A complicated movie about the Central Intelligence Agency and its agents,
The Good Shepherd isn't your typical spy movie. Though it stars
Matt Damon (The Bourne Identity films) and Angelina Jolie (Mr.
& Mrs. Smith, Lara Croft franchise)--actors with considerable
experience in the action-espionage genre--The Good Shepherd requires
that they play more subdued and (much less interesting) characters here.
The movie focuses on the career or Edward Wilson (Damon), a privileged
Yale graduate who goes on to help found the CIA. He is a quiet, serious,
and guarded man, even in the most intimate moments with his civilian wife
(Jolie, in a role that wastes her talent). Set against a backdrop of real-life
events such as the Bay of Pigs, The Good Shepherd is meticulous
in creating a realistic timeframe.
The film gets a jolt of excitement when Robert DeNiro (in his first directing
role since 1993's A Bronx Tale) peppers the screen with appearances
by Joe Pesci, Alec Baldwin, and William Hurt. But those moments are too
infrequent.
At 157 minutes long, the film is crammed with many factual details, but
the characters are shortchanged when it comes to development. Viewers have
to wonder why anyone, much less someone like Wilson who has everything
going for him, would devote his life to a thankless job that brings so
little happiness to himself and his family.
The Good Shepherd is an ambitious but flawed film. The actors do a
formidable job with a well-initentioned but meandering script. However,
we meet so many characters and learn so little about each that it's difficult
to drum up much empathy for any of them. |