Doug Liman

American Made

First Hit:  It’s a Tom Cruise film and therefore you will always get everything he can give; full tilt entertainment.

I’ve said it before and I’ll continue to say it. Tom Cruise will probably never be in a film and be someone other than Tom Cruise. This isn’t a bad thing because he gives everything to each film he’s in. The issue is that you always know and see ‘Tom Cruise’, not the character he’s playing.

Here he uses the role and true story of Barry Seal, a TWA pilot that ended up working for the CIA and even the White House, to give the audience his, boyish charm, intensity, and action. Seal was a bored airline pilot who, on occasion, would turn off the auto-pilot and make the plane turn and twist in the sky just to wake up his co-pilot and passengers.

One day he’s approached by Monty ‘Schafer’ (Domhnall Gleeson) a CIA operative to fly spy camera photo missions in Central America. For this he will get a cool plane to fly, have lots of excitement, and make a little money. Without telling his wife he quits TWA and takes this new mission on, full tilt. Soon afterward, he gets a deal to smuggle drugs from South America on his way back from taking spy photos. This becomes very lucrative for him and he begins making a lot of money.

However, the DEA finds out and wants to bust him in his Louisiana home. The CIA is willing to turn a blind eye to the drug smuggling because of his excellent spy photographs and therefore move him and his family to Mena, AK. Here they give him more than 2,000 acres of land, an airport, hanger, home and a new plane.

He does so well for the drug cartel and the CIA that he buys more planes and men to fly them. He’s got hundreds of millions of dollars in banks, all over town, in his house, in his hanger, and buried in the ground around his home.

All the while he gets into scrapes that he gets bailed out from. Finally, he has to turn witness against the drug cartel and when he does, he’s in trouble. His punishment for all the drug smuggling was 1,000 hours of community service with the Salvation Army, which he does. However, the cartel isn't so lenient.

As I said the film is fun, and the action scenes are good with Tom making it all good fun.

Cruise knows how to make a film fun with his personality and ability to make the audience feel good. Sarah Wright as his wife Lucy was good. I loved her line about having to go back to work at Kentucky Fried Chicken. Gleeson was good as the CIA agent who recruited Seal. Jayma Mays was strong as the AK State DA who wanted to prosecute Seal. Gary Spinelli wrote an event filled script. Doug Liman let Cruise be himself and bring engagement and excitement to the screen. Just don’t think you’re going to see a meaningful story about Barry Seal.

Overall:  It was an excellent vehicle for Cruise to be, well; Tom Cruise.

Fair Game

First Hit: A very strong political drama based on the true experiences of Joseph Wilson and Valerie Plame.

I don’t think there could have been two better actors selected for the parts of Joseph Wilson (played by Sean Penn) and Valerie Plame (played by Naomi Watts). Both are very accomplished actors and have strong political views which they get to act out in this film.

The well-known premise is that Plame, an 18 year veteran in covert activities with the CIA was publicly outed by the Bush White House staff to save their own skin from fabricating evidence to raid Iraq with their shock and awe bombing.

Joseph had written a report that discounted the belief that 500 tons of yellowcake material had been mined in Niger and sent to Iraq for the development of weapons of mass destruction. Because Plame and Wilson knew the truth they destroyed them publicly.

Eventually they were exonerated and the truth was heard. Penn, as Wilson, was his glorious self, standing in front of audiences tearing apart the governments’ ideas of the truth.

The director (Doug Liman) and his team did a remarkable job of interlacing real clips of Bush’s administration making their case to the public and the international community along with their filmed scenes.

Penn was fabulous and while watching him lambast the Bush Administration I couldn’t help but see the distance and nearness of this character and Jeff Spicoli. He embodies the idea and the truth of the person he is playing. Watts was spectacular. I loved the way she carried her strength not only when she was interviewing a possible ally, speaking to an enemy or working with her counterparts. David Andrews plays Scooter Libby with the manipulative tenacity I would have expected. Jez Butterworth and John-Henry Butterworth did a great job with Joseph Wilson’s book “The Politics of Truth” and Valerie Plame’s book “Fair Game”. Liman did a great job of directing this film with full story clarity.

Overall: A very strong film which also can be a bit scary when one realizes how some government officials can bend their truth in a way that can cost thousands of lives – look what happen in Iraq.

googleaa391b326d7dfe4f.html