In the Line of Fire Movie Review
In the Line of Fire Review
"In the Line of Fire" Overview

Rating: R
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Wolfgang PetersenProducer : Jeff Apple
Screenwiter : Jeff Maguire
Starring : Clint Eastwood,John Malkovich,Rene Russo,Dylan McDermott,Gary Cole,John Mahoney,Fred Dalton Thomas
Clint Eastwood was a legend a long time before Wolfgang Petersen decided to cast
him as an aging Secret Service agent trying to derail a psychopath who's trying to
assassinate the President. But Petersen's movie, titled In the Line of Fire, benefits
immensely from his history and his presence, his ironclad persona as last man standing.
Sporting a well-cut suit jacket rather than a poncho and a pair of holsters, Eastwood's
steely resolve still has the power to rejuvenate otherwise rote plot conventions with
every sliver of his gravelly voice, as if questioning his opponents' manhood with
every flick of an adverb.
Eastwood plays Frank Horrigan, the kind of man who comes home after a long day of
booby-trapping money counterfeiters and wants nothing else than to get out of his
suit, drink a good glass of bourbon, and listen to Kind of Blue. Just as he's settling
into one of these comfortable slumps, he receives a phone call from a man who calls
himself Booth (John Malkovich). Sober and staid, Booth tells Frank that he's going
to kill the president. The fact that Booth's deserted apartment is found with a singular
photo of Frank when he was an agent under JFK underlines Horrigan's conviction.
Petersen is playing cat-and-mouse, but he's doing so on a grand scale. It's Dirt
y Harry goes to Washington. Scribe Jeff Maguire saddles the film with a light romance
between Horrigan and a hot-to-trot female agent, ably played by Rene Russo, plus
a bureaucratic maelstrom cooked up by a presidential advisor (Fred Dalton Thomas)
and the postulant agent-in-charge for the Secret Service (Gary Cole). The wolf-and-cub
play between Frank and his young partner (Dylan McDermott) comes off as custard:
cute enough but ultimately benign.
No matter the distractions and sleight of hand, the fireworks are all Eastwood and
Malkovich. Whereas Eastwood is all accountable, hard-assed efficiency, Malkovich
is a study in brooding frenzy. It takes Horrigan a while to pinpoint Booth's soft
spots, but the villain has the agent's number from the get-go and has a devil of a
time spinning him. It's a devil of a time to watch as well. When Frank does finally
break Booth's calm seal, there's an outburst, but we see nothing of it again until
the visceral, if not preposterous, ending. The consistent professional, Malkovich
segues back into cool menace without a moment of hesitation.
Petersen's commendable pacing throws down the gauntlet and Malkovich and Eastwood
savor the thrusts and parries, perhaps even a little too much. Nothing else in the
picture has the hope of standing up to these throttling psychological battles, all
the more impressive since they are mostly done on the phone. The aged friendship between
Horrigan and the Director of the Secret Service (John Mahoney) has a conversant strum
to it, but soon enough, it becomes a simple procedure vs. experience argument between
two ragged old-timers. That's the point: Petersen wants us to think that Frank has
a life beyond topping Booth and tries to prove it with these slight moments of placid
social life, but nobody else matters. Frank and Booth were made for each other.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





