Chicago Sun-Times

CONFUSED ‘OLD MAN’

Jeff Bridges spy story swings from amazing action to far-fetched plot and back

- RICHARD ROEPER rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Just when we think we’re pulled back in, they push us out. There’s much to admire about the FX action-drama series “The Old Man,” starting with the powerful and nuanced work from Jeff Bridges, who has survived lifethreat­ening battles with COVID and cancer, and there are some stunningly effective moments that play like a septuagena­rian take on “The Fugitive” crossed with a “Bourne” movie.

But virtually every time we’re ready to fully commit, the script veers off in a direction that defies plausibili­ty, stalls the main storyline, or introduces a new wrinkle that is completely out of left field. It’s never a good thing when you’re asking, How could they have missed THAT all these years? when you should be engrossed by each turn of events.

At 72, Bridges still has that effortless­ly natural and rumpled charm, and we immediatel­y buy into his note-perfect characteri­zation of one Dan Chase, a widower who is living in the woods of Vermont, and taking his ultra-loyal Rottweiler­s, Dave and Carol, with him everywhere he goes — even for a doctor’s appointmen­t, where he introduces the startled physician to the pups and the doc says, “Dave and Carol are your dogs. I got confused for a second there.”

“Why, because they have names?”

“Well, because they have people’s names. Those are people’s names.”

Pause.

“Not in this case.”

That’s some good stuff, as “The Old Man” eases us into Chase’s seemingly uncomplica­ted existence — until the moment a hitman breaks into the house in the middle of the night, and Dan dispatches of the assailant, stashes the obligatory Go Bag with passports, cash, guns and a change of shirts, and hits the road. He calls his unseen grown daughter Emily and says, “They found me,” in a tone that lets us know he knew this day was coming.

Turns out Dan is a former CIA operative who went rogue in Afghanista­n, got mixed up in some serious “Lawrence of Arabia”-type complicati­ons and spent the next 30-plus years hiding in plain sight in the States. Now, the chase is on, so to speak, with the FBI trying to locate Dan and bring him in before the goons hired by a revengemin­ded Afghan warlord can get to him first.

The great John Lithgow is perfectly cast as Harold Harper, a top-ranking FBI official who has a long and complicate­d history with Dan and is worried that secrets that have been buried for decades will resurface, potentiall­y ruining Harold’s legacy and everything he’s built, profession­ally and personally.

In the most problemati­c developmen­t in the series thus far (the first four episodes were made available to reviewers), the wonderful Amy Brenneman is saddled with playing a character who seems shoehorned into the proceeding­s. Brenneman’s Zoe McDonald is a recent divorcée who rents the guest house on her property to Dan, asks him on a date within days and finds herself in the wrong place at the wrong time when another assassin comes calling. Next thing poor Zoe knows, she’s forced to go on the run with Dan, posing as his wife and berating him for getting her into this mess — that is, when she’s not delivering long monologues about her failed marriage.

The monologues. We get a lot of those in “The Old Man.” Here’s Harold Harper, doling out his patented wisdom and insights to Angela: “I taught you to play the game like cop. To a cop, a puzzle is a thing to be solved. But the other game, the one that Chase and I played when we were young, the one I’m starting to realize we’re playing again — that game has no rules. Its puzzles have no solutions. They just lead to other puzzles.

In the hands of John Lithgow, it’s kind of a magnificen­t speech — but then you take a beat and ask, what did he just say there? Would anybody in that position ever talk like that, and if so, why? It’s flowery fluff.

So it goes with “The Old Man.” We get some incredibly highlevel action and hand-to-hand fight sequence, and the expected strong performanc­es from Bridges, Lithgow, et al., but the pace is sometimes excruciati­ngly slow, the flashback sequences have a kind of B-movie vibe, and there are simply too many times when these really smart characters do some really dumb things, just to keep the wheels of the plot in motion.

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 ?? FX PHOTOS ?? Dan Chase (Jeff Bridges), a former CIA operative in hiding, gets found and goes on the run in “The Old Man.”
FX PHOTOS Dan Chase (Jeff Bridges), a former CIA operative in hiding, gets found and goes on the run in “The Old Man.”
 ?? ?? John Lithgow plays an FBI honcho worried that Dan will spill secrets.
John Lithgow plays an FBI honcho worried that Dan will spill secrets.

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