“Body of Lies” has it all… almost: an excellent director,
Ridley Scott, big names on the cast list, Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe, as
well as a gripping subject that contains a significant drop of espionage and
terrorism on a hazardous Middle East background. The spots seem both
interesting and dangerous, as the focal points of their depictions are the traditions
and conducts of the people who live there. The action-packed continuous spin of
intelligence games, political plots and volatile, almost vicious scenes of
violence, are astutely combined with judicious remarks on contemporary relationships
between states and cultural differences, but that can barely make up for the
fact that “Body of Lies” lacks, however, a story that makes it feel distinctive.
Leonardo DiCaprio fills the fast moving shoes of Roger
Ferris, a CIA operative who although respects his job, is not directly targeted
by the consequences of his actions, at least during the first major part of the
film. He may sound or appear to be concerned about his mission, but he is far
from being in the line of fire and, thus, moviegoers remain as distant and
uninvolved as he is.
As a result of this rather simple scheme, you will try to hang
around good-naturedly hoping for the real story to eventually break down the
door, but you will nevertheless understand sooner or later that there’s nothing
more to come and that’s about it.
Ferris’ unworried boss, Ed Hoffman, impersonated by Russell
Crowe, does not bat an eyelash when his subordinate yells and explains that he
is worried sick about the plans that don’t work out according to their initial
schemes. And this is exactly the idea the movie is supposed to hold: agents on
the ground discern some things better than their superiors, who, stimulated by
political matters, give orders that usually generate chaotic and out of control
situations.
The movie mainly concentrates on Ferris’ assignment to hunt
down a Middle Eastern terrorist leader who has been planning several dangerous
attacks in Europe. However, the treacherous
nature of the agent’s mission can’t possibly stand in the way of love and,
therefore, Ferris falls in love with a nurse, played by Golshifteh Farahani.
Although DiCaprio’s vitality and strength spice up the clichéd
plot a little bit, his character has no other choice than moving back and forth
in an attempt to produce drama that never really comes to surface.
The best moment of the film is probably the one in which
several SUVs circle Ferris in the middle of the desert, provoking an
impenetrable cloud of sand, while the agent is abducted and dragged into one of
the vehicles. Hoffman feels puzzled as he watches the whole scene via satellite
and, as each SUV drives away in a different direction, he has no idea which car
to track in order to find Ferris.
From lust to dust… this is the track “Body of Lies”
involuntarily follows. Whatever it aims to be, it merely manages to obtain the
audience’s indifference.