Sunday, April 13, 2025

The Amateur

Hollywood and espionage films have been about as common, for many decades, as John Wayne and westerns. We've seen many through the years, i.e. "All the President's Men", "The Day of the Jackal", "Three Days of the Condor", "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy", "Body of Lies", the James Bond franchise and others, and now we have yet another one where it centers around someone that's not even a spy.

Charlie Heller (Rami Malek) is a brilliant, but deeply introverted decoder for the CIA working out of a basement office at headquarters in Langley whose life is turned upside down when his wife, Sarah (Rachel Brosnahan) is killed in a London terrorist attack, When his supervisors, Chief Moore (Holt McCallany) and Caleb (Danny Sapani) refuse to take action, he takes matters into his own hands, embarking on a dangerous trek across the globe to track down those responsible.  Along with a trusted decoding source, Inquiline (Caitriona Balfe) and on again, off again Agent Henderson (Laurence Fishburne), and his intelligence, this intelligence serves as the ultimate weapon for eluding his pursuers and achieving his revenge. 

Others to round out the cast are Jon Bernthal as The Bear, Nick Mills as Finn, Jullianne Nicholson as Director O'Brien, Adrian Martinez as Carlos, Evan Milton as Slater, Tiffany Gray as Esther and Kate Sumpter as Anchor. 

This was brilliantly directed with grit and intensity by James Hawes ("The Earth in Balance" (TV movie) '90, "A Line in the Sand"(TV movie) '04, "The Lift" (TV movie) '07,  "The 39 Steps" (TV movie) '08, "Enid" (TV movie) '09, "Pulse" (TV movie) '10, "The Challenger Disaster" (TV movie) '13, "One Life" '23). This filmmaker's staging and pacing of this film was incredibly tight considering the movie was shot in many different countries where keeping the project all together can deem daunting. It was easy to follow along with each scene and Malek's presence is amazingly captivating and this is incredible directing, even though Malek is a consummate actor. It was well executed by writers Ken Nolan ("Black Hawk Down" '01, "Dawn" (TV movie) '16, Transformers: The Last Knight" '17, "Only the Brave" '17) plus TV and a short, and Gary Spinelli ("Stash House" '12, "American Made" '17) plus TV, based on the novel by Robert Littrell. As aforementioned, considering this was shot in many countries, this was held together very well. It was tight, concise and definitely kept one's attention. The only issue with this is that there were a few areas of slowness in the script, and maybe an area of a bit of choppiness in the middle of the story, but otherwise, it simply excelled. 

Certainly if you like espionage films, you'll revel with this, but the captivating aspect of this is clearly that of Malek. He is quite the chameleon when it comes to acting--he will play any role as long as it's challenging and gripping. This is the sign of a true artist. It's a great way to escape into this two hour running time. 

Out of 4 Stars: 3.5                                    Rated: PG-13                                            123mins.


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