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Chris Knipp
12-22-2006, 09:26 PM
ROBERT DE NIRO: THE GOOD SHEPHERD

The spook who stayed out in the cold: an epic critique of the American espionage game

Review by Chris Knipp

A gray winter day was a fitting time to see one of the first public screenings of a film called The Good Shepherd, whose chilly hero Edward Wilson (Matt Damon, in a role modeled in part on CIA founder James Jesus Angleton) is not so much all things to all men as nobody to anybody. A composite figure in a portrait of the birth, rise, and moral shriveling of the American CIA, Matt Damon’s disturbingly shut-down Wilson would be one of recent film’s most tragic figures if he were not such a hollow, unappealing man. Directing a long-contemplated project using a screenplay by Eric Roth (who penned Munich), Robert De Niro has forged a Godfather of Yankee spycraft, a heavy, solemn epic about betrayal and loyalty in the world of espionage and counter-espionage dominated not by Italians as in the original Godfather, though Coppola produced, De Niro directed, and Joe Pesci has one of the liveliest onscreen moments, but by uptight, stony, patrician WASPs.

Indeed as seen here the world of American intelligence is a privileged and exclusive and deeply conflicted one where Irish, blacks, and Italians need not apply; fathers are absent; privilege grows out of Skull and Bones at Yale, wives are betrayed; sons labor desperately to measure up; and the leading practitioners are ridden with guilt and suspicion. There is no one to trust and nothing to believe in – not family, not tradition, not even music – only America, which Edward Wilson says belongs to his class. All others are just visiting.

Into this demoralizing story, damning in its picture of the world of white privilege and of intelligence itself but nonetheless intricately involving and at times genuinely disturbing, are woven some of the major incidents and personalities of the period from before the Second World War – after which OSS morphed into CIA— till after the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion under JFK, from hot war to cold war. You have Philbys and fake Russian turncoats, CIA execs siphoning off money to Switzerland in guise of chocolate boxes, and through it all you have a Cuba mole investigation that smashes Wilson’s own family.

Wilson’s true penchant was for a deaf girl named Laura (an excellent Tammy Blanchard); and with her is the only time Damon seems to develop human warmth. He is forced to marry the more elevated Margaret Russell (an uncomfortable Angelina Jolie) sister of one of his Skull and Bones colleagues who remains Wilson’s Old Boy link to privilege ever after. Traumatic embarrassment, revelation of closest held secrets, and doubt of loyalty are seen as inborn elements of the espionage world. The very qualities that make a good spy, as seen here, also make a man untrustworthy.

Do spies ever have fun? Not much, as seen from the angle of Damon’s character. Dr. Fredericks (Michael Gambon), a randy gay pseudo-intellectual who turns and turns again, is naughty, but he pays for it. Another Brit, Arch Cummings, played gamely by Billy Crudup, similarly wears a smile that turns to dust. A good professional of the lower ranks like Staff Sergeant Brocco (John Turturro), Wilson’s OSS assistant in England, is a stern sadist whose use of LSD for an interrogation backfires fatally. Nasty sabotages are devised to spoil the Latin American left’s agricultural schemes. Big foul-ups like the Bay of Pigs invasion lead to vicious internal purges. And through it all Wilson’s son cringes and his wife pines; the marriage had dried up after his six-year absence during WWII, and his imploded selfhood is symbolized by his only hobby, building ships inside bottles. As the film bluntly puts it, the spymaster must choose either family or country; he can’t have both. And is it all worth it? The Russian on LSD declares his country’s armed might a myth perpetuated by America to justify its ongoing pursuit of world dominance. Is intelligence a needed quantity, or are its organizations self-perpetuating shams? The movie never gives a positive answer. This may be the cruelest picture of the spy game ever put on film.

Many fine actors play small unappealing roles as spymasters or cold operatives. These include De Niro himself, Alec Baldwin, and William Hurt, all creditable, but unlikely to get Oscar nods for their tightly held back performances. Damon can be accused of the same limitation, though if his Wilson bothers you, he’s done his job better than you may think. And young Eddie Redmayne, as Wilson’s grown son, has one of the most gut-wrenching roles in a story notable for its devastating picture of the effects of career on family life.

Despite its epic scale and length (it’s 160 minutes long), The Good Shepherd is more troubling than flashy, more thought-provoking than moving. Ultimately it may be somewhat an artistic failure. The criticism that it is either too long or too short, that it needed to be pared down or expanded to a mini-series, has some merit. But nonetheless as a work that considers big issues and asks big questions, it’s one of the most serious and intellectually stimulating American mainstream films of the year.

cinemabon
12-23-2006, 05:49 PM
Well done, Chris

Chris Knipp
12-23-2006, 07:30 PM
Thanks. I hope a lot of people get to see this. It seems to me a significant piece and something to ponder.

oscar jubis
12-30-2006, 09:15 PM
The Good Shepherd feels like the Cliffs Notes version of an important historical novel. I couldn't find confirmation DeNiro had a version that runs 30 minutes longer, as a critic claims. But I'm convinced there are two lines of dialogue in a trailer I saw (uttered by Ms. Jolie) that are not in the theatrical cut of the film (evidence that a longer cut exists perhaps). If the longer cut exists, it's likely to be an improvement. There's so much plot here that, at 2hr40min, the film feels like an overview. I agree with Chris that Jolie looks "uncomfortable", perhaps miscast I'd say. And I didn't get the sense that Damon and 31 year-old Jolie had/looked aged enough to be the parents of Eddie Redmayne. I disagreed with Cristi (wife) calling it "incoherent", but the viewer must connect a lot of dots because substantial expository material is missing.

Chris Knipp
12-30-2006, 09:38 PM
The Good Shepherd feels like the Cliffs Notes version of an important historical novel.That's a pretty reductive way to talk about a movie that has an epic feel to it, and I hope (as I've said to you on other occasions) this is not supposed to constitute a "review," but at least you say the historical novel is an "important" one.

I agree with your criticisms on the aging. That is often a problem, and Damon with his boyish physiognomy is hard to "age". And we agree on Jolie. She is perhaps miscast. I don't insist on that, because after all her character is meant to be a mismatch for Damon's.

It can often be said that a film is a simplification of a novel. No film has the richness of a long novel; ruthless cutting is necessary to fit the format of images and 2 1/2 hours.


the viewer must connect a lot of dots because substantial expository material is missing. Where do you see this? You need to specify. I did not feel that there were serious gaps in the narrative structure. I should think a basic knowledge of US history and intelligence/CIA history would make the movie pretty easy to read.

Sorry you did not respond much to what I consider probably one of the best American films of the year, something with serious content and a sense of film tradition.

oscar jubis
12-30-2006, 10:07 PM
How can it be "probably one of the best American films of the year" and "may be somewhat an artistic failure"?

Chris Knipp
12-31-2006, 06:23 PM
How can it be "probably one of the best American films of the year" and "may be somewhat an artistic failure"? I may sound as if I'm contradicting myself, but I think this can happen, and Babel may be a related case. Babel's ideas either are falacious, or not worked out fully enough, but its sequences are so well done that it seems like one of the year's best movies. The Good Shepherd "may be too long or too short" -- my words, and you half agree, since you appear sure it is too short. (I'm not that sure; I think it might be looked at as too long, or something that should have been a mini-series, so this part could have been effectively shortened.) This is exactly what I am referring to when I say it may be somewhat an artistic failure--a structural failure. But its content is so engrossing and important, it also deserves consideration. Sometimes an interesting failure is more, well, interesting than an easy success. And Babel is in a sense a structural failure as well, but compelling in its parts.