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A subtler, cooler Spielberg

Updated - October 25, 2015 02:54 am IST

Published - October 24, 2015 04:20 pm IST

The superb new Spielberg movie is a showcase for the superb new Spielberg

A still from 'Bridge of Spies'.

When wethink of Steven Spielberg, we think in terms of his set pieces — those extended sequences in which all filmmaking elements coalesce with breathtaking logistical planning — and there’s a doozy of a set piece in the director’s superb Bridge of Spies . But first, a bit of background. It’s 1957, the height of the Cold War. A Soviet spy named Rudolf Abel is captured in Brooklyn and sent to trial, defended by an insurance lawyer named James Donovan. Despite Donovan’s spirited arguments, Abel is found guilty and sentenced to prison, until the capture of an American spy by the Russians makes Abel a valuable bargaining chip. Give us our man, the Americans say, and we’ll let you have Abel. The exchange will take place in Germany, and the set piece kicks in around the time Donovan goes there, as the Wall is being built.

The camera moves back and forth, capturing blocks of stone and barbed wire being dropped in place to divide a nation, and we see, simultaneously, people trying to leave East Germany and go to the West. The thing that links all this activity is the arrest of an American student, Frederic Pryor. He cycles from West to East, finds his girlfriend, asks her to leave at once, they cycle back to the Wall… only to find that the last stone is being lowered. Indiana Jones found himself in a similar situation once, when his enemies left him behind in the crypt where he found the Ark — there too, a slab of stone blocked off his exit. But that Spielberg was out to thrill us, whereas the Spielberg of Bridge of Spies isn’t out to dazzle. This set piece doesn’t scream for attention. It just is. We’re being shown what happened to Frederic Pryor and around Frederic Pryor that day. It’s still a master class on how to transform pages of a talky screenplay into pure cinema — only now, there’s a subtler magician on stage.

With films like

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Munich and

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Bridge of Spies , Spielberg has moved to a realm of artistry where he’s able to put out ideas and also give us cinema, which is something of a Holy Grail for mainstream filmmakers who aren’t just interested in box-office success. How to entertain versus how to educate. How to make us enjoy the film (a function of our senses) and yet make us think (a function of the intellect). Spielberg balances it all beautifully. From an overhead train in Germany, Donovan looks down on people being shot as they try to scale the wall. Back home, he looks down from another train and sees kids climbing casually over suburban fences. It’s a contrast, yes, but as in Munich, it’s also a reminder that the horrors we witness never really leave us. It wasn’t that Spielberg wasn’t doing any of this earlier, but even his “serious films” like

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Schindler’s List were sensory experiences. We were sucked into the drama on screen. Now, he’s cooler, more detached.

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But where

Schindler’s List seems like a slice of history, a glimpse into a world that once was,
Munich and
Bridge of Spies come off as past events whose echoes are felt even today. When there’s madness all around, how does one keep his sanity and do the right thing, the decent thing — especially when this course of action gets you labelled a Boy Scout, a bleeding-heart liberal? How does one treat a prisoner of war? These questions come up in
Bridge of Spies and they’re all around us today.

Bridge of Spies tells us that there are two sides to everything. Seen through American eyes, Abel is a Commie rat. There’s a stunning cut — perhaps an editorial decision, perhaps it was written that way — when the judge enters the courtroom and we hear the words “all rise,” but we move to a classroom where children get up and proclaim their allegiance to the American flag. This is the Normal Rockwell picture of life that people like Abel are threatening. And yet, isn’t Abel, from Russia’s viewpoint, a patriot, a hero even? I was reminded of the Alexander-Porus legend — they were enemies who recognised that the other was merely doing what one was doing himself. Had Spielberg made Schindler’s List today, he may have given the monstrous Nazi commandant Amon Goeth (played so chillingly by Ralph Fiennes) a more human face. We’d still have hated him, but maybe we’d have seen that he was a product of his times, like we all are.

Baradwaj Rangan is

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The Hindu’s cinema critic

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