Bridge of Spies
Dir: Steven Spielberg
2015
***
Bridge of Spies tells the intriguing story of James
B. Donovan, an American lawyer who in 1957 was given the task of defending
Rudolf Abel, a Russian Spy, found living and working in New York City. It's a
compelling true story from the Cold War, full
of unbelievable situations and thrilling repercussions, directed by
the mighty Steven Spielberg, written by the brilliant
Coen Brothers and starring Tom Hanks and Mark Rylance who won best supporting
actor at a number of award ceremonies. It's got everything you could want
from a Cold War political thriller, and yet, I was left feeling pretty underwhelmed.
Tom Hanks' performance was good but I'm not sure he was the best choice of
actor. Personally, I think the problem was that it was Tom Hanks in
a Steven Spielberg film, rather than the best that he can be. Steven Spielberg films can
almost be put into a genre of their own, they're always big films but there is
always a Christmas card quality to them that doesn't always work. The direction
is very striking, I just don't think it fit the story very well. There are far
too many Spielbergisums for my liking, this distracts from the story and
is becoming rather predictable from the director. An example. Tom Hanks' James B.
Donovan sees people shot down trying to cross over the Berlin Wall from the
window of a moving train. Later in the film, once he's back in the USA, he sees
kids climbing over a fence in the back of someone's garden with pretty much the
same composition. It's a great idea, both visually and as part of the
bigger story but in Spielberg's hands it is forced and becomes somewhat of
a tiresome exercise in forced emotional response, something that
is a blight on Hollywood currently, created by the bearded one himself
I'm afraid. Mark Rylance's performance was impressive but I'm not
quite sure it was better than that of the other actors nominated in 2015. The
sets were impressive but they looked a bit to new at certain times, it was also
hard to tell if much of the background was CGI or not or if it just looked like
it could be due to the Hallmark style hazy hue lens Spielberg seems
to have adopted in his features. It may well be both but either way, I don't
like it. The story should have been a noir full of contrast or a gritty
life-like drama. Spielberg's big blockbuster treatment just doesn't fit
the story, there is a lot to admire and indeed enjoy about the film, it's just
that I believe that the story is so original it deserved to be handled with a
less obvious approach.
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