The Good Shepherd examines a fascinating time in American foreign policy, one when the intelligence community that rallied around the American war effort against the Nazis morphed into the peacetime intelligence service that would become the C.I.A. It centres on Edward Wilson (Matt Damon), a stoic academic who puts his loyalties to secret organisations first, God second and family third. Thats bad luck for his young wife Clover (a woefully miscast Angelina Jolie), whos left at home to raise their son while Wilson does... well, who knows what hes really doing? There are mysterious connections with Russian spies and conspiracy theories about moles within the burgeoning organisation but Wilson seems to spend most of his time behind a desk. The film bounces between the Cuban Missile Crisis, a search for a potential C.I.A. leak (in a nod to The Conversation) and following Wilson from Yale to super-spy. Along the way, he gets seduced by Clover, pledges loyalty to General Bill Sullivan (director De Niro in a small role) and sits behind his desk some more. This wouldnt be so dreadfully dull if Wilson wasnt so stoic and if the films running time didnt near three hours. While De Niro shows great respect and admiration for the actors involved in this, only the second feature hes directed, he needs to be more cutthroat about his vision as a director. He simply cant say no: not to more scenes of Jolie as the put-upon wife, to more scenes of Wilsons poetry classes at Yale, to more Russian spy drama. But by taking every side road, the films forward momentum is severely curtailed, and what gets lost in the muddle is the crucial sense of Wilson as an actual spy. When, near the end of the film, hes described as "the heart and soul of the C.I.A., the viewer cant help but wonder when he did any actual espionage. Certainly not in this film. That the only extra is another 16 minutes of deleted scenes (really, there was more?) is disappointing, but I cant say that I was dying for a three-hour commentary appreciating Jolies glowing, fully modern woman trapped in a 50s period film. A disappointing waste of the gathered talent, especially trapped on such a slow boat to nowhere.
(Universal)The Good Shepherd
Robert De Niro
BY James KeastPublished Apr 20, 2007