Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Secret Agent

The second movie in my double feature featuring the Academy Award nominees for Best Picture yesterday was The Secret Agent (click on the titles to read my commentaries for Bugonia, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, Sinners, and Train Dreams).  There is a lot to unpack but I found this to be absolutely riveting.  During the military dictatorship in Brazil in 1977,  Armando Solimoes (Wagner Moura) is a former scientist on the run from a phony corruption charge brought by Henrique Ghirotti (Luciano Chirolli), the head of a utilities company who is threatened by his research.  He arrives in Recife during Carnival to visit his son Fernando (Enzo Nunes) who lives with his maternal grandparents (Carlos Francisco and Aline Marta Maia) after the murder of his wife Fatima (Alice Carvalho).  He stays at a safe house for political dissidents run by Dona Sabastiana (Tania Maria), adopts the name Marcelo Alves, and is aided by a resistance leader named Anisio (Buda Lira) who inadvertently involves him with the corrupt chief of police Euclides (Roberio Diogenes).  He learns from another resistance leader named Elza (Maria Fernanda Candido) that Ghirotti has hired two hitmen, Augusto (Roney Villela) and Bobbi (Gabriel Leone), to kill him so he decides to flee with his son.  Mayhem ensues.  The action is nonlinear and there are a lot of characters to keep track of so I only had the vaguest notion of what was going on at any given time (it is definitely a slow burn with lots of interesting references to the specific time and place) but everything mostly comes together in the conclusion even if that conclusion is a bit anticlimactic.  What I found most compelling is the portrayal of the sometimes absurd (the corrupt police chief is trying to cover up the discovery of a leg found in the body of a shark) and often cruel reality of living under a military dictatorship and the escalating tension surrounding Armando's uncertain fate is almost unbearable.  Moura's performance is captivating because he is playing multiple versions of himself in different timelines (he even plays the adult version of his son in present day) and the changes in characterization are subtle but noticeable.  Finally, I loved the 1970s vibe in the costumes, production design, and soundtrack (the use of vintage camera equipment also adds to the period verisimilitude).  I have not been able to stop thinking about this and I highly recommend it!

Note:  Now that I have seen all of the nominees, I hope that Sinners wins Best Picture but I wouldn't mind if One Battle After the Other does.

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