(2007)
Interesting that Matthew Carnahan wrote this; he also delivered the vacuous The Kingdom, so he likes the pseudo-political fare.
This essays (and it does essay) its central point about apathy and inaction quite successfully, but it's also constantly looking over its shoulder, wary of accusations of unpatriotic behaviour, hence the completely inessential third story segment of two soldiers in Aghanistan (just to show that, whatever else it has to say, it's behind those brave American boys).
A lot of this is just preaching to the choir, since the people Redford wants to watch it clearly aren't going to, but it's nice to see the back and forth between Streep's journo and Cruise's congressman even if it's obvious stuff (Cruise, like Robin Williams, is always much more effective playing nasty and duplicitous). Redford's college professor-student plotline feels rather too "written" but it also manages to hold the attention.
This essays (and it does essay) its central point about apathy and inaction quite successfully, but it's also constantly looking over its shoulder, wary of accusations of unpatriotic behaviour, hence the completely inessential third story segment of two soldiers in Aghanistan (just to show that, whatever else it has to say, it's behind those brave American boys).
A lot of this is just preaching to the choir, since the people Redford wants to watch it clearly aren't going to, but it's nice to see the back and forth between Streep's journo and Cruise's congressman even if it's obvious stuff (Cruise, like Robin Williams, is always much more effective playing nasty and duplicitous). Redford's college professor-student plotline feels rather too "written" but it also manages to hold the attention.
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