The Good Shepherd
By Geoff Hoppe
December 31, 2006 - 18:50
I saw The Good Shepherd with an old high school friend. Five years ago, he was my classmate in AP world history. Now he’s a West Point graduate and Military Intelligence officer (he’ll go to

The Good Shepherd is a glossy, sneaky propaganda real, albeit one with excellent direction and wonderful acting. The CIA is hammered again and again by director Robert DeNiro. Not that
The Good Shepherd’s accusations aren’t direct, however. They’re filtered through the lens of protagonist Edward Wilson (Matt Damon), a patriotic patrician whose intelligence career begins as an undergrad at

The Good Shepherd’s basic plotline is about the search for a mole in the CIA, one whose involvement botched the
Stargazers will enjoy this picture. There are countless famous people and good actors, though they aren’t always used well. Joe Pesci plays a brilliant bit part as a casino owner. Unfortunately, his purpose is to be a straight man. “We Italians—we have our families and the church. The Irish—they have the homeland. The blacks have their music. What do you people have, Mr. Wilson?” he asks Matt Damon’s WASPy protagonist. “We have the

It’s the supporting actors who truly shine—John Turturro’s sleepy-eyed, omnipresent enforcer, Michael Gambon’s regal portrayal of a Yale poetry professor, Oleg Stefan’s subtle, powerful performance as the Soviet intelligence god merely known as “Ulysses.”

Worth the money? Heck no. In fact, I plan to raise a big middle finger to this movie—and to
P.S. Know what I couldn’t get out of my head during this movie? The way Matt Damon kept screaming MATT DAMON!!! in Team
