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till
mourning the sudden and unexplained loss of a loved father after
more than 10 years, James Clayton (Farrell), a computer genius in
the totally hot, two-day growth mould, is approached by Walter Burke
(Pacino), a recruiting agent for the CIA.
Burke
has a longstanding reputation among his peers for picking the cream
of the crop and, as training progresses, the best among the best.
In
Clayton he is as sure as ever he has picked a winner - the NOC -
the agent who goes deepest under cover, with no backup - the one
who, when caught is not now or never has been known to the government
of the United States of America.
At
"The Farm" training progresses as training might, with
Clayton living up to expectations. But, in the fullness of time,
a promising career is suddenly and dramatically brought to a premature
end when, after resisting gruelling, demeaning and extreme physical
torture, the recruit succumbs to the most basic male weakness -
feelings for a woman.
After
discharge from "The Farm", booze and self-pity are as
good hiding places as any.
After
taking a few minor, but none too unexpected twists to this point,
The Recruit suddenly makes a huge u-turn.
And
from here on in, it takes so many unusual, unexpected and dramatic
u-turns that, if one were not paying attention, one might be left
dazed and bemused wondering exactly which way one was supposed to
be facing. But, thankfully, we were awake to every possible twist
because I lost count of how many times it was reinforced that "nothing
is as it seems" and "trust no one".
The
Recruit is full of twists, turns, surprises, intrigue and thinking
requirements but just a little too light on for action for my liking
- so much so that I was bordering on boredom.
On
the other hand Mrs Irish Git was thoroughly entertained and excited
by the whole thing - not shutting her gob all the way home in the
car - not that that's much out of the ordinary, if you know what
I mean.
Or
was it Colin Farrell (more fine acting talent from the land of saints
and scholars) that turned her on?
And
the two-day growth I mentioned earlier - funny how it was exactly
the same length day in and day out for the months supposedly spanned
by the movie. That must have been a nightmare for the continuity
guy.
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