The past few years have given Abraham Lincoln a bit of a moment on the big screen. There was Lincoln, which snagged Daniel Day-Lewis his third Best Actor Oscar, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, which revised history to make him a supernatural character, and Killing Lincoln, which was a highly related mini-series. But before those three marched out in quick succession in 2012, there was The Conspirator about the fallout from Lincolnās assassination. These have varying degrees of success with The Conspirator falling squarely in the middle.
The major problem with the film is that itās so tasteful as to be bland. Each and every frame feels like itās watermarked with āFor Your Consideration.ā Thereās a great story to be told in here somewhere, but this reserved and overly tasteful approach leads to tedium here. This seems to be a common criticism with much of Robert Redfordās output as a director. A concluding scene at the gallows should pack an emotional wallop, but a hanging scene has never been so clinical and removed of emotional impact before. This blasĆ© approach never allows for us to gain access or insight into the characters motivations,
The film feels more concerned with trying to make this case remind us of modern day discussions about war criminals, torture and the power of the government to do as it pleases. But these allusions are so protracted and tastefully removed that they never truly become anything more than window dressing. A distinct point-of-view about these talking points, or about the characterās actions, would have made for a better film. Or if it had bothered to really interaction with these political allusions beyond mere flirtation and placed more firmly in the moral quagmire it presents, we could have had a truly special film.
But Redford at least has a game cast that performs beyond reproach. James McAvoy and Robin Wright modulate their characters so that their growing disillusionment with their situation and slowly dawning realizations are effectively handled. A large supporting ensemble delivers solid work from top to bottom, with the notable exception being Justin Long who is too modern for a period film. But Kevin Kline, Tom Wilkinson, Alexis Bledel, Norman Reedus, Evan Rachel Wood, Stephen Root, James Badge Dale, Danny Huston all perform well in their limited roles. So the problem isnāt the script or the cast, itās Redfordās direction which seems to aim squarely at a middle-of-the-road prestige format for a story that demands a point-of-view.
The Conspirator Reviews
The Conspirator
Posted : 10 years, 5 months ago on 13 November 2013 08:120 comments, Reply to this entry
An average movie
Posted : 11 years ago on 3 May 2013 02:51Even though Robert Redford managed to win the Academy award for the best picture with his directing debut, āOrdinary Peopleā, he never really managed to become a really great director like Clint Eastwood for example (on the other hand, Eastwood is probably the only one who managed to have such great careers both as an actor and as a director). Still, I always had a weak spot for Redfordās work as a director so I was really eager to check this out. Recently, I have seen and really loved āLincolnā by Spielberg and this movie was a nice companion piece. Unfortunately, I didnāt really blow me away though. I mean, the directing was solid and the cast was really impressive (James McAvoy, Robin Wright, Kevin Kline, Evan Rachel Wood, Tom Wilkinson, Justin Long, Danny Huston, Colm Meaney, Alexis Bledel, Toby Kebbell, Norman Reedus). However, I had a hard time to care about the whole story. I mean, it was mildly interesting but far from being spellbinding in my opinion. Of course, it is pretty obvious that the poor woman didnāt deserve to die but, come on, this country was at war and some pretty despicable sh*t happened back then. The whole point of this movie is that the constitution should be respected regardless if there is peace or war. Sorry, I donāt mean to be mean or anything but thatās extremely naive in my opinion. Indeed, any country in times of war or any major crisis will disregard many laws, constitutions, bills of rights or whatever. Thatās how the world goes, Iām afraid. So, I had a hard time to care about this womanās fate (without mentioning how many times a black man was judged and consequently hung without a fair trial). Still, in spite of its flaws, it remains a well made historical drama with a very strong cast and it is definitely worth, especially if you like the genre.
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