The Tom Hanks-starring period piece Bridge of Spies is Steven Spielberg’s best and most entertaining film since…well, his last Tom Hanks-starring period piece. In the decade-plus since the delightful Catch Me If You Can, Spielberg’s made good starchy period pieces (Lincoln), dull starchy period pieces (War Horse) and a few old-school adventure
It helps that the movie has a pretty wild true story to start with as its premise. It’s 1957 and tenacious New York insurance lawyer James Donovan (Hanks) is assigned to defend a captured Soviet spy, Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance). Donovan is initially reluctant to take the case of such an obvious persona non grata, but he applies himself to the task out of a strong commitment to the integrity of his profession. Donovan helps secure a prison sentence rather than the death penalty for Abel, arguing that the spy could make a valuable bargaining chip with the USSR in the future. The CIA takes that suggestion in 1962, offering Abel in trade to the USSR for captured U.S. spy pilot Francis Gary Powers – but given tensions between the two world powers, the agency wants Donovan to conduct the negotiation as a private citizen. Donovan agrees to travel to East Germany to make the deal, but he’s got a plan of his own in mind: he’s not leaving without bringing home a much lower-priority captive, American student Frederic Pryor, as well.
It’s a twisty pile of characters and relationships, and Spielberg gives it plenty of space to breathe over the course of a nearly two-and-a-half-hour running time. But while there may be a lot of chitchat, it’s all very high-stakes chitchat, with a script that keeps us constantly aware of both the geopolitical weight and the very personal emotions that inform the negotiations. Matt Charman wrote the original screenplay, but it’s hard not to attribute much of the film’s sly sense of humor and quick-witted repartee to the Coen brothers, who revised the script.
Despite all the nuclear brinksmanship, Bridge of Spies is something Spielberg hasn’t really managed to be in quite a while: fun. It’s heartening to see the director continue to work with the period pieces that seem to have primarily occupied his mind for the past decade, while still tapping into the sense of play that more frequently characterized his early work. Spielberg’s next film is a children’s fantasy story, an adaptation of Roald Dahl’s The BFG, with Rylance as the titular jovial giant. Here’s hoping Spielberg can continue to lighten up a bit without Hanks or the Coens in tow.
Patrick Dunn
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