The gritty realism of double Academy award winning movie Spotlight is a reminder of what can be achieved when the writers, director and cast stay resolutely true to the ideals of storytelling.
Spotlight would have failed the emotional test if it had succumbed to over dramatising the true story of how Boston reporters revealed the shocking extent of sexual abuse by priests.
Instead, the sure hand of co-writer and director Tom McCarthy delivered a gut-churning cinematic tour-de-force in which the grown-up victims of the sordid sexual predilections of priests helped grafting reporters from The Boston Globe's Spotlight team to lift the lid.
Everywhere in Spotlight are glimpses of pathos and human frailty, balanced against the determination of the church's hierarchy and their civilian allies to keep the sins of priests institutionalised.
Filmed very much in the matter-of-fact spirit of All the President's Men - the story of the Watergate scandal that toppled Richard Nixon - the irony of Spotlight was that the callous hand of the cardinal in the cover-up did not see him disgraced by the church when the scale of the monstrous truth was revealed.