Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

An essential viewing based on real life

- RASHID IRANI

MARK FELT: THE MAN WHO BROUGHT DOWN THE WHITE HOUSE Direction: Peter Landesman Actors: Liam Neeson, Diane Lane Rating:

This is a career-defining role for Liam Neeson. In a taut and timely film based on real life, he plays Mark Felt, the FBI whistleblo­wer who exposed the Watergate scandal.

…The Man Who Brought Down the White House combines the elements of historical drama, biopic and political thriller in a precise and unshowy effort by director Peter Landesman.

Mark Felt was deputy director of the FBI under J Edgar Hoover in 1972, confronted the Republican administra­tion head-on, defied the acting FBI chief (Marton Csokas) despite restrainin­g orders and persisted in the Watergate break-in investigat­ion, even leaking classified informatio­n to the media.

The trail of corruption and political chicanery led all the way to the Oval Office and implicated President Richard Nixon.

Somewhat unreasonab­ly, the role of the two Washington Post reporters who first broke the story, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, is underplaye­d.

Felt, of course, is better known by his pseudonym, Deep Throat. It was only a few years before his death in 2008 that he revealed his true identity.

In the film, we are made privy to the minutiae of Felt’s family life, the disappeara­nce of his young daughter; his long-suffering wife (played by the ever-dependable Diane Lane).

This is a film conceived, shot and edited with old-fashioned scrupulous­ness.

Like its celebrated predecesso­r, All the President’s Men (1976), Mark Felt… is essential viewing.

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A still from the movie
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