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The Good Shepherd

Posted by Brian C. Gibson (brian@filmschoolrejects.com) on December 22, 2006

The Good ShepherdBased partly on the life of one of the founding fathers of the CIA, James “Jesus” Angelton, The Good Shepherd follows Edward Wilson (Matt Damon) through a thick fog of deception and suspicion. When a man who loves and serves his country with pride is forced to make a decision that would effect the fate of his personal life and the fate of his country, he must decide where his loyalty resides.

The Good Shepherd is not only good, it is one of the year’s best films. When a film has a cast that can fill seats, a good story and a director that can put the pieces together, you get a film like this. Just looking at the film’s roster makes you want to see it, but whether or not it is good or not is another story. Earlier this year there was another film All The King’s Men that had a cast that just screamed Oscar, but thankfully there have been a few other films since that have cast a very large shadow over the undeserved hype that the afore mentioned film may have received. This film may not win everything, or even anything for that matter, but deserves to be in the ranks of the year’s 5 best films.

Rarely behind the camera, Robert De Niro summons knockout performances from his ensemble cast and delivers one of the years best films. Not much can be said for what De Niro could have done better, but one thing that I found to be a bit overdone was the film’s 2 hour 40 minute runtime. One storyline could have been completely cut from the film without affecting the plot and saved the film maybe another 20-30 minutes. Other than the butt-numbing runtime, the film was great entertainment and a good look into our country’s earliest forms of defense.

Matt Damon has displayed performances in the past that have given him attention, but none that truly have shown anything different from the smile and face that have made him famous. Dazzling us with his performance in The Departed, Damon takes his craft to the next level and sells his performance all the way to the credits. An unflinching and rock solid performance from Damon anchored this film, and may give all the other Oscar hopefuls a late run for their money.


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3 Comments

Bruce Warner says:

I agree that the film was way too long–it could have been tightened up with about 30 minutes less run time. While the cast and cinematography was quite good, the plot dragged on at a pace that did not allow for enough suspense and never really got my adrenaline going. I also think that several characters were not given enough development.


New Movies and Box Office Predictions: Time to Catch Up! : Film School Rejects says:

[...] The third entry in my year ending marathon is a toss up. The first film being considered is the Robert DeNiro directed spy drama The Good Shepherd. This has been getting middling reviews while being almost universally criticized for being too long. It looks like a movie that I would be interested in, but the near three hour length and the potentially dry matter has given me pause. The next film under consideration is We Are Marshall, which is also getting middling reviews. I looks like it could be good, but I am not sure I need to see another inspirational football movie after already seeing Invincible and Gridiron Gang this year, you can expand that to sports in general and include the very good Rocky Balboa in the mix. The third features an actor I never thought I would see among the leads of a romantic comedy, Jack Black. The movie is The Holiday, which also features Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law, and Rufus Sewell. [...]


Phyllis Kunz says:

The movie was riveting and chilling,

But I wish it had been Alec Baldwin in the opening scene. An opening scene should begin with a bang. Alec Baldwin is more bang for the buck.


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