Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Find movies you'll love

dj4our Blog

  • Sarcastic, Sunshiney Fun!

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
    ***
    R (for language, some sex and drug content.)
    1 hr. 41 min.
    written by: Michael Arndt
    produced by: Albert Berger, David T. Friendly, Peter Saraf, Marc Turtletaub, & Ron Yerxa  
    directed by: Jonathon Ayton & Valerie Faris
    Here's a great family film that I wouldn't recommend for the whole family. It's definitely for the adults (mature or not) in the family. It's a  fractured and fractious comedy, spiked with dark laughs and genuine affection for its dysfunctional characters. Arndt's subtly lacerating screenplay takes stock clichés and infuses them with quirks that approach reality, albeit an extremely heightened sense of reality; you watch the movie and see a splintered, spirited family unit grow closer and approach something resembling understanding. To lay out the twists and turns of Little Miss Sunshine would rob those coming to the film fresh.
    The Hoover family takes a road trip from Albuquerque, New Mexico to the Little Miss Sunshine pageant in Redondo Beach, California, to fulfill the deepest wish of 7-year-old Olive (Abigail Bresson), an ordinary little girl with big dreams. Her father, Richard (Greg Kinnear) is a manic go-getter striving to sell his motivational nine-step technique to becoming a winner. Truth is, he's an annoying loser who insecurely leans on self-help to help others. Ironic. Her father, Sheryl (Toni Colette) has her hands full with her suicidal brother and Proust scholar Frank (Steve Carell) and Richard's caustic, drugged out, potty-mouthed dad (Alan Arkin). Then there's brother Dwayne (Paul Dano) is going on nine months as a mute, studying the nihilistic works of Nietzsche.
    When Olive wins a spot in the prestigious Little Miss Sunshine pageant in, the family pile into a past-its-prime Volkswagen van and head out towards the promise of a glittering future in California. What's great about the movie is that it doesn't unfold in an entirely predictable manner, often zigging where you might think it would zag – lining scenes with a patently absurd vibe, music video vets turned feature film directors Dayton and Faris swipe a few pages from the Woody Allen/Wes Anderson playbook, electing to play gags straight ahead and letting the laughs evolve naturally. As I said, I'm not gonna get into all the various dramedic situations the family gets in due to their tensions and personalities. We all know the myriad difficulties that can arise during a road trip. The finale of the film presents a scathingly satirical depiction of child beauty pageants, in which elementary school girls model swimsuits and strut onstage to dance music. It's great to finally see Olive demonstrate to her family and the audience what she has learned from her grandfather's private dance routine rehearsals. It's Olive and this routine that ultimately brings this formerly dysfunctional family together.
    Alan Arkin , Paul Dano , Steve Carell , Greg Kinnear , Abigail Breslin and Toni Collette in Fox Searchlight Pictures' Little Miss Sunshine
    In retrospect (I guess all reviews are) I almost see this movie as a live-action version of "The Simpsons". It has the dysfunctional family that underneath it all really mean well. The father is a bumbling, lovable idiot (like Homer), the mother is doing everything she can to keep the family together (Marge), Arkin plays his Grandpa character in a cross-between Moe & Grandpa Simpson, while Dwayne is an amalgam of Bart and Nelson. Haw ha! Of course, lil Olive is akin to Lisa Simpson in her sunny disposition and resilient nature. Just an observation.  
    The directors have assembled a cast brimming with impeccable comic timing; Kinnear, Collette, Carell, Breslin, Dano and Arkin take Arndt's screenplay and give it a loose, improvised feel – if the Academy weren't so predictably out of touch, I'd say that Little Miss Sunshine might be due a raft of trophies come Oscar time....but what do I know? So few films truly worth sitting through have made their way into our multiplexes in 2006 that when a work like Little Miss Sunshine comes along, you can't recommend it strongly enough. It's a rib-tickling ray of light beamed from Hollywood, of all places, reminding you that, yes, in fact it is possible to be both moved and amused, with nary a toliet joke or product placement in sight.

  • Stallone ends his icon with a K.O.

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Rocky Balboa  (2006)

    ROCKY BALBOA
    ***1/2
    PG for boxing violence and some language.
    1 hr, 42 min.
    written by: Sylvester Stallone
    produced by: Kevin King, David Winkler, Charles Winkler, & Sylvester Stallone
    directed by: Sylvester Stallone
    Introduction
    I'm gonna start out this review with an introduction involving some history, some stats, and a recap. Thirty years ago ";Rocky" was introduced to the cinema world and Americans (especially Philadelphians) loved the movie and the characters. Critics loved it. Ebert gave it four stars. Sylvester Stallone was certainly not a hot young thing when at 30years old, he wrote a film in three days about a two-bit boxer straddling the line between bum fighter and street thug.  Studios loved the script but he refused to sell the screenplay without getting cast as the lead. It was his script and he was the one who knew Rocky best. It was a gamble that paid off, and it made Sly a star. If he would've quit after that, he could've been an absolute legend, a contender if you will, but he didn't. Stallone was never again as raw or vulnerable or intense as he was in that original film; there were shades of Brando (so they said) in that brief moment of time.
    That year, Oscar night was Rocky's night. The movie dominated as it was nominated for ten (that's right) Academy Awards that year: Best Sound, Best Original Song ("Gonna Fly Now"), Best Supporting Actor (Burgess Meredith & Burt Young), Best Actress (Talia Shire), Best Actor (Stallone), and Best Original Screenplay (Stallone). It won for Best Picture, Best Director (John Avildsen) and Best Editing (Richard Halsey and Scott Conrad). That's right, it won best picture beating out "Taxi Driver", "Network" and "All the President's Men". All great movies in their own right by great directors. Still Rocky won. There's nothing terribly unique about the underdog storyline. Still, there's something about the movie that connected an involved the audience.
    I'm inclined to think that it's Stallone's/Rocky's indomitable will that moved viewers. Both had a goal and saw it through no matter what. Stallone even said that he locked himself in a room for three days to write the script cuz he wanted more that the roles that were coming his way. He even painted the windows black so that there'd be no distractions. Like Stallone, the character of Rocky would never quit. He worked hard and went the distance. His will even showed outside the ring when he pursued a painfully shy Adrian Pennino. Sure, he wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer (unlike Stallone, who is actually pretty smart despite the public's image of him) but he had courage, determination, a sense of humor, and heart.
    Then there were the sequels which many seemed to make fun of more and more after each movie came out. Sequels just don't work without a decent script and a great cast. The supporting characters in these films have always been solid but as the franchise progressed, the scripts seemed to have thrown in the towel (especially 1990's "Rocky V"). Although Stallone was nominated for his writing in the first one and the writing wasn't exactly horrible in the three that followed but the fourth sequel just didn't feel right. I like all the sequels except for that one. I didn't even bother seeing it all. Stallone knew it and that's why there's a final (yes, he even said this. is. it.) Rocky movie in theaters right now.
    With this movie, we come full circle.


    Review
    Rocky (Stallone) is once again retired and still living in Philadelphia, he now runs a small Italian restaurant decorated with boxing memorabilia called Adrian's. The place is named in honor of his late wife who died of "woman cancer" (as he says), in 2002. Rocky's there just about every night telling the same old boxing stories to all his guests. Spider Rico (Pedro Lovell), who Rocky beat in the beginning of the first movie, seems to be a permanent guest and fan of Rock. Even though he has the restaurant going for him and people passin' him by on the street sayin', "Hey Rock!", he still is alone when he wakes up in the morning. He misses Adrian (Talia Shire). His heart aches.
    Their only son, Robert Jr. (Milo Ventimiglia), has entered the corporate world and works at a firm in downtown Philadelphia. The relationship between father and son is strained; Robert feels resentment about living in the shadow of his famous father.
    He visits her grave often. He sits on a folding chair in front of her grave with fresh flowers on her stone, talking to her about what's goin' on. Her brother Paulie (Burt Young) still hangs around Rocky like his crotchety shadow. He often joins Rocky at the cemetery and reluctantly rides along with him as they visit all the old haunts. The pet store Adrian used to work at. The dinky apartment she lived in. The gym Micky ran. The lot where the skating rink used to be. In one of my favorite scenes, Paulie tales him he can't take these tours down memory lane anymore cuz he knows he treated Adrian lousy. It's these scenes that goes back to what the first film got so right....characterization, even the city is a character and Stallone knows it.  I connect to his loss and heartache cuz I care about these characters and that's what makes this movie so much more than a machismo, superhero slugfest.
    At the end of his yearly tour, he stops at the Lucky Seven tavern, which he would pass by on his way to Mickey's gym during his boxing career. The bartender is Marie (Geraldine Hughes), a grown woman Rocky hadn't seen in decades - then, she was a young kid who Rocky admonished her to quit smoking and clean up her act. Now, she is a down-on-her-luck bartender and single mother of a young man named Stephenson (or "Steps"). Partly out of a desire to help her, as he did before, and partly out of the need for a friend and confidant, Rocky befriends Marie and tries to provide a role model for Steps (James Francis Kelly III). When his assistant at the restaurant goes on maternity leave, he invites Marie to work there.
    Geraldine Hughes and Sylvester  Stallone in MGM's Rocky Balboa 
    The stagnation that has gripped Rocky since Adrian's death begins to lift when ESPN televises a computer simulation of a fight pitting two pas t and present champs. The virtual fight pits Rocky (in his prime) against the current champ, Mason "The Line" Dixon (Antonio Tarver). The simulation (a nod to the computer "Superfight" between Rocky Marciano and Muhammad Ali) causes a change of heart in Rocky; though he has not fought professionally in years, he begins to believe he still has "some stuff in the basement," and decides to start fighting again, but only on a small scale.
    Dixon is an unpopular heavyweight champ, which as Stallone knows, is not unheard of. Former '80s heavyweight champ Larry Holmes had to deal with that, and he too had to fight an old, popular champ, a broken, on-his-way-out Muhammad Ali. Is Balboa going to take the fight and rise up to the occasion? Of course he is. But, he's confused as to why he wants to do it. It's his friends and family that remind him that he's a fighter and will always be and he shouldn't let age stop him from doing something he's great at.


    This time, it's a different kind of fight though. Balboa doesn't have a title on the line. He's fighting his inner demons now that Adrian has passed away. He's fighting to gain the respect of his son by showing him that "going toe to toe, saying 'I am'" is a noble, human struggle. Dixon may be unpopular, but he's not the type of villain that Clubber Lang or Ivan Drago were. These two are both fighting for respect and honor, and I think that's part of what gives this film its good heart.


    This is a good, solid, moral film. Stallone may not be the greatest writer in the world, but this screenplay is sincere in a way the previous four sequels have missed. It's interesting that this film doesn't have a number attached to it, because it might be the one true sequel to "Rocky".
    Rocky goes to Robert and Paulie to ask them to be in his corner and to help him train. Robert feels that the whole notion is crazy and that the feelings his dad is having will soon pass. Paulie also thinks the idea is crazy and tells Rocky the reason for these feelings is because "Adrian left him." Rocky sharply corrects Paulie by saying "She didn't leave me, she died." In an emotional  and real scene, Rocky breaks down and admits that he has found life without Adrian unbearable and much harder than he thought it would be. As a result of that, a "beast" has grown inside him and it is tearing him apart. Rocky needs an outlet to vent his anger and pain.
    Rocky applies for his license to fight and although he passes all of his medical tests he is still refused a license. After an impassioned speech to the Pennsylvania Athletic Commission, in which he accuses them of acting in bad faith by knowing full well that they will deny him a license even if he passes, he is allowed back into the ring.
    The simulation, and the news that Rocky has gotten his license, gets gears turning in Mason Dixon's camp. Dixon is viewed as soft because he hasn't had any "true" competition - all of his opponents have provided him little challenge, and generated scant interest from the public. HBO won't televise any more of his fights because they don't make any money; most of the available challengers have little marquee value. His people convince him to participate in an exhibition bout against Rocky, to take advantage of the buzz generated by the computer fight. At first, Dixon refuses: he has no desire to beat an old man. But he realizes that, if he is ever to respect himself as a fighter, he needs to test himself against a true challenger.
    Dixon's reps come to see Rocky in his restaurant and offer him the chance to face Dixon in the ring in a charity exhibition bout. At first, Rocky is unsure - this is far bigger than what he was planning to do - but Marie advises him to take this last shot. Paulie doesn't believe it is possible, but when he is fired from the meat plant, he comes back to Rocky and, in a drunken rant, pledges to help him. Robert is harder to convince: though he is his own man, he has resented living in the shadow of his father, and though he knows his father doesn't mean for it to happen, the notion of a new fight threatens to make it worse.
    Sylvester Stallone and Milo Ventimiglia in MGM's  Rocky Balboa 
    For both their sakes, Robert begs Rocky to not fight. Rocky answers his son with one of the more inspiring lines of dialogue in the film:
    Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean, and nasty place an' no matter how tough you think you are, it'll always beat you if you let it. It ain't about how hard you hit, it's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward, how much you can take and keep moving forward. That’s how winning is done! If you know what you're worth, then go out and get what you're worth. But you gotta be willing to take the hits and not pointin' fingers saying you ain’t where you wanna be because of him, her, or anybody! Cowards do that, and that ain’t you! You’re better than that!

     
    Robert understands and quits his job to join Rocky in his corner. Tony "Duke" Evers (Tony Burton) is once again his head trainer, and gears his training specifically toward his ability to generate power. As Rocky's age precludes him from training for speed, and sparring will not help him any, Duke implores him to start "buildin' some hurtin' bombs;" in other words, try to beat Dixon with brute strength. After a grueling training montage mirroring many elements of that seen in the first film, Rocky is ready for the ring.
    The Balboa-Dixon exhibition match is shown on HBO Pay-per-view from the Mandalay Bay hotel/casino in Las Vegas. The two fighters enter the ring to their own respective themes - Rocky enters to the tune of Frank Sinatra singing "High Hopes" (Paulie's selection) while Dixon enters to an aggressive number--"It's a Fight" by Three 6 MafiaMichael Buffer opens the event with his usual flair, "Let's get ready to rumble!" The fight itself starts slowly - Rocky is thrown off balance by Dixon's speed. He does land a few punches in the first round, but it is in the second round that Rocky starts to do some damage. After Rocky is knocked down twice by Dixon, a hook to Rocky's body breaks Dixon's left hand, and allows Rocky to charge in and throw some devastating punches.
    Sylvester Stallone in MGM's Rocky Balboa 
    The fight is the first fight I feel in the franchise that is filmed like a real fight. No superheroics. Just fighting. Multiple camera angles. Close ups. Dizzying, tiring shots that match the feel of the fighters well. The fight is back and forth, until the tenth(and final) round when it appears that Dixon will outlast the tired Balboa. A hook sends Balboa to a knee where he has a flashback, and within his head he returns to what he said to his son when asked not to fight again. The tired stallion finds the strength to continue; he stands up and fights back, throwing punch after punch. Balboa taunts Dixon to get him to give everything he has, knowing this is the last round of his life. The fight ends with both fighters trading blows in the center of the ring, and it is Rocky that throws the last punch of the fight. The spectators cheer wildly. He tells Paulie that the "beast" that was living inside him is now gone. Rocky exits the arena as the decision is read; Dixon wins in a split decision. Rocky, who has already begun leaving the ring, turns back to the crowd, taking one more curtain call before finally leaving, as the crowd roars their approval.
    The movie concludes as it began, with Rocky at Adrian's grave. He leaves a flower for Adrian, saying, "Yo, Adrian, we did it." Then he turns and walks away, stopping for a moment to turn once more to the grave site and wave, before fading from focus altogether, seeming as if he ascends. The last shot of the film, and of the saga as a whole, is of the flower on the headstone.



    The Bottom Line:
    I can say enough about how much I enjoyed this genuinely moving movie about nobility, passion, character, and love.
    I've always felt that at its core, the soul of "Rocky" was romance, not boxing. Stallone has revived that romance. Many have discounted these films and have blasted Stallone's ability as an actor, forgetting that he was once nominated for an Oscar. Rocky fans will not be disappointed and for those who aren't, you may just be pleasantly surprised. The Rock's back. Bill Conti's music's back. (How can you not get excited by that fanfare?!) Philly's back. "Rocky Balboa" is a knockout! If you saw just the first one and then this, you'd be set.

     
    For a decent Q&A with Stallone about the movie click here

  • This Good movie needs your full attention

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    The Good Shepherd
    ***
    Rated R for some violence, sexuality and language.
    2 hr, 45 min.
    written by: Eric Roth
    produced by: Robert DeNiro, Jane Rosenthal, & James G. Robinson
    directed by: Robert DeNiro
    It's taken me almost a week to write a review of this film. I couldn't really figure out how to approach writing about it. Explaining the film to people has been quite a task. It's one of those films that demands every iota of one's attention.  It is a very detailed, complex, and involving film. It is more than just a movie about the formation of the CIA. It's about a solitary pursuit involving secrecy, duplicity and paranoia. Ultimately it is a troubling movie about trust and mistrust. 
    The film is mesmerizingly paced and ambitious all while invoking the style of ";The Godfather" which doesn't seem too far off since director Robert DeNiro was directed by Francis Ford Coppola in "The Godfather Part II"  who is also one of the executive producers in this film. DeNiro has made a smart, cerebral espionage thriller that captures the feel of a true spy film. I'm not gonna say to much about the film cuz I feel it's worthy of individual internalization after your own viewing. Therefore this won't be a detailed review but rather a generalized look at a intricately made film. 
    The movie starts in 1961 as the failure during the Bay of Pigs Invasion is witnessed and a then an anonymous photograph with a reel to reel tape surfaces that leads to suspicion of an insider. Then the story jumps back to 1939 as the journey of Edward Wilson unfolds. Wilson (Matt Damon) understands the value of secrecy; discretion and commitment to honor have been embedded in him since childhood. He is an eager, optimistic student at Yale who harbors a tragic past. Shortly after his recruitment to the school's Skull and Bones secret society (a brotherhood and breeding ground for future world leaders), he is asked to spy on his mentor Dr. Fredricks (Michael Gambon) who seems to be a Nazi sympathizer.  Also while studying in the library, he meets Laura (Tammy Blanchard), a deaf student whom he starts to build a natural connection. He is then is approached by FBI agent Sam Murach (Alec Baldwin) to spy on Fredricks due to the professor's alleged connections. He reluctantly does as asked out of his loyalty to his country, causing the professor to resign.
    In 1941 upon graduation, Wilson is approached by General Bill Sullivan (DeNiro, in a small yet important role) at a Skull and Bones meeting on Deer Island. It is there that Wilson also meets Clover (Angelina Jolie), a sister of a fellow classmate and S&B member  as well as a Senator's daughter. A seemingly unlikely attraction is instigated by Clover, who seems a little off as she forces herself on Wilson. Edward is then shown on the beach with Laura, who he has been romantically involved with. Clover's brother informs Edward that his sister is pregnant and suggests that he 'do the right thing' and marry her. Edward is too late to block Laura from reading his lips, allowing her to find out the news.
    He does what he believes to be the right thing and marries Clover and is almost immediately sent off to England during WWII on an assignment from Sullivan, where he spends the next 6 years.
    While in London, he meets with British intelligence Officer Arch Cummings (Billy Crudup) and Richard Hayes (Lee Pace), a fellow S & B and classmate. He is then to be tutored in espionage by a seasoned pro, his old poetry professor, Fredricks. Edward apparently ruined 2 years of undercover work being done by his professor by his previous rookie spy work.
    Wilson's acute mind, spotless reputation and sincere belief in American values render him a prime candidate for a career in intelligence, and he is soon recruited to work for the OSS (the precursor to the CIA) during WWII. As one of the covert founders of the CIA, working in the heart of an organization where duplicity is required and nothing is taken at face value, As his methods are adopted as standard operating procedure, Wilson develops into one of the Agency's veteran operatives, all the while combating his KGB counterpart. However, his steely dedication to his country comes at an ever-increasing price. Not even his wife Clover or his beloved son can divert Wilson from a path that will force him to sacrifice everything in pursuit of this job.

     
    Matt Damon in Universal Pictures' The Good Shepherd 
    Upon his return home, Wilson's idealism is steadily eroded by a growing suspicious nature, reflective of a world settling into the long paranoia of the Cold War. He meets his son, Edward, Jr. for the first time. He gives him a ship he made and put in what looks like a glass watch casing. His wife informs him she is no longer Clover but now prefers to be called Margaret. She asks him to sleep in different beds until they get to know one another again. Six years is a long time. Sullivan approaches him to help form a foreign intelligence organization and wants Edward to work with Hayes and under Phillip Allen (William Hurt), a S&B elder.
    As life continues, his son grows up and his relationship with his wife continues to grow more distant. When his wife has friends over for dinner, they ask if he really works for the CIA. Edward replies that his wife has an overactive imagination and that he is just a civil servant. Jolie handles her role well as the frustrated wife closed off by a man full of secrets and paranoia.
    Wilson is then given an assignment interviewing a Russian named Valentin (Oleg Stefan) requesting asylum and claiming to be a high ranking official who knows Edward's counterpart in the Soviet government. Edward attends a production of The Cherry Orchard with Valentin, who claims it is a bad translation. It is at the theater that Edward runs into Laura again. They return to her house and end up sleeping together.
    After Margaret finds out about the affair, the dysfunctional family attends the annual S& party on Deer Island where Edward has a discussion with Hayes regarding the upcoming Bay of Pigs Invasion. His son overhears the discussion, and Edward tells his son (now a young adult) he cannot repeat what he overheard to anyone. Wilson later visits Edward Jr. at Yale. He tells his father he has been approached by the OSS agency looking for young recruits and he wants to sign up. Edward tells his son it's a difficult life and tries to talk him out of it. But Edward Jr. is adamant as he so desperately wants to be like his father since he never received the love he needed from him.
    After the aforementioned photograph and tape is analyzing, the CIA officials make a number of findings. The decisions Edward has to make once these findings come to a more specific reality is staggering. It ultimately forces him to choose between the safety of his country and the life of his family. Here, the movie comes full circle. We see that the character of Edward Wilson falls even deeper into his stoic, cold and detached persona that has developed throughout the story. The outcome of Wilson's choices leaves you numb and shocked but not really too surprised.
    The movie ends with Wilson and Hayes walking through what would eventually be the new CIA headquarters.  That's exactly where DeNiro wants it. Apparently, he's has an interest in intelligence-gathering for some time and had his heart set on telling the story of the formation of the CIA for quite a while. At nearly three hours, it may feel a bit too long. I'm usually the kind of guy who can care less what kinda length a movie clocks in at. But, here because this film is initially difficult to follow (think "The Russia House", "Gorky Park" or even last year's excellent "The Constant Gardener") it had my focus derailed a coupla times. Still, the story and characters did soon grow on me and the film became more compelling despite it's dryness at times.
    Lee Pace and Matt Damon in Universal Pictures' The Good Shepherd
    Dense, politically-minded movies like this typically don't exactly set the box office afire, as evidenced by the recent grosses of last autumn's "The Constant Gardener" ($33 million), "Munich" ($47 million) and "Syriana" (just under $51 million). Even more comparatively, 2000's "Thirteen Days" took a direct pass at the high, inside drama of the Cuban Missile Crisis, but could only scare up $35 million theatrically. Star power doesn't necessarily sway folks who are maybe inclined to pay attention to international affairs and big-canvas political issues only every two years during an election cycle. They're frequently awards bait, yes, but these are shining examples of the types of adult movies which Hollywood generally loathes to make any more, owing to ample evidence in their difficulty to market and attract the same sort of upscale audience that, say, makes 40- to 54-years-olds the single biggest purchaser of music albums, responsible for around 20 percent of the marketplace.
    The cast of the film is stellar and as it should be in a movie like this, there are no grandstanding performances though. Just good actors coming in and out of a complex story circling Damon. Damon does a great job. I've liked him since his small role in "Courage Under Fire" and of course "Good Will Hunting". He displays no Jason Bourne abilities in this role as it's all internal and nuanced. His role was originally to go to Leonardo DiCaprio (who was busy filming "Blood Diamond") but I'm glad it didn't. Although it's still kinda odd seeing Damon play a father, it woulda been even moreso seeing DiCaprio play poppa. On that note, I have to mention the great performance by Eddie Redmayne as the adult Edward Wilson Jr. Other notable performances are John Turturro who works with Damon in the OSS and then there's Joe Pesci, who was last seen in 1999's "Lethal Weapon 4" playing an informant.
     
    Despite its name cast and the  De Niro's return behind the camera for the first time since 1993's heralded "A Bronx Tale", this film doesn't necessarily look to be much different. Much like ";Munich" (no coincidence, given that they share screenwriter Eric Roth, who co-scripted Spielberg's movie), the film takes a complex subject or set of issues and provides an angled illumination that doesn't easily let the viewer off the hook, but rather asks significant and probing questions about what values are immutable, what compromises necessary, what means justifiable.
     
    "The Good Shepherd" isn't a nail-biter or adrenalized drama, in other words. But it does feel both accurate in detail and, more importantly and impressively, real in its enlightenment of the early Cold War struggle, and those who populated it. Edward sees himself as a product of these polarizing times - a protector of freedoms and American prerogative who nonetheless has to sometimes deal in unsavory shades of grey in order to accomplish his aims. As head of counterintelligence, his job is to penetrate enemy intelligence and alter our foes' perceptions of us from the inside out, all while the Soviet Union's KGB attempts to do the same thing to us.
    This tightrope act is most tautly embodied in one plot strand involving a Russian defector, Valentin Mironov (John Sessions). When another man also claiming to be Mironov eventually shows up, Edward must further reevaluate his judgments; he signs off on torturous methods, and his colleague Ray Brocco (Turturro) heads a brutal interrogation.
    It's here, in Damon's quietly clenched jaw and dead eyes, that you see Edward's last bit of idealism mortally wounded by the pressing needs of practicality. It's throughout "The Good Shepherd" but mostly here that you understand the jarring, no-win scenarios that men like him face on a constant basis.

 

Like what you're reading?

Subscribe
Search
  Go

Browse previous
<June 2007>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
272829303112
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
1234567


Categories
 


Advertisement