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(2006) rt:167m ***½
Director: Robert De Niro
Starring: Matt Damon, Angeline Jolie, Alec Baldwin, Billy Crudup,
Robert De Niro, William Hurt
I'm not sure what the hell is going on with me
and Matt Damon CIA movies lately. I just finished renting and watching
the entire Bourne trilogy
and now I decide to take on this three-hour behemoth. I must really
love me some Matt Damon (but not in a Sarah
Silverman kind of way). I had seen snippets of this thing as I
flipped through my pay channels, but never caught it from the beginning.
I had wanted to see it, though, so I put aside a large chunk of a
Friday night to hunker down with a moody period piece about the early
days of the CIA. Matt Damon plays our main character, an almost silent
man who seems almost cursed with the responsibility he eventually
accrues. As the son of an upper echelon Navy officer, he seems almost
pre-ordained to follow his father into public service. The difference
in those days and today is that the rich went into the service, positions
of prestige and privilege. Being a poetry major at Yale didn't automatically
make him an obvious choice for that line of work, but it was less
about poetry and more about breeding and Yale in particular, as it
was the recruiting ground zero for well healed boys to bring into
the world of espionage and intrigue. Doing the whole Skull
and Bones thing, he gets in with a larger group of well bred young
men--sons of senators and commanders and influential folks in general.
There are several instances early on where we are shown that Damon's
character is very serious and pretty much entirely humorless. Although
we also know he has a soft spot for the weak, damaged and/or vulnerable,
as he dates a hearing impaired girl (subtle, I know). This all goes
south as he accidentally knocks up the Senator's daughter, has a quickie
marriage and is brought in to work counter intelligence for the US
overseas as war breaks out across Europe. The rest of the film concentrates
on Damon's character and his relationships with other people; his
wife, his son, his Russian nemesis, and most of all his country. The
film is called The Good Shepherd because Damon is always giving up
things in favor of his country and what he feels is the right thing
to do. The only thing we see him show tenderness towards is his son,
while all others, including his wife, he suffers as a matter of duty.
This duty is in great part a duty to his father's legacy--a legacy
that ended with a self-inflicted gunshot wound and a suicide note
the contents of which nobody has ever seen. Needless to say, Damon's
son follows his path into the CIA, and as Damon sees his son, over
whom he's as protective as a stoic guy can be, repeating his patterns,
he makes a decision that can at the same time feel like a betrayal
of his son, and an act of salvation. That ambiguity is what makes
the film interesting. For such a long movie, the pacing is pretty
even keel and the plotline, despite not being always active carries
it along. And I had no idea that Robert De Niro directed this thing
until the end credits rolled. It's actually pretty impressive. He
did a great job of conveying mood and using shadow and didn't get
overly flashy or try to impose his style in any heavy-handed way.
There were actually a few scenes in which I really liked the direction.
Who knew? The only thing that really bugged me about the film was
the casting of Damon and Angelina Jolie's son. The kid looks like
a carp. His skinny effeminateness and fish face is just so distracting
I wanted to turn the movie off. He's honestly difficult to look at.
Of course that could very well be what a Damon/Jolie spawn would look
like. So if you have a bunch of hours to put aside, and dig period
movies, this thing isn't half bad. And I think that De Niro kid may
have a future in Hollywood. [On Demand, MF]
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