Daily Press

Rom-com-esque spy film an uneven telling of true crime

- By Katie Walsh

As the old saying goes, the truth is always stranger than fiction, and indeed there are some true stories so strange that they can’t be fully expressed with familiar modes of storytelli­ng. Such is the case of “Rogue Agent,” a film that unfolds as a spy thriller and romantic drama before it takes a hard left into the seamy world of scam artistry.

For British viewers, the sordid story of Robert Freegard is likely wellknown. The tale will even feel familiar for American viewers, thanks to the Netflix true crime series “The Puppet Master: Hunting the Ultimate Conman.” But the two projects take completely different tacks. Though both start at the same point, when Freegard was passing himself off as an MI5 agent fighting the Irish Republican Army from behind the bar of a Shropshire pub, “Rogue Agent” proceeds linearly from there, while “The Puppet Master” winds its way back and forth through Freegard’s life of coercion and control, achieving a far more eerie and chilling effect.

Directed by Declan Lawn and Adam Patterson, who directed the hit BBC series “The Salisbury Poisonings,” “Rogue Agent” is based on the article “Chasing Agent Freegard” by Michael Bronner. Lawn and Patterson collaborat­ed on the screenplay, a straightfo­rward telling of the events, focusing on one of the many victims Freegard left in his wake. The film itself is rather oddly paced and can’t quite land on a tone, flitting from spy film to rom-com to maudlin story of escape

and empowermen­t.

Alice Archer (Gemma Arterton), a litigation solicitor, is a powerful businesswo­man who falls in with Robert Freegard (James Norton), going by the surname Hansen, while he’s posing as a car salesman. Alice runs a background check on Robert, though her fears about his mysterious past are assuaged when he reveals he’s an MI5 spy. It’s a tale he’s spouted to a few college kids many years earlier, enlisting them as “freelance spies” in the fight against the IRA.

Alice’s intuition, as well as her private investigat­or, win out, but not after she’s started a business with him and made plans for the future. Robert discards her, knowing she’s onto him, and he takes what he can and splits for the next victim. But Alice decides to go after him, and the slowburn thriller morphs into something that feels more like a Lifetime movie.

If “Rogue Agent” is at all compelling, it’s due to Arterton, who has always easily held the screen. The screenplay doesn’t give her a lot to work with as a woman emerging from the fog of manipulati­on,

gaslightin­g and betrayal, but she sells Alice’s devastatio­n, which hardens into determinat­ion.

It’s unfair to compare “Rogue Agent” to “The Puppet Master,” but it can’t be overstated that the structure of “The Puppet Master” lent that docuseries a sense of sickening foreboding throughout, as Freegard’s acts of brainwashi­ng and manipulati­on over the years unfold. “Rogue Agent” is handicappe­d by the time limits of Bronner’s article, and Lawn and Patterson never experiment with timelines or story structure to build suspense.

In the saturated market of true crime content, a simple “woman in peril” tale isn’t enough to hold our interest anymore. Perhaps the prurient unraveling­s of Freegard’s greatest hits is best left to nonfiction projects, but even with the liberties of narrative adaptation, Lawn and Patterson leave the psychologi­cal and emotional depths of this story unexplored.

No MPAA rating

Running time: 1:56

How to watch: In theaters and on AMC+

 ?? NICK BRIGGS/IFC ?? James Norton, left, as Robert Freegard and Gemma Arterton as Alice Archer in “Rogue Agent.”
NICK BRIGGS/IFC James Norton, left, as Robert Freegard and Gemma Arterton as Alice Archer in “Rogue Agent.”

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