3. Bridge of Spies takes place during the Cold War, a time of extreme suspicion between the United States and the Soviet Union, a time of McCarthyism and the Red Scare and the sense that anyone, your neighbor or your teacher, could be a secret spy whose nefarious espionage will end up in nuclear war if you don’t stop him. Into this maelstrom comes Brooklyn insurance lawyer Jim Donovan (Tom Hanks), a partner at a big firm who is approached by the government to provide an “honest” defense of Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance), an accused Soviet spy. The government expects Donovan to just roll over, but a sense of professional pride and a deep belief in the Constitution forces Donovan to give Abel the best defense possible, much to the detriment of his professional reputation and his family’s safety. The case doesn’t go well, but he does earn not just the trust of Abel, but also of the government, which deputizes him to head to Berlin and negotiate the release of an American pilot shot down over enemy lines, using Abel as bait. The second half of the movie is a tense standoff between Donovan, and the U.S. government, and the East Germans, and the Soviets, and the whole time Donovan has a cold and laments repeatedly about how he just wants to go home and get to bed.

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4. This is all affecting and well-done and you’ll never be bored; Spielberg could make a web design meeting interesting. But none of it’s particularly surprising either. Donovan is a prince of a guy from the second we meet him; characters take turns describing his heroism from different perspectives, including one perhaps who just flat out says, “You will always get back up when knocked down.” He also has a habit of espousing altruistic American ideals when challenged, which, while inspirational, often makes him feel like he’s giving a speech rather than having a casual drink with a colleague. This is doubled-down by casting Hanks, who’s as great as he usually is (and does everything he can to downplay Donovan’s heroism, which of course makes him look even more heroic) but is a singularly uninspired choice for such a part. The fun of a movie like this can often be found in a morally compromised but good-hearted sort being pushed to his (or her, rarely) limit for injustice and responding by discovering their courageous beacon within. But the minute we see Hanks, we know he’s going to be the moral center of the movie, because he’s Tom Hanks. The movie then takes every path we expect it to. I wonder if a more slippery actor, maybe a Christian Bale, or a Robert Downey Jr., might have been a better choice. After all, even Oskar Schindler seems like a jerk at first.

5. The strongest relationship in the movie is between Donovan and Abel, who earns Donovan’s respect for his modesty and his unwavering loyalty to his home country, even when he knows he likely won’t be welcomed back, if he’s ever to actually return. The movie wisely never pretends Abel isn’t completely guilty of the crimes he’s accused of him but also doesn’t damn him for it; Spielberg’s more interested in pointing out the human perils of a culture of secrets than taking any particular side, a viewpoint that is admirable and also maybe a little too on the nose than you’d like. This is aided greatly by Rylance’s warm, comfortable performance, the firmest human connection in a movie that’s colder and a little more withholding than your average Spielberg movie. This is a movie you admire for its craftsmanship—particularly a wordless 10-minute opening sequence that sets up everything you need to know—and applaud its earnestness, but are never truly electrified by. It’s a movie whose undeniable professionalism essentially invites you to say, “They don’t make ‘em like that anymore.” And they don’t. But I’m not sure that’s quite as much of a compliment as Spielberg wants it to be.

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Grade: B.


Grierson & Leitch is a regular column about the movies. Follow us on Twitter, @griersonleitch.