia lies in the hospital bed with a copy of The Sun showing the headline They Didn’t Do It! Henry visits the nursery to see his newborn son, then goes to Martha’s room. As he lies beside her, a bedside radio crackles with the news that the two innocent youths have been released, thanks to The Sun’s exclusive scoop, marking a hard-won vindication born from journalistic tenacity and the high cost of truth.

The Paper Timeline

Follow the complete movie timeline of The Paper (1994) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.


Henry Hackett and Bernie White's health worry

Henry Hackett is the Sun's metro editor who loves his job but is worn down by long hours and low pay. Bernie White reveals he has prostate cancer and is trying to track down his estranged daughter to reconcile before his time runs out.

Morning The New York Sun newsroom

Unpopular cutbacks implemented

Facing dire financial straits, the paper's owner has Alicia Clark impose unpopular cutbacks across the newsroom. Henry clashes with Alicia as he worries about layoffs and the future of the paper and his staff.

Morning The New York Sun newsroom

Martha urges Henry toward the Sentinel

Martha, Henry's pregnant wife and fellow Sun journalist, fears he won't be around to help raise their child. She urges him to take an editor position at the prestigious New York Sentinel, promising more money, respect, and fewer hours.

Morning Henry and Martha's home

Brooklyn murder breaks; youths arrested

A hot crime story erupts with the murder of two white businessmen in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Two African-American teenagers are arrested, but Henry and columnist Michael McDougal grow skeptical after hearing cops criticizing the arrest on the newsroom scanner.

Morning Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Obsessed reporter and Sentinel interview

Henry becomes obsessed with the case, pushing his staff to dig deeper. He cannot resist stealing information about the case while in the Sentinel newsroom interviewing for the job, jeopardizing his chances there.

During interview The New York Sentinel newsroom

Mobster link alleged; innocent suspects

A source tells Martha that the murdered businessmen were bankers who stole money from a reputed New York mobster, reinforcing Henry's belief that the Brooklyn youths were wrongly arrested. The detail deepens his resolve to expose the truth.

Evening Martha's home

Deadline pressure and refusal to extend

With time running out, Henry pushes to extend the deadline to get more time to nail the story. Alicia refuses, citing overtime costs for the press workers and delivery truck drivers, jeopardizing the Sun's ability to publish the truth.

Evening The New York Sun newsroom

Detective confirms innocence

Henry and McDougal recruit a police detective who confirms the suspects are innocent and merely happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. The investigative breakthrough strengthens their case but comes too late for the planned front page.

Evening Sun newsroom

Confrontation and firing

Henry confronts Alicia about stopping the presses and publishing a correct story. A tense fistfight erupts, and Alicia ultimately fires Henry from the Sun.

Evening The New York Sun newsroom

Alicia's change of heart and bar bullet

After a drink with McDougal, Alicia contemplates changing course and doing the right thing. Before she can reach the press room on a pay phone, a stray bullet from a drunk city official hits her leg at the bar.

Evening Journalist watering hole/bar

Henry arrives home; Martha rushed to hospital

Henry arrives home just as Martha is rushed to the hospital for an emergency cesarean section. In the hospital, Alicia insists on calling the Sun to change the front page before doctors treat her.

Night Hospital

The Sun's vindicating front page

The next morning, Alicia lies in her hospital bed reading the Sun with the headline 'They Didn't Do It!' Henry visits the newborn son in the nursery, then goes to Martha's room. A bedside news anchor reports that the youths have been released thanks to the Sun's exclusive scoop.

Morning Hospital

The Paper Characters

Explore all characters from The Paper (1994). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.


Henry Hackett (Michael Keaton)

Metro editor of The New York Sun, Henry is driven and principled but weary from long hours and financial pressures. He is fiercely determined to get the facts straight and to protect his staff from bad journalism. His obsession with the Williamsburg murder case tests his ethics and loyalty to the paper.

🗞️ Determined 🧭 Ethical Dilemma 👓 Investigative

Alicia Clark (Glenn Close)

The managing editor who champions cost-cutting and efficiency, sometimes clashing with Henry over how to run a big story. She embodies newsroom pragmatism and ambition, yet she also shows capacity for growth and change. Her decisions shape the paper’s direction and its fate.

💼 Professional 🧭 Pragmatic 🗯️ Decisive

Martha Hackett (Marisa Tomei)

Henry’s pregnant wife and a fellow Sun journalist who voices concern about time and support. She embodies the personal stakes behind newsroom battles and serves as a counterpoint to Henry’s relentless drive.

👩‍🍼 Family 💬 Supportive 🧭 Perspective

Michael McDougal (Randy Quaid)

A wary columnist who partners with Henry, challenging the status quo and pushing for a rigorous investigation. His skepticism and insider knowledge help drive the pursuit of the truth.

🧭 Skeptic 🗯️ Insider 🕵️‍♂️ Investigative

Bernie White (Jason Robards)

The editor-in-chief who, facing illness and budget pressure, embodies the hierarchy and old-school authority of the newspaper. His struggle to balance leadership, health, and family adds an emotional layer to the newsroom drama.

🧠 Authority 🗺️ Experience 🔒 Pressure

The Paper Settings

Learn where and when The Paper (1994) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.


Time period

1990s

Set in the early 1990s, the film reflects a period when print newspapers were the primary source of breaking news and faced significant financial pressures. Long hours, budget cuts, and the race to publish first shape the characters’ decisions. Pre-digital tools define how information is gathered and distributed.

Location

New York City, Williamsburg, Brooklyn

The story unfolds in New York City with pivotal action in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, giving the newsroom a metropolitan backdrop. The city’s fast pace and diverse neighborhoods frame the drama of reporting and cutthroat competition between papers. Williamsburg’s gritty, working-class atmosphere mirrors the tension of a hot murder case breaking in the press.

🗽 Urban NYC 📰 Newsroom City 🎭 City Life

The Paper Themes

Discover the main themes in The Paper (1994). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.


🗞️

Journalism Ethics

The pursuit of a truthful story collides with tight deadlines and newsroom politics. Henry fights to verify facts while management pressures push for speed over accuracy. The film probes how ethical choices in reporting impact lives beyond the newsroom.

💔

Family vs Career

Henry’s devotion to the paper strains his relationship with Martha, who is pregnant and worried he won’t be around for the birth. The lure of a prestigious job and monetary security clashes with his duty to family. The narrative tests whether ambition justifies personal cost.

⚖️

Truth and Accountability

With bankers and mobsters involved, the story raises questions about who is responsible for the consequences of the newspaper’s reporting. The Sun’s exclusive can alter reputations and lives, making accuracy a matter of justice. The climax hinges on whether the paper publishes the truth, even at great risk.

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The Paper Spoiler-Free Summary

Discover the spoiler-free summary of The Paper (1994). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.


In the relentless churn of New York’s tabloid presses, the daily grind feels both a badge of honor and a crushing weight. The city’s streets pulse with ambition, deadlines, and the ever‑present threat of a front‑page scandal, while the newsroom hums with the clatter of typewriters, ringing phones, and the whispered promise of a story that could change everything. The film’s tone is gritty and urgent, a kinetic portrait of a world where truth and profit constantly collide, and where the slightest misstep can rewrite a career in an instant.

Henry Hackett is the metro editor of the beleaguered New York Sun, a man who loves the craft of journalism but is wearied by long hours, dwindling pay, and the looming shadow of his demanding boss, Bernie White. As the paper’s finances falter, Alicia Clark – the sharp‑tongued managing editor and Henry’s longtime professional rival – imposes harsh cutbacks that force every staff member to choose between principles and survival. At the same time, Henry’s personal life teeters on the brink: his pregnant wife Martha, herself a journalist on leave, fears the future and urges him to accept a lucrative offer from a more prestigious rival paper, a move that promises stability but also distance.

Against this backdrop, a tantalizing, career‑defining lead surfaces, pulling Henry deeper into the moral maze that defines his world. Together with the skeptical columnist Michael McDougal, he must weigh loyalty to his newspaper, the aspirations of his growing family, and the ethical compass that has guided his choices. The film invites viewers into the high‑stakes theater of New York journalism, where every decision reverberates through the ink‑stained halls and the lives of those who dare to chase the next big story.

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