Mark Felt Review: Liam Neeson Blows Watergates Whistle in Deep Throat Biopic - 27reservation

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Mark Felt Review: Liam Neeson Blows Watergates Whistle in Deep Throat Biopic


The name Mark Felt might not strike a chord replace it with the moniker Deep Throat, however and watch the imaginary bulb above your head light up. As played by Liam Neeson in a quietly devastating performance, Felt is the 30-year FBI veteran who worked covertly with the press to bring down malfeasance (read: Watergate) in the Nixon White House. That tale was told in the 1976 procedural classic All the Presidents Men with Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman playing Washington Post muckrakers Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. But the reporting team is only peripheral to the action in writer-director Peter Landesmans drama, which focuses on the interior life of the whistleblower himself. (Its not subtitled The Man Who Brought Down the White House for nothing.) The lifelong G-man did not publicly confess his identity as Deep Throat until 2005, three years before his death at 95; he claimed the porn-inspired name embarrassed him. What the film, based on books by Felt and John D. OConnor, lacks in narrative drive it strives to make up for with psychological probing.

When J. Edgar Hoover died in 1972, Felt one of the Bureau honchos inner circle assumed he would take the bosss job and use those infamous private files to put the screws to D.C. powerbrokers. Instead, Nixon (unseen in the film) appointed outsider L. Patrick Gray (Martin Csokas) as Acting FBI Director. His anger at being passed over was exceeded only by the fury of his alcoholic wife, Audrey (a simmering Diane Lane), who had previously encouraged her husband to investigate the Weather Underground; she believed their missing daughter, Joan (Maika Monroe), had joined the terrorist group. Alas, the domestic drama serves only to distract from the insider politics that gives the film its pulse.

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Ironically, Felts covert meetings with Woodward (a way too young and green-looking Julian Morris) lack the spark that comes when the Fed contacts an old friend, Time magazines Sandy Smith (Bruce Greenwood). The journalist knows something big is up because by-the-book Felt had never leaked him anything over the years. Is the intelligence-agency bureaucrat acting out of revenge on Nixon for dicking him over or out an obligation to stop the FBI from being fatally compromised by executive-branch interference? In Neesons beautifully calibrated portrayal, both possibilities seem plausible.

Still, the real heat in telling Felts story for a new generation is how it bounces off whats happening right now: Trumps firing of FBI director James Comey, the appointment of the bureaus former chief Robert Mueller to oversee the investigation into possible Russian interference in the 2016 elections, the defections and divided loyalties within the commander-in-chiefs own inner circle. The phrase All the Presidents Men takes on fresh urgency in an era that makes us wonder if theyll be a modern-day Felt to bring down the White House. Heres just the movie to keep you guessing.

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