Enemy of the State
Nobody seems more concerned with civil liberties these days than Hollywood.
Joining the specter of martial law raised in The Siege is the threat of
government invasion of privacy in Enemy of the State, a glitzy,
thoughtful, overlong paranoid thriller by Tony Scott that suffers from
derivativeness and a surplus of satellite imagery, car crashes, and hammered
keyboards.
Will Smith is plucky and vulnerable as Robert Dean, a smooth corporate lawyer
drawn unwittingly into becoming a bastion of the Fourth Amendment. The
inadvertent recipient of a tape of a political assassination plotted by rogue
National Security Agency administrator Reynolds (Jon Voight, oddly resembling
Ken Starr), he's stunned as his plush life collapses. He's implicated in
scandal, his wife dumps him, he loses his job, his credit cards are rejected,
people try to kill him. More insidious and powerful than the CIA, the NSA has
access to mind-boggling espionage technology -- bugs, computers, satellites,
nerdy hackers -- that make every citizen's life a Truman Show.
Only Brill (a crotchety Gene Hackman) -- a shadowy surveillance expert -- can
help Dean fight back. Enemy's debt to Coppola's brilliant The
Conversation is acknowledged not just by the casting of Hackman but by a
painstaking, if gratuitous, re-creation of that film's opening scene. Wim
Wenders is less lucky, though Gabriel Byrne from his The End of Violence
-- which Enemy copies in style and subject -- has a bit part. And
Scott filches from himself with the True Romance-like ending. Although
clever and provocative, Enemy is hardly state of the art. At the
Harbour Mall, Lincoln Mall, Showcase, Starcase, Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket
cinemas.
-- Peter Keough