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DVD The Interpreter (Full Screen Edition)
Director Sydney Pollack delivers megawatt star power, high gloss, and political passion to The Interpreter, his first thriller since The Firm. With Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn delivering smooth, understated performances, the film more closely recalls Pollack's 1975 Robert Redford/Faye Dunaway paranoid thriller Three Days of the Condor, trading conspiratorial politicians for potential assassination in the United Nations General Assembly (this being the first film ever granted permission to use actual U.N. locations). Kidman plays a U.N. interpreter who inadvertently overhears hints of a plot to kill the reviled, tyrannical leader of her (fictional) African homeland; Penn is the Secret Service agent assigned to protect her, or to determine her role (if any) in the assassination scenario. By distancing itself from real-life politics, The Interpreter softens its potential impact as a thriller about contemporary globalization and threats to international peace, but the Penn/Kidman personal drama (between two people who gain a deep appreciation for shared anguish, without being artificially forced into romance) adds a richly human dimension to Pollack's expert handling of the thriller elements of a complex yet easily-followed plot. Indie-film stalwart Catherine Keener shines in her supporting role as Penn's sarcastic by sympathetic Secret Service partner. --Jeff Shannon
Review(s): DVD The Interpreter (Full Screen Edition)
WASTE OF TALENT
A pedigree of Oscar winning actors and a director are sadly wasted in THE INTERPRETER. I consider myself of above average intelligence and attention span, but the convoluted script for this movie takes so many turns and the pace is so slow that it is hard to become truly involved in the outcome. Nicole Kidman gives a glowing performance as always as a UN interpreter who overhears the assassination plot for a visiting African dignitary. Sean Penn is the SS agent haunted by the recent death of his estranged wife, and the agent who handles Kidman's accusations. Catherine Keenar is wasted as Penn's partner, a cardboard character whose presence is nominal to say the least. Director Sydney Pollack turns up in a cameo as Penn's hardnosed boss, but his direction is certainly not Oscar caliber. I'm not sure what the scriptwriter's intentions were for this movie, but as a thriller it misses the mark and as a character study, it barely sustains interest, in spite of the noteworthy performances. A shame to see such talent squandered.
solid performances by Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn
Nicole Kidman (Dogville, The Hours, To Die For) plays Sylvia Broome, an Interpreter for the U.N. who over heard something up in the booth that she works in that may have been an assassination on the president of Matobo, Zubwanie. So, secret service agent Tobin Keller, played by Sean Penn (Mystic River, The Assassination Of Richard Nixon), whos wife just recently died, is on the verge of believing her and not. Nicely constructed action/thriller with some pretty good moments, one being a bus conversation and then it explodes. Also starring Catherine Keener (Being John Malkovich, Full Frontal), Jesper Christopher and Michael Wright (Money Talks, Pinero). Probably one of the only good movies that has come out so far besides Sin City and Constantine. A fun ride.
Related DVD's The Interpreter (Full Screen Edition)
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