Springfield News-Sun

By Neal Justin

-

“The Sympathize­r,” an intriguing adaptation of the 2015 novel by Viet Thanh Nguyen, is a portrait of the Captain, a North Vietnamese mole who is torn between his love for American pop culture and his loyalty to the Communist party.

But his struggle keeps get- ting interrupte­d by a famil- iar face.

Robert Downey Jr., fresh off his Oscar win for “Oppen- heimer,” takes on four dif-

rent versions of the Ugly American, all malicious manipulato­rs who use the Captain for political pur- poses. Downey has lots of fun finding different ways to ham it up, especially when he’s playing a racist congressma­n who talks like Clint Eastwood. But the seven episodes start to feel more like an acting exercise than a black comedy about our country’s relationsh­ip with Vietnam.

Other performers have successful­ly slipped into various roles in the same project, most notably Peter Sellers in “Dr. Strangelov­e” and Alec Guinness in “Kind Hearts and Coronets.” But this time out, idea feels like a distractio­n.

The story the Captain, played by the engaging Hoa Xuande, is too riveting to play second fiddle to a stunt.

Downey, who also serves as an executive producer, will bring a lot more eyeballs to the series than it would have

without him on screen. But he would have served the story better if he had just settled on one psychopath.

The limited series pre- mieres at 9 p.m. Sunday on HBO.

Other shows to watch ‘Tropic Thunder’

The scenes in “The Sym- pathizer” revolving around the production of a Vietnam War film may tempt you to revisit this 2008 hit with a similar theme. Do it. Downey earned an Oscar nomination by channeling an actor so committed to his role as a Black soldier that he under- goes pigmentati­on alteration surgery. The over-the-top comedy has a bevy of star turns, including Ben Stiller, who wants to be seen as more than a Rambo replica, and Jack Black as a drug-addicted comic best known for passing gas. Stick around for the finale in which an unrecogniz­able Tom Cruise, playing a hot-headed producer, throws himself a one-man dance party. Streaming on Showtime on Demand, Peacock, Paramount+

‘Neal Brennan: Crazy Good’

The co-creator of “Chappelle’s Show” doesn’t look like a troublemak­er. But his brand of comedy reveals just how much he likes to stir things up. In his latest special, Brennan makes the case that greatness is usually achieved by psychopath­s and drug addicts. On Netflix.

 ?? HOPPER STONE / HBO / TNS ?? Hoa Xuande (left) and Robert Downey Jr. star in “The Sympathize­r.”
HOPPER STONE / HBO / TNS Hoa Xuande (left) and Robert Downey Jr. star in “The Sympathize­r.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States