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Others say...
"Excellent" This is a very well made film about a true story of betrayal to one's country and those who work to catch him in the act. I love non-fiction whether it is in book form or films.
Chris Cooper, Ryan Phillippe and Laura Linney are all superb in their roles. The supporting cast does a great job too.
I really enjoyed the special features on the DVD where we meet the real Eric O'Neill and his wife Juliana, along with behind-the-scenes commentary and video.
If you love suspense and great story-telling, I recommend this film. If you think a film drags without car crashes and explosions, I recommend you skip this intelligent movie.
"Tightly woven, briskly paced and utterly absorbing..." `Breach' is a fantastic film that took me by surprise; for I never expecting it to hit all the marks it did. I saw the trailer and expected it to be an average government thriller, but what I got was an above average thriller than not only delivered chills (I was on edge throughout this entire film) but it also delivered the right mixture of drama and justice. It is a thought provoking moral driven film that masters its genre quite easily. Thanks to tight scripting and excellent acting the film is further elevated into pristine territory.
The film, based on a true story, recounts the greatest security breach in US history, one made by a certain Robert Hanssen. You Eric O'Neill, trying desperately to make agent, is handed a job monitoring Hanssen, under the premise that he is being investigated for his questionable extracurricular activities. Eric is a little put off by his new job, especially once he gets to know Hanssen and begins to feel that the investigation is a little unfair; and then he learns the truth behind what he's really after and things begin to change. Hanssen is much smarter than the rest of them and this makes O'Neill uneasy, for he's young and inexperienced, but he has one thing on his side; Hanssen trusts him.
The film is expertly woven, truly, for it never loses the audience for a single moment. The script brilliantly plays scene off scene, actor off actor, and weaves a very believable and understandable film. I was never lost, wondering what was going on, yet the film is never too simple, never dumbed down for the audience. It is smart and interesting and impeccably crafted.
The acting is another highlight. Chris Cooper is phenomenal as Hanssen, slipping beneath the man's skin and fleshing out his inner demons. Hanssen has a gruff exterior, but his heart is not as cold as he depicts, and this is seen as he attempts to befriend O'Neill. I never thought that Ryan Phillippe would be able to hold his own aside Cooper or Linney or even Haysbert, but he does. I've liked Phillippe (I adored him in `Cruel Intentions') but for the most part I never saw him as an overly strong actor. Here he holds his own and demands our attention. The way he displays his characters panic while restraining it to mainly his eyes and a few well placed twitches is astonishing. I kept looking at my wife going `he is really pulling this off'. Linney is fine, although she's been better and her character is a little clichéd (my wife asked me a few times if people really talk like that). Haysbert doesn't have a lot to do, but he is always commanding.
The film belongs to Cooper and Phillippe, and they support each frame masterfully.
If you are looking for an absorbing thriller that will leave you at the edge of your seat from beginning to end then `Breach' is the film you are looking for. Even if you already know the end (which they share with you at the very beginning) the film will never cease to grab you. The acting is impeccable, the script is spot on and the direction is tight enough to keep the action heavy and our interest unwavering.
"Cooper is great..." ...but the pacing and the dreary visuals leaves this reviewer a little cold. Character actor Chris Cooper never ceases to amaze me. He can become anyone quite convincingly. Phillipe is also showing signs of great potential and because of them this film is entertaining. However, the pacing is all wrong. Too many times I was ready for them to arrest him. There's no surprise-no nail biting scenes that leave you perched on the edge of your seat. This is just a film that's little more than a documentary. I'd rather have seen the information on the History channel. The actors are what makes this a three star for me.
"Intelligent & gripping, with brilliant Chris Cooper performance" I didn't remember all that much about the story of the traitor Robert Hansen...but BREACH sure brought it back. In the very early years of the George W. Bush administration, before 9/11, the arrest of Hansen was a big story. I called him a traitor, rather than a double agent, because the extent of the damage he caused to the US intelligence efforts over a couple of decades was in the billions of dollars and also probably cost the lives of several KGB agents who were working for the US.
BREACH doesn't quite tell us exactly why Hansen did what he did, but it certainly creates a complex personality and gives us enough clues to draw our own conclusions. As portrayed by the brilliantly cast Chris Cooper, Hansen is highly intelligent, extremely intuitive, bitter, deeply religious, deeply paranoid, socially awkward, not well liked by his peers and also into some kinky stuff. Yet, despite his personality difficulties, he seems to be a top-notch performer and an invaluable asset. My guess would be that Hansen didn't feel valued ENOUGH b y the US, so he made himself important to the Russians.
Laura Linney (in one of her patented terse, tart performances that doesn't stretch her in the least) plays the primary agent in charge of finally proving Hansen is their man. He's been a suspect for awhile...but there's no proof. Linney conceives of an idea to place a green but up-and-coming young intelligence officer in Cooper's office as his new assistant. Ryan Phillipe, whom I don't always like too much, is very good. He comes into the film as a guy confident that he's got a lot to offer...he's got a great wife, great clothes, great brain and a lot of swagger. But as he is essentially confined to a small office with Cooper (as sterile and unexciting an office as there could possibly be!), the two men begin to affect each other. First, Hansen belittles his new helper, but Phillipe actually learns from this experiences man, and even begins to doubt that there is anything nefarious about him. But Hansen also begins to espouse his deeply held religious beliefs on Phillipe. Both men are Catholics, but Hansen is devoted to a fault...attending mass every day. His recommended cure for stress or pressure at work..."pray more."
Eventually, Phillipe ingratiates himself to some extent with his new boss...and Hansen loosens up just a little. He comes to trust this young man (as much as he can trust anyone)...and takes a somewhat unhealthy interest in his life and particularly in his wife.
One can't quite call this a cat and mouse game...because Hansen isn't chasing Phillipe. Nor is it a battle of wits, exactly, because Hansen clearly is superior there as well. But it's a battle of Phillipe's native wit and blazingly fast thinking on his feet vs. Hansen's analytical, experience brain.
Obviously, you know how this turns out...but it is the journey that is fascinating. The movie is very well written, and the direction is simple and clean. Most of the movie belongs to these two men. While Phillipe holds up his end very well, it is Chris Cooper, in an award-worthy performance, who steals the show. It is far from a flashy performance...this guy is the best actor I've ever seen to have so little charisma (although he sure turned his charisma ON in ADAPTATION!). He always looks vaguely like he has an upset stomach. He brings a particular sourness to this role, combined with great intelligence. It is as complete a characterization as one could ever hope to see in a movie. He's so riveting, that when he IS finally apprehended...you can't help but feel just a little sad seeing it coming to an end.
I'd also like to compliment Gary Cole's work as a peer of Hansen's, along with Kathleen Quinlan in a small but effective turn as Hansen's wife. Also excellent is Caroline Dhavernas in a critical supporting role as Phillipe's wife...I look forward seeing more of her in the future.
This is not an action-packed movie...but it is certainly one of the most exciting and intelligent thrillers to come along in a long time. I very heartily recommend it for adult viewers.
Also, whenever I see a "non-fiction" movie, I always wonder how close to the truth it may have been. The DVD has a bonus feature showing a 20/20 news report on the actual events, shortly after Hansen's arrest. Not only is it interesting, but it confirms how closely BREACH adhered to the real events. It is simply a great true story told very well indeed.
"Motive remains the mystery" Well this is certainly an excellent film. The script is smart and requires constant attention. The acting is superb. The narrative and editing are fast paced and yet the viewer does not get lost. The story is compelling, complex, and frightening. Even with all these positive qualities, the film leaves the viewer with one unresolved issue, and that is to fully understand the motives behind FBI agent Robert Hanssen's 20 years of spying for the Soviet Union while nestled in the center of the FBI.
Chris Cooper is always superb. He is one of the finest actors in films. He is absolute great in this film. The other actors are excellent also but Cooper's performance was over and beyond excellent. He fully captured the psychological construction of a highly conflicted and brilliant man. Laura Linney is cool and professional in her search for the evidence against Hanssen. Ryan Phillippe, who plays young FBI clerk Eric O'Neill, does not often show emotion on his face or in his tone, but in some ways this allows him to play the 'everyman' type of guy with whom most guys would identify.
There is considerable wisdom in not over explaining, of allowing conjecture, of leaving lose ends for the audience to tie together. This is the case in this film where motive remains only partly revealed, partially exposed, and never resolved or packaged for the viewer.
Robert Hanssen was a conservative, Opus Dei Catholic, who engaged in sexual perversions. This fact alone allows us to see that the man contains conflicting emotional forces that are not resolved. But why would he become a traitor for 20 years, resulting in the deaths of many agents and loss of national security? There is a hint that he wished to show the US how vulnerable we really are. But why did it go on for 20 years? There is also considerable resentment and hostility toward authority and FBI management shown by Agent Hanssen. Was he so anti-authoritarian that he secretly wished to undermine the FBI leadership? There is resentment and sarcasm about federal policies and procedures, but every federal employee is subject to these procedures and endures them to get their work done. Was it that FBI leadership failed to recognize how smart he was, to offer him praise and recognition for his analytical abilities? This seems to me to be one of the best partial explanations. He was indeed a smart man, but even the most brilliant man can not expect constant support and praise from supervisors and leaders. The lack of constant praise, recognition, and verbal reinforcement is punishment for some personalities without a centered stable core self concept. Hanssen had strict rules for himself and family but strict rules maintained obsessively is actually about control of impulses and negative feelings more so than about organizational skills and high morality. The person with a strong sense of self is able to give themselves recognition and reward when they feel their advice has been ignored by leadership or they feel they are not appreciated. A person with a strong sense of self has the ability to empathize and realize there are lots of smart folks in federal jobs and no one gets constantly reinforced. Instead a healthy attitude is that bright employees have to take turns in the spotlight. Hanssen was vulnerable because he lacked this strong center. He was smart and organized but he was far from self-actualized, thus making him very vulnerable under pressure.
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Breach (Widescreen Edition)
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What our customer's say!
"Caught with a red hand", Although the acting is pretty first rate here, the story is dreadful. The script writer is to blame. It is like they waited until the last moments of the story and, then, blew them up minute by minute. He spied for 22 years and they have about a month in this story. Moles in the security agencies are the worst fear, and they put this one in charge of finding himself... There has been a long history of the CIA and FBI being the worst ever at preventing leaks. The Russian A bomb came from such a leak.
"The life of another liar", Eric O'Neill (Ryan Phillippe), a young FBI employee who is desperate to become an agent, is assigned to spy on Robert Hanssen (Chris Cooper), a top FBI agent, family man and devout Catholic, who also happens to have been selling government secrets to the Russians for the past 16 years.
"Breach" is writer/director Billy Ray's second film as director and touches on many of the same themes as his first film, "Shattered Glass" (about fabulist Stephen Glass). Both films are based on the true stories of men whose whole lives were based on falsehoods and both films deal with the downfall and resulting implications of their demise for these men and those around them. Being a huge fan of "Shattered Glass", it came as no surprise to me that I also liked "Breach". In a way, the strong similarities between "Shattered Glass" and "Breach" detracted from "Breach", since I would have liked to see Billy Ray extend himself more. Nevertheless, "Breach" is still a great film.
Although Robert Hanssen was a traitor to his country, instead of portraying him as a man who is purely evil, he is portrayed as a weak man who still has some good features. That is, he is portrayed as a human being, albeit a flawed one, rather than a cardboard cut-out villain. Chris Cooper gives an excellent performance in this role. This isn't the first film I've seen him in (in fact, it's the seventh), but it's the first time that I've really taken any notice of him.
The script of this film is also great, if a little bit by-the-book (its structure follows that given in screenwriting texts to the letter, not that that's a bad thing). When you think about it, a film about one man spying on his boss has the potential to be completely boring. Yet, Ray turns this into a well-written, well-paced thriller with plenty of moments of genuine tension. Several of the scenes in the film seem far too cinematic to be true, which makes me wonder how close this film kept to the fact. Nevertheless, even if this film turns out to be 95% fiction, that doesn't take away from the fact that this is a highly enjoyable movie that will make you think.
"spy game", BREACH is thrilling even if you know the outcome. Actually knowing the outcome makes it at times more tense and interesting. Waiting for the inevitable can have more an effect than not knowing what's coming. Basically this is one of those rare true life stories that is as weird, if not weirder than Hollywood could make up. FBI agent Robert Hanseen sold government secrets to the Russians for 20 years, making him the biggest traitor in all of U.S. history. Chris Cooper is one of the finest actors working today. Of Robert Hanseen Cooper says he is the most contradicted character he has ever played. After seeing the film you can understand where Cooper is coming from. You might feel Hanseen is the most contradicted person you ever heard of. Robert Hanseen was an ultra-conservative and like many conservative types seemed to be talking out one side of his head while going off and acting in ways that, well, don't quite fit with his professed belief system. To say the least. The DVD includes some useful bonus material. Recommended to the general public, highly recommended to serious film fans and required viewing for fans of spy thrillers.
""Breach"", This movie was not as action-packed as I had thought it would be. I enjoyed the story, but to be quite honest, it came to a close rather abruptly. However, the acting was great!
"Your FBI at work, and after only 20 years of traitorous leaks, they bust the case. Chris Cooper is superb", What do you do with an FBI traitor who for 20 years was feeding serious secrets to the Soviets and then to Russia? If you're the FBI, you don't follow up on tips about the guy, you don't get curious that his expensive life style doesn't match his FBI salary, you ignore his extensive, private hetero kinkiness even though a murmur about homosexuality would get another person booted out the door, and you sure don't want to look too hard and then find a scandal on your hands like the CIA's Aldrich Ames.
It was in 1979, three years after he joined the FBI, that Robert Hanssen started his career as a spy. It wasn't until 1999 that it occurred to the FBI to look closely at Hanssen. At one point, concerned about the possibility of a mole in their midst, the FBI actually had Hanssen investigating any possible moles within the FBI.
Don't look for FBI culpability in Breach. The movie barely alludes to all this, yet this is the real story of Robert Hanssen. What we have, instead, is a genuinely fascinating story of the final hunt to nail Hanssen, the hunt for evidence that would stand up in court. To get that evidence the FBI, finally on the job, sends in Eric O'Neill, a young man without much experience to be Hanssen's gofer. The hope is that Hanssen will not see this fellow as a threat and may let down his guard. If the FBI is going to nail Hanssen, they need to catch him in the act of sending classified information to the Russians. Without this, the best they can do is fire him. It's no spoiler to say that Robert Hanssen was arrested in 2001 and is now serving a life sentence in a high security prison, restricted to solitary confinement 23 hours a day. Eric O'Neill did his job.
That outstanding actor, Chris Cooper, plays Hanssen. It's a magnificent performance, stuffed full with intelligence, arrogance, suspicion, threat and conflict. Hanssen is not a likeable guy, but he's shrewd and smart. The contest between Hanssen's deep suspicions toward anyone and Eric O'Neill's odd combination of apparent naivety and resourceful quick thinking keeps the movie, for the most part, speeding right along. The one real weakness is Laura Linney as O'Neill's boss. It's an unnecessary part and just seems to sit there as a way to feature a star name who can be used now and then for some plot exposition. As much as I like Linney, every time she's on screen I'm reminded that I'm watching a Hollywood movie. That goes for some of the secondary parts, too. The movie needed faces we'd never seen before, except for Cooper. Instead there are too many vaguely familiar Hollywood faces, such as Gary Cole, Dennis Haysbert, and Kathleen Quinlan. They all do good jobs, but their familiarity is distracting.
Ryan Phillippe as Eric O'Neill gives a first-class, nuanced performance. O'Neill is not thrilled with what he's called upon to do. He can't tell anyone, including his wife, and she's not happy with his long and erratic hours. It's a dangerous, high stress job and the man he's trying to catch is no dummy. Phillippe holds his own with Cooper. It's unfortunate that he has one of those youngish, generically handsome faces. He's a good actor, and I think his looks get in the way of critical appreciation of his skills. The movie stands or falls on the actor who plays Hanssen. Chris Cooper is so good and so believable it's a pleasure to sit back and lose yourself in his performance. He's been memorable is so many movies, but one of his best performances (and a favorite of mine) is in Lone Star.
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Read this reviews before You buy...
"Chris Cooper is great . . .", This intelligent, well-directed/well-written film is about the famous contemporary spy for the Russians, Robert Hanssen - an FBI agent selling secrets for over 20 years until caught.
Besides telling a great story, veteran actor Chris Cooper (you might not even recognize the name, but you'll know him when you see him) turns in a sterling performance as the quirky, smart, religious Hanssen. He "makes the movie" in my opinion and is fascinating to watch and analyze as he works through this. I don't know the personality of the real Robert Hanssen, but Cooper's interpretation of him is golden.
Kudos to Ryan Phillipe as the young counter-spy, Eric O'Neill, who brings down Hanssen. Laura Linney does a credible job as O'Neill's boss in the FBI's counter-spy operation.
As a refreshing change, this is a "police movie", without all of the over-the-top fake bravado and continual pistol waving. Thoughtful, intelligent, extremely interesting. A pleasant surprise - recommended.
"The great acting cannot overcome the pace", Breach is a classic espionage movie. Eric O'Neill (Ryan Philippe) is sent to work on the daunting task of spying on a spy. He's paired with a veteran agent named Robert Hanssen (Chris Cooper). Initially, O'Neill is given the assignment by Agent Burroughs (Laura Linney) under the guise that Hanssen has been posting sexual content on the web. Eventually he discovers that Hanssen is involved in something much more despicable.
From there it's a somewhat tense battle of wills as O'Neill, Burroughs, and all involved do whatever they can to uncover the web of lies and deceit being perpetrated by Hanssen, while he does everything he can to hide his intention and his actions.
It's well acted, and the story itself is fairly interesting. If it were a documentary on the History channel, I would have been much more interested - because there would have been many more details. And while I appreciate the fact that it stayed true to the content, there was simply something lacking in the delivery of the story, not to mention the fact that the explanation of Hanssen's actions was nearly absent. Sooner or later there needs to be a little bit of video stimulation to go along with the audio counterpart.
In the end it's a spy movie that falls flat because of bad pacing, painfully slow sequences, long-winded and uninteresting dialogue, and a great deal of disappointment. The movie is coma-inducing during portions of the movie, slower than wheelchair stuck the mud, and much like running on the beach, the arduous effort doesn't seem to be nearly as worthwhile or as running on a flat surface.
"Breach", This movie is very good. It showed that even the FBI had one rotten apple. I'm glad the FBI caught Robert Philip Hanssen. I hope there are no more like him.
"Fascinating subject matter let down by obvious treatment", "Breach" tells the fascinating true story of the final few months in the career of FBI veteran Robert Hanssen leading up to his arrest for being a traitor in 2001. The film reinforces the hypocrisy of Hanssen - on the one hand attending church everyday yet on the other betraying his country and indulging in deviant sexual practices. Unfortunately the film lays things on a bit too obviously especially at the very end detracting from the impact. Ryan Phillipe is good as the Hanssen's clerk Eric O'Neill, sent in to monitor Hanssen in his final few months, but the other key characters Hanssen (Chris Cooper), O'Neill's boss (Laura Linney), and O'Neill's wife are all somewhat one-dimensional.
"A true story about a spy who almost got away with a lifetime of treachery", Who wouldn't believe a guy who went to church daily, was a devoted family man with a loving wife and several children, who lived modestly, and went everyday to his job as FBI Agent in Washington, D.C. for 22 years?
Yet, this man, Robert Hanssen, spyed for the Soviets for all of those 22 years so convincingly that he almost got away with what is called the most devastating breach of U.S. security in history.
Chris Cooper recreates the man, Robert Hanssen, with an intensity that is uncanny. He portrays the secrecy, the duplicity, and the Dr. Jekyl - Mr. Hyde personality of Hanssen brilliantly. The cast which includes Laura Linney and Kathleen Quinlan is excellent as well.
Breach is unnerving, fascinating, chilling, and suspenseful, even though we know what the ending will be at the beginning. The best film I have seen in a long time.
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