The
following are capsule reviews of some films I've seen in recent weeks,
including two superb true-crime stories with the potential to
rank among my best-10 of 2007.
Reviews
by Chuck O'Leary
Breach - Set during the first two
months of 2001, this is the gripping true story of
how the FBI used one of its young surveillance
operatives, Eric O'Neill (Ryan Phillippe), to help catch
a traitor within its own agency, FBI veteran Robert Hanssen
(Chris Cooper). The Hanssen we observe in the film is an absolutely
fascinating two-faced villain. On the outside, he's an uptight prig
and devout Catholic who regularly attends mass and preaches the values of
God and country. But as O’Neill would discover, Hanssen was a walking
contradiction who secretly liked making home sex videos, and worse, had been
selling valuable American intelligence secrets to the Russians
for years. Even though many of us already know the outcome of this story,
co-writer-director Billy Ray (Shattered
Glass) is still able to maintain considerable suspense
throughout as O'Neill attempts to gain Hanssen's trust through their mutual
Catholic background, while trying to obtain incriminating evidence without his
surly, egotistical new boss becoming wise. Breach follows The Good Shepherd as the second
outstanding spy-thriller to be released by Universal Pictures within the last
two months. Robert De Niro's The
Good Shepherd was terrific. Breach is even better, and is
the kind of great film that seldom gets released this early in the year.
Rating: 9 out of 10.
Zodiac - This is the
second film to get released in the last 12
months about the never-solved Zodiac killings that terrorized the San
Francisco Bay area in the late '60s and early '70s. Last year's film
version, called The Zodiac,
was a low-budget production that got a 10-screen theatrical release last
March 17. It's a decent movie, but limits its scope to one
fictional small-town cop's investigation into the killings. David
Fincher's Zodiac is
the more ambitious, thorough and better of the two. Based on Robert
Graysmith's novel, Fincher's film is a captivating 157-minute case
history that divides its time between three men closely associated with
the investigation, SFPD detective, Dave Toschi (Mark Ruffalo); doped-up San
Francisco Chronicle reporter Paul Avery (Robert Downey Jr.); and Graysmith
himself (Jake Gyllenhaal), a Chronicle cartoonist who remained obsessed
with the case long after it left the headlines. Zodiac fascinates in its
attention to detail, and convincingly recreates an era when
crime fighting techniques were a lot more primitive than they are
today. The film's only shortcoming is failing to show
the effect these senseless murders had on any of the victim's families.
Otherwise, it's an engrossing real-life mystery that makes a
plausible hypothesis about the identity of the elusive Zodiac
killer. Let's just say, you may never think of your helpful hardware man
from Ace the same way again. The one thing this and last year's
Zodiac movie have in common is character actor Philip Baker Hall, who
appears in both.
Rating: 8
out of 10.
The
Number 23 -
Most bad movies are just plain boring, but occasionally one will come along
that's so outrageous in its badness that it ends up having some degree of
entertainment value. Joel Schumacher's laughable would-be thriller, The Number 23, is such a
film. Not yet getting the hint that audiences don't want to see
him in serious roles, Jim Carrey plays a dog catcher whose wife
(Virginia Madsen) introduces him to an obscure book about characters
obsessed with the number 23. Carrey's character then himself becomes
completely obsessed with the number, believing that he and the book's
characters are somehow interconnected. It's obvious Carrey's
character belongs in a rubber room from the very beginning, and,
after 13 years together, didn't his wife ever get around to asking him,
"So what were you doing that day I met you out in front of the mental
hospital?" We can only hope a sequel called The Number 46 doesn't get made.
Rating: 4 out of 10.
Factory
Girl
- Not great, but better than many of the reviews it's gotten,
this is the tragic story of artist/actress Edie Sedgwick,
and how her involvement with Andy Warhol's avant-garde freak show known as The
Factory led to her self-destruction. Sedgwick's all-too-common story of
drug-addiction hastening the downfall of a young starlet is nothing
new. However, the film is most interesting in its portrayal of Warhol as
a cold-hearted user. Sienna Miller proves she's more than just another
pretty face with her strong portrayal of Sedgwick, and it took me a while
to even recognize that it is Guy Pearce playing Warhol. The film's
fictional folk singer named Billy Quinn (played by Hayden
Christensen) with whom Sedgwick becomes involved is obviously supposed to
be Bob Dylan. Factory Girl
is a sad story of a life ruined by child abuse and hedonistic excess.
Rating: 7 out of 10
Music
& Lyrics -
An amiable romantic-comedy starring Hugh Grant as a washed-up '80s
pop singer who gets a second chance when he's hired by a
current pop female superstar to write her a song. Drew
Barrymore plays a young woman not in show business who becomes his
unlikely songwriting partner. The film opens with the amusing
recreation of a mid-1980s music video of a deliriously cheesy pop song
called "Pop! Goes My Heart." The song is a lot of fun, but ends
up being the only memorable thing in a middling rom-com that
needed a wittier script. Rating: 5 out of 10.