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Review: Breach (*** 1/2)

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Steve Rhodes - 15 Feb 2007 05:10 GMT
BREACH
A film review by Steve Rhodes

Copyright 2007 Steve Rhodes

RATING (0 TO ****):  *** 1/2

BREACH, an absolutely fascinating and completely engrossing tale by director
Billy Ray (SHATTERED GLASS), has extra punch, since this enthralling
espionage story is based on a true story.  Robert Hanssen, who is said to
have been the "worst spy in American history," fed top secrets to the
Soviets for twenty-two years until he was apprehended in early 2001.

The movie starts with a video clip of Attorney General Ashcroft announcing
his arrest and then cuts to two month earlier when the final phase of the
investigation into Hanssen's treachery begins.  A much earlier large scale
attempt to find the mole failed because Hanssen himself led the search.

The hyper-religious Hanssen is played brilliantly by Chris Cooper
(ADAPTATION).  Hanssen, the ex-head of the Soviet intelligence bureau of the
FBI, is a Catholic who wears his belief on his sleeve.  His sparse office is
adorned with a crucifix on the wall and a catechism and a Virgin Mary
statuette on the desk.  And his universal advice to his new "clerk," an
up-and-coming would-be agent named Eric O'Neill (Ryan Phillippe), is to
"pray more."  Hanssen sees God as the answer to everything, and church is
part of Hanssen's daily ritual.  He firmly believes that it was atheism that
caused the downfall of the Soviet empire.  A guy who would never be caught
smiling, Hanssen is an IT geek and a general know-it-all who is always the
smartest guy in the room.

Well, as it turns out, brains and loyalty to one's country can be very
different things.  The consistently excellent Laura Linney plays FBI agent
Kate Burroughs, who is O'Neill's handler.  She assigns him to work for and
spy on Hanssen, telling O'Neill that Hanssen is a sexual deviant.  Of
course, since the film opens with the charge of treason against Hanssen, we
know he is more than a sexual deviant, which he is as well.  At first
O'Neill comes to respect the wise old man he is working for, until, that is,
he learns what is really going on.

The soft-spoken film manages to have plenty of surprises along the way even
if we do know the conclusion.  The supporting cast adds much of the
complexity, nuances and potential twists.  Juliana (Caroline Dhavernas),
O'Neill's wife, for example, is an East German, which may or may not mean
something; Hanssen's wife Bonnie (Kathleen Quinlan) is way too much of a
goodie-two-shoes; and Dennis Haysbert (one of the presidents in "24") plays
an agent heading up a team to dig into every aspect of Hanssen's life.
Phillippe (FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS), not one of Hollywood's stronger actors,
gives an especially good rendition of an inexperienced guy who has to think
as fast as he can as he tries to outfox a veteran of the deception game.
The battle of wits between the two of them is consistently engaging and
mesmerizing.

BREACH runs 1:50.  It is rated PG-13 for "violence, sexual content and
language" and would be acceptable for kids around 10 and up.

The film opens nationwide in the United States on Friday, February 16, 2007.
In the Silicon Valley, it will be showing at the AMC theaters, the Century
theaters and the Camera Cinemas.

Web: http://www.InternetReviews.com

Email: Steve.Rhodes@InternetReviews.com

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barkerplace@hotmail.com - 15 Mar 2007 21:09 GMT
On Feb 14, 10:10 pm, "Steve Rhodes" <Steve.Rho...@InternetReviews.com>
wrote:
> BREACH
> A film review by Steve Rhodes
[quoted text clipped - 63 lines]
>
> Just send me a letter with the word "subscribe" in the subject line.

Ryan Phillippe appears to have a sebaceous (keratinous) cyst on the
left side of his forehead that waxes
and wanes  through the movie.
 
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