An excerpt from my review in the May 23rd issue of The American Conservative, available to electronic subscribers tonight:
"The  Interpreter," starring Sean Penn as a Secret Service agent charged with  protecting a Robert Mugabe-style African dictator visiting the United Nations  and Nicole Kidman as a translator who overhears a plot to assassinate the  kleptocrat, received a rather warm welcome from critics and opening weekend  audiences because 2005 has been so lacking in Hollywood movies for grown-ups.  One suspenseful set-piece tracking a terrorist on a Brooklyn bus temporarily  justifies the movie's thudding, screeching score, but, overall, this portentous,  inane, and interminable film gives maturity a bad name.
 Directors seldom ripen with age, and the septuagenarian Sydney Pollack, maker of  "Three Days of the Condor" and "Out of Africa," is no  exception. We like to imagine that directors are artists with profound insights  into the human predicament, but they more resemble battlefield commanders  relying upon the charismatic confidence and sleepless energy of the prime of  life, not the wisdom of age, to make countless quick decisions.
 Imagine that after months wheedling permission to be the first to film inside  the UN, it's the day to shoot the crucial encounter between Penn, so florid and  furrowed, and Kidman, so pale and smooth. But your leading lady shows up with a  pimple, and all that your make-up artists can do is powder it down to a  not-quite-subliminal blemish on her otherwise flawless complexion.
 So, do you call Kofi Annan and beg to be allowed back in a week when Nicole's  lip has healed? Or do you throw out your planned close-ups? Or maybe you could  backlight her? Your 120 or so highly-paid crew members are looking to you for  decisions.
 Pollack, though, just tiredly plows ahead, making uninspired choices that fail  to encourage suspension of disbelief in the frequently ludicrous plot.    
 My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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