Genre:
Drama/Thriller
Director: Billy Ray
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Chris Cooper, Laura
Linney, Dennis Haysbert, Kathleen Quinlan, Gary Cole, Caroline
Dhavernas
RunTime: -
Released By: Lighthouse Pictures & Cathay-Keris
Films
Rating: TBA
Official Website: www.breachmovie.net
Opening Day: 12 April 2007
Synopsis:
In the United States, there is an elite group of men and women
who is entrusted with the keys to our country. Agents in the
Federal Bureau of Investigation are sworn not only to uphold
the law, but to serve the United States with the same honor
they would their own family.
This is the story of one man who betrayed us all.
Inspired by true events, Breach is a dramatic thriller set
inside the halls of the Bureau that serves as gatekeeper of
the nation’s most sensitive and volatile secrets. In
February 2001, renowned FBI operative Robert Hanssen was found
guilty of treason against America. Over a period of more than
two decades, Hanssen systematically and deliberately sold
his country’s key intelligence to the former Soviet
Union. Today, Academy Award® winner CHRIS COOPER (American
Beauty, Adaptation) stars as Hanssen, one of the most notorious
spies in the history of our country.
RYAN PHILLIPPE (Crash, Flags of Our Fathers) joins Cooper,
starring as Eric O’Neill, the young agent-in-training
handpicked by the FBI to help draw Hanssen from his cover.
When O’Neill is promoted out of his low-level surveillance
job and into the headquarters of the FBI, his dream of becoming
a full-fledged agent is on the verge of becoming a reality.
Even more impressive, O’Neill is selected to work for
renowned operative Hanssen within “information assurance,”
a new division created to protect all classified FBI intelligence.
His enthusiasm, however, quickly turns to anxiety as O’Neill
is confronted with the true reason behind his unexpected promotion.
Hanssen is the sole subject of a long-term, top-secret investigation;
he is a suspected mole who has become extremely dangerous
by the sheer global import of the information he is protecting.
The Bureau asks O’Neill to use Hanssen’s growing
trust of the apprentice to slowly draw the traitor out of
deep cover. Now engaged in a lethal game of spy-versusspy,
O’Neill finds himself fighting to bring down Hanssen
before the treacherous double
Movie
Review:
In “Breach”, director Billy Ray’s thematic
follow-up to 2003’s “Shattered Glass”, works
within its predecessor’s docudrama confines but steadily
ratchets it up to a full-blown thriller well worth its dramatic
salt. Despite the ending being splashed across the headlines
and its case study still being referenced till this day as
“possibly the worst intelligence disaster in US history”,
the premise of a secrets being sold to foreign regimes continues
to maintain an air of unreality that remains unnerving. This
is especially so in a post-9/11 world that constantly expounds
on the careful handling of counter-intelligence and sensitive
information being touchstones of security in this brave new
world.
Ray
adheres to a disconcertingly effective cut and dry interpretation
of true-life FBI man turned agent provocateur, Robert Hanssen’s
(Chris Cooper) world. Unfolding underneath the cloudy grays
of the country’s capital, the film works through the
drones that walk the hallways of dull furnishings and tightly
wound bureaucrats protecting their turf at every turn, remanding
their responsibilities for somebody else to follow through
on while feeding their own cynicisms through inadvertence.
It’s mindful of not romanticising the shady, cloak-and-dagger
world of spies or the circumventive thrill seeking of slipping
one past the establishment but forms itself into a careful
and observant record of Hanssen’s final months leading
up to his arrest, all through the eyes of Eric O'Neill (Ryan
Phillippe), a surveillance specialist for the FBI.
With
“Breach”, Ray now deals with deception on a much
larger canvas. The stakes are set much higher in the psychological
poker game between the men right in the heart of the scandal.
Ambitious and competent, O’Neill is assigned to Hanssen
as an assistant at a new division of the Bureau with the true
intent to shadow and detail his boss’s every activity.
They fabricate and withhold information from one another to
conceal their true interests. But as the lies start to pile
up and a burgeoning respect for each other hinders their defences,
their responsibilities and intentions become hazier.
The
conjecture used for its artistic merit was principally constructed
from numerous biographical accounts of Hanssen and those close
to him as well as O’Neill’s own input about his
experience. The impetus of Hanssen’s actions as well
as his perspective on his country’s intelligence failure
are only eluded to and insinuated upon. The film does not
inform and detail as a mere procedural but like every good
film, puts its characters in the forefront instead of its
plot. That’s not to say that the story isn’t up
to par as there is not one wasted scene or lull in the tight
script. Ray establishes a tone of continued discovery by using
Phillippe’s character as a narrative linchpin in crafting
an utterly fascinating portrayal of Hanssen through Chris
Cooper’s superlative turn as the country’s most
dangerous man.
There’s
just so much to be said for Cooper’s performance here
that could very well be his most complex and perplexingly
nuanced role of his career. He pulls each and every one of
his scenes off with a consummate understanding of a man racked
with paranoia and personal sin despite the strong waves of
pharisaical religiosity that he exudes, which O’Neill
wisely uses to his advantage. This is one of the strongest
performances of the year.
In
a film teeming with politics unseen ever since the terrorist
attacks in September 2001, mere months after Hanssen’s
arrest, there’s a point being made by its director in
his lingering shots of the hanging portraits of George W.
Bush and John Ashcroft that parallels Hanssen’s growing
disillusionment with his government’s complacency and
lax disregard for the importance of intelligence in the administration’s
hierarchy.
Movie
Rating:
(Chris
Cooper in the year’s best performance)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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