Looking at Soderbergh's filmography you will see an interesting pattern. He will make a film targeted at the mainstream audience and then make a couple that are more for the arthouse. Recently, it seems that you get an Ocean's film with the likes of Bubble and The Girlfriend Experience in between. Then you get something like The Informant!, which is easy to advertise as a mass appeal film, with Matt Damon and moments that are reminiscent of the Ocean's series. By the time you are actually in the theater and realize it is not quite what you expected, it is too late. What is hoped for at this point is that you like what you see.
Mark Whitacre (Matt Damon, who put on a lot of weight for the role) is an ivy-league educated scientist who has risen to high levels at Archer Daniels Midland, a large company based in Illinois. While working on a particularly troubling project, combined with unofficial talks with competitors, a case of espionage comes to light. The FBI swoops in with Agent Brian Shepard (Scott Bakula) taking the lead.
Mark cooperates with Shepard to point of clearing himself in the process. The problem is that he knows more than he initially lets on. As Shepard is going to leave, Mark, at the urging of his wife, tells Shepard about a global price fixing scam. This puts Mark right back in the middle as the FBI urge him to wear a wire and collect as much information as he could.
The film, written by Scott Z. Burns based on Kurt Eichenwald's book, starts strong as this fascinating character of Mark Whitacre is developed and the story begins its complex and winding road. The problem is that as the story moves forward and the layers of lies are peeled away, the tale loses steam. The screenplay becomes less interesting, ultimately dragging a little as we reach the end.
The best part of the film is Matt Damon. It does not seem to matter what he does, he always makes it interesting. He is funny, charming, awkward, deceptive, and deluded all at the same time. Particularly early on, he is fascinating to watch.
Bottomline. This is a good, not great, movie. It has solid direction, good performances, and a look that feels accurate to the depicted time. I enjoyed the time I spent with it and feel it is well worth checking out, I just do not see myself revisiting it all that often.
Recommended.
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