Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House
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Release Year: 2017
Rating: 6.4/10 ( voted)
Critic's Score: /100
Director: Peter Landesman
Stars: Liam Neeson, Diane Lane, Marton Csokas
Storyline
The story of
Writers: Peter Landesman, Mark Felt, Liam Neeson, Diane Lane, Marton Csokas, Liam Neeson, Diane Lane, Marton Csokas, Tony Goldwyn, Ike Barinholtz, Josh Lucas, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Kate Walsh, Brian d'Arcy James, Maika Monroe, Michael C. Hall, Tom Sizemore, Julian Morris, Bruce Greenwood, Noah Wyle, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Cast: Liam Neeson -
Mark Felt
Diane Lane -
Audrey Felt
Marton Csokas -
L. Patrick Gray
Tony Goldwyn -
Ed Miller
Ike Barinholtz -
Angelo Lano
Josh Lucas -
Charlie Bates
Wendi McLendon-Covey -
Carol Tschudy
Kate Walsh -
Pat Miller
Brian d'Arcy James -
Robert Kunkel
Maika Monroe -
Joan Felt
Michael C. Hall -
John Dean
Tom Sizemore -
Bill Sullivan
Julian Morris -
Bob Woodward
Bruce Greenwood -
Sandy Smith
Noah Wyle -
Stan Pottinger
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 3 Jan 2017
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
This is Eddie Marsan and Peter Landsman's first collaboration since Concussion (2015). See more »
User Review
Author:
Rating: 8/10
A brief clip of Walter Cronkite on TV in "Mark Felt..." reminded me of
the authority the legendary newscaster generated back in the day, and
star Liam Neeson likewise lends immeasurable gravitas to this film of
ideas, a tangential look at the Watergate case.
Just as Mark Felt, self-identified decades later to be the mysterious
Deep Throat who aided Woodward & Bernstein in revealing to the public
the White House wrongdoings, is a footnote in American history, so too
this well-made movie is destined to be a mere footnote in film history.
That's because it does not fit into popular genres, specifically the
thriller, but is more the province of television drama in the 21st
Century.
Back in the day, this would have been an A-production release from
United Artists or later Columbia Pictures in the Stanley Kramer vein,
his films about ideas and problem subjects like "The Men" with Brando
or "Home of the Brave", but nowadays it is up to successor company to
Columbia, specialty division, namely Sony Pictures Classics, to bring
this worthy effort to a blasé public.
I happen to love movies of this type, far more than the Action Man
pictures like "Taken" that have made of middle-aged actor Neeson an
iconic action figure. The best movie I recall is "Command Decision", a
war movie, but minus the action, and more recently (though 2 decades
back) the excellent "Executive Decision" starring Kurt Russell.
Felt's importance at the FBI, notably in the wake of J. Edgar's death,
is the principal thrust of Peter Landesman's film. It moves along on a
low flame, tension mounting imperceptibly under the handicap of the
viewer being already aware, certainly in broad strokes, of the
incidents being covered in the wake of the burglary of Dem offices at
D.C.'s Watergate Hotel, as well as the ultimate outcome. But using
insider Felt's point- of-view gives us an interesting vantage point.
Neeson as Felt is a noir hero, self-divided and trying to do the right
thing but caught in a malevolent universe where, to paraphrase TV's
"The Fugitive", fate is moving a huge hand. His conflict with new
acting FBI head Gray, well-played subtly by Marton Csokas, is quite
believable, and helps to add depth to the otherwise black & white
"whose side are you on" in the story's depiction of a war between the
evil White House and the "standing up for our country" FBI.
It is Felt's personal life that creates the movie's emotional core, at
first seeming irrelevant but actually paying off by movie's end more
forcefully than the character's heroics. He's carrying a torch for his
missing daughter Joan (Maika Monroe, in an understated turn), who
brings in a serious subplot of the society's counterculture from the
'60s and a different kind of terrorism than that confronting the nation
and the FBI today. Felt's belated war against the Weather Underground
and other leftist domestic groups is what proves to be his personal
downfall, as he ends up resorting to horrible, illegal tactics just as
his dreaded villain of a former co-worker Sullivan (smoothly played by
instant bad guy Tom Sizemore) and innumerable Nixon cronies did. I
found Felt's Jekyll & Hyde split personality traits of honor vs.
expediency to be the core of the movie's subdued power.
Casting of Monroe was a big help, as she closely resembles mom Diane
Lane, the latter actress doing well in a very difficult role that
suffers in Landesman's writing from a bit too many '50s/'60s clichés of
the unfulfilled woman trapped in a marriage that rendered her totally
subservient/dependent on her husband.
NOTE: Previous review posted on IMDb is a trashing of the movie by
someone who hadn't seen it -just assuming how bad and slanted it would
be. I've wished this website would control such poor and distracting
behavior by users -antithetical to the whole purpose of submitting
reviews.
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