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Operation Finale

  • Film
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures
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Time Out says

3 out of 5 stars

Despite its engaging performances, this real-life story about Israel's hunt for a war criminal moves through rote plot points with uninventive efficiency.

Any cognitive dissonance that may arise from watching Ben Kingsley – the actor who played Gandhi – interpret genocidal monster Adolf Eichmann dissipates quickly in ‘Operation Finale’: Kingsley delivers a complex and masterful performance, generating more empathy for a Nazi than you might expect. Oscar Isaac is effective as the Israeli agent on his tail in 1960s Argentina, and their weighty interactions at a safe house call to mind Clarice Starling’s early encounters with Hannibal Lecter – a younger agent battling a seasoned villain through a chess-like sequence of probing, dueling dialogues.

Still, Isaac can’t match Kingsley’s subtle bravado. And that one-sided power dynamic raises a thorny issue: What happens when your Nazi mastermind is the most compelling thing about a historical drama? In ‘Schindler’s List’, Steven Spielberg solved a similar challenge by leveraging rich, relatable performances from Kingsley and Liam Neeson against the hypnotic vitriol of Ralph Fiennes’s vicious lieutenant. But director Chris Weitz's ‘Operation Finale’ fails to offer a noble character who can offset the frightening charms of Kingsley's Eichmann (a fleeting exception: Simon Russell Beale’s 90 seconds as eloquent prime minister David Ben Gurion).

The technical elements of the film are strong, and Alexandre Desplat’s score is outstanding, but the cast deserves a better script than first-timer Matthew Orton’s workmanlike effort. Rarely does the movie spark terror or raise the pulse; it is neither gripping nor ambivalent enough to command the respect of Spielberg’s similarly-themed ‘Munich’. But as a showdown of wits, it’s engaging enough, with Kingsley wrangling memorable nuance from an unlikely role.

Written by
Daniel Gallant

Release Details

  • Rated:15
  • Release date:Tuesday 2 October 2018
  • Duration:123 mins

Cast and crew

  • Director:Chris Weitz
  • Screenwriter:Matthew Orton
  • Cast:
    • Melanie Laurent
    • Oscar Isaac
    • Ben Kingsley
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