‘Breach’ is a truly adult thriller
This spy-vs.-mole tale is often worthy of Hitchcock
![]() | Young FBI trainee Eric O'Neill (Ryan Phillippe) is lectured on becoming a godly man by renowned operative and suspected spy Robert Hanssen (Chris Cooper) in "Breach." |
Universal Pictures |
Slideshow |
November movies The “Twilight” sequel, “New Moon” hits the big screen, along with George Clooney in “The Men Who Stare at Goats” and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and the apocalyptic “2012” and “The Road.” more photos |
Video: Celebrity interviews |
Taylor Lautner On ‘New Moon’ madness Nov. 10: Taylor Lautner tells Shaun Robinson about the craziness surrounding his life and how he handles it. |
The first truly adult American film of the new year, Billy Ray’s “Breach” is the mostly true story of Robert Hanssen, an FBI agent who became a spy for the Soviets. Currently serving a life sentence, he was responsible for at least three deaths and the loss of billions of dollars.
Chris Cooper plays him as a mass of contradictions: smart and tough, bigoted and sentimental, deeply religious yet apparently addicted to internet porn — and self-pitying in a way that allows him to rationalize his lethal betrayals and call them patriotic. The role is an actor’s dream, and Cooper brilliantly captures the enigmatic personality at its center.
We get to know Hanssen through Eric O’Neill, a cocky agent-in-training who has been assigned to assist him—and catch him in an act of treason. At first Hanssen humiliates him with boot-camp insults (“you really are as dumb as a bag of hammers”), but eventually he takes a paternal interest in the younger man.
|
Ray and his co-writers, Adam Mazer and William Rotko, use O’Neill’s small lies and hypocrisies to reflect on Hanssen’s much larger and more damaging fabrications. There’s a hall-of-mirrors quality about their deceptions. On the surface, Hanssen seems the perfect husband and churchgoer, while O’Neill is so stressed out he becomes impossible to live with.
Ray achieved something similar, if on a smaller scale, in his 2003 film, “Shattered Glass,” based on the life of New Republic reporter Stephen Glass, whose imaginative articles turned out to be too colorful to be true. “Breach” complicates the situation by raising the stakes.
Ryan Phillippe plays O’Neill almost as a blank slate at first, but as O’Neill gets closer to Hanssen, Phillippe deftly explores the character’s doubts and compromises. A turning point is reached when Hanssen and his wife (Kathleen Quinlan) turn up at the apartment shared by O’Neill and his wife (Caroline Dhavernas) — and threaten to take over their lives.
As Ray tells it, this spy-vs.-mole tale is often worthy of Hitchcock, especially the Hitchcock who humanized spies and made their difficult choices so involving. As it does in Hitchcock’s “Notorious,” espionage ultimately takes a back seat to the alliances people form in spite of their intentions.
It would be so easy (and so uninteresting) if monsters like Hanssen were merely bad, or if informers like O’Neill were one-dimensionally good, but the tension in “Breach” comes from getting to know them and realize their frailties. Prayer is presented as a crutch for Hanssen through much of the film. By the end, it’s so much more than that.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AT THE MOVIES |
| Add At the movies headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide



