
3.5 out of 4 stars
Directed by Steven Spielberg
Starring: Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance, Amy Ryan, Austin Stowell, Alan Alda, Sebastian Koch, Domenick Lombardozzi, Scott Shepherd, Eve Hewson, Michael Gaston, Peter McRobbie, Billy Magnussen, Stephen Kunken, Dakin Matthews, Will Rogers
Rated PG-13 for some violence and brief strong language.
141 minutes
Verdict: Anchored by Spielberg's typically great direction and the great casting of Hanks and Rylance, BRIDGE OF SPIES is an engrossing, broadly-scoped story of the power of principles against insurmountable odds in the Cold War.
YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN BRIDGE OF SPIES IF YOU LIKED:
CATCH ME IF YOU CAN (2002)
LINCOLN (2012)
TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY (2011)
CHARLIE WILSON'S WAR (2007)
GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK. (2005)
Spielberg is one of the all-time great directors, one whose decades-long career (JAWS, the film that solidified his reputation as a major filmmaker but was not even his first film, is 40 years old this year) had proven itself as one of the greatest runs ever well before now. Every time he has another new film in the can, regardless of the subject matter, cast or whatever else, if Spielberg is directing, you can bet it's worth the time. He has an unparalleled ability to cut to the human interest of his stories with powerful and insightful feeling, which he does with uncannily wide appeal and accessibility. If Stanley Kubrick was a master of the cinematic mind, and Martin Scorsese is a master of the cinematic soul, then Spielberg is unquestionably a master of the cinematic heart. But Spielberg's work is split between two halves of a heart, with only a bit of crossover in between, with a spirit of adventure in possession of one half, and the other is more mature and deeply sympathetic. Spielberg's latest work, BRIDGE OF SPIES, is a product of the latter. It's an "Oscar movie", a drama of real-world importance and gravity, and like his previous film, LINCOLN, explores a period of United States history that tested the ideals and promise of the nation with lessons learned, or rather, that ought to have been learned, for later generations.
BRIDGE OF SPIES reunites Spielberg with actor Tom Hanks (their fourth film together, following THE TERMINAL in 2004), who stars as James Donovan, a Brooklyn lawyer specializing in insurance settlement claims, who we're introduced to in the midst of finagling over whether an accident involving one insured driver and five claimants is a single incident or five. He has a knack for approaching his cases with precision and unshakable single-mindedness, but even he is unnerved when his firm assigns him to defend Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance), a Soviet spy. The year is 1957, and both Americans and Russians are perpetually terrified by the prospect of nuclear attack; while schoolchildren are taught to "duck and cover" in the case of such an incident, nothing following the failure of diplomacy is likely to save them in the case of such a catastrophe.
This is the first half, which is, admittedly, the more interesting part of the film, exploring the nature of a nation gripped by terror, and how different people respond with differing views of patriotic duty, whether to fight tooth and nail for greater good, or to actually be the greater good. "We have no rule book," a CIA agent threatens Donovan, while the courts turn down his demands that Abel's civil rights be met, because Abel is not an American citizen. The comparisons to the state of the union ten years ago, when we as a nation were seething from the terror of a new threat that we allowed to drown out our principles as Americans, are not difficult to see. "We have a Constitution," Donovan counters to the agent, "That is our rule book."
In the second part, BRIDGE OF SPIES takes a sharp turn, one at which point the film lags a bit, before picking up its flow again at a new pace. An American spy, Francis Gary Powers (Austin Stowell) has been shot down in a U-2 spy plane while taking photographs over the Soviet Union, and the CIA is eager to get him back before anything can be extracted from Soviet interrogators, while the regime is already having a heyday over the embarrassment of the incident for the U.S. Donovan is called upon to negotiate the exchange of Abel for Powers, but with another American, economics student Frederic Pryor, being held without charges in East Germany for finding himself on the wrong side of the under-construction Berlin Wall, Donovan complicates negotiations by insisting on Pryor's release as well.
The script is partly credited to Joel and Ethan Coen, a pair whose directing style is so distinct that their writing under their own direction and under the direction of another, the resemblance is minute at best, and although there are little quirks (such as Donovan's persistent cold while in Berlin after losing his coat, although that may very well be rooted in the historical fact) that feel traceable to their artistic mannerisms, the most notable Coen contribution appears to be Rudolph Abel. As portrayed by character actor Mark Rylance (who will star as the eponymous "Big Friendly Giant" in Spielberg's upcoming Roald Dahl adaptation, THE BFG), Abel has a dry wit and gentlemanly candor that make him the movie's most sympathetic character, an unlikely position for a Soviet spy in an unmistakably pro-American movie, but it's not pro-American at all costs. After all, that would be playing without a rule book, which we cannot afford to do as Americans. There's a parallel to the two nations striving for supremacy, but the difference is crucial.
In response to the threat at home, it can be easy to forget how bad the threat abroad may be, but as we see the Berlin Wall going up to stem the flow of people trying to escape the devastated conditions of East Berlin, it's chilling, with the realization of entrapment setting in. This is Spielberg telling the story of an average Joe forced to rise to the occasion of extraordinary circumstances, yet again, and if Donovan is Chief Brody, then the United States is probably Quint, and the Soviet regime has got to be the shark. Hanks's stalwart Midwestern-style sincerity is akin to Jimmy Stewart in the role of Donovan, a deeply principled legal warrior willing to all necessary within view of his rule book to do his duty. So likable and authentic, he bears the moral compass without being an insufferable goody-two-shoes, while taking a journey through these experiences that brings him out the other side as a changed man, unable to even watch a bunch of kids climbing fences carelessly in the American suburbs without feeling a shudder.
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Images via DreamWorks/Fox 2000/Touchstone Pictures |