Richard Jewell review – Clint Eastwood’s cautionary tale for cynical times

Eastwood’s elegant biopic about the 1996 Olympics security guard turned terror suspect resonates today

There is an elegant, even-handed character study buried within Clint Eastwood’s crisp procedural about a security guard who becomes a hero – and then a pariah – after reporting a suspicious package at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. Richard Jewell (Paul Walter Hauser, who plays Jewell as deeply flawed but still sympathetic) is an overweight 33-year-old loner who lives with his mother, Bobi (Kathy Bates). He believes in protecting people and sees himself as a diligent member of law enforcement.

So it’s a shock when the FBI accuses him of having planted the bomb and, worse still, when minxy and unscrupulous local journalist Kathy Scruggs (Olivia Wilde, hindered by thin, sexist characterisation) creates a national media circus by writing about him. Cool-headed attorney Watson Bryant (Sam Rockwell) is called in to teach Jewell a lesson about trusting the authorities. “Why do you keep defending these people?” Bobi asks her son. “I’m not defending, I’m explaining,” he replies, knee-capped by his own beliefs. Equally resonant is Eastwood’s take on the public lambasting of false heroes, as well as the fickle and arbitrary nature of fame.

Watch a trailer for Richard Jewell.

Contributor

Simran Hans

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Cry Macho review – Clint Eastwood’s lone ranger bridges the generation gap
The director plays a ‘real cowboy’ who bonds with the boy he’s asked to rescue from his mother in this touching road movie

Simran Hans

13, Nov, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
Richard Jewell review – Clint Eastwood's bomb-hero drama fails to detonate
The true story of the nerdy security guard who saved many lives during a terror attack at the Atlanta Olympics features a couple of great performances – and a lot of silliness

Peter Bradshaw

31, Jan, 2020 @7:00 AM

Article image
J. Edgar – review
Leonardo Caprio portrays FBI director J Edgar Hoover as a paranoid control freak in Clint Eastwood's critical biopic, writes Philip French

Philip French

22, Jan, 2012 @12:06 AM

Article image
The Silent Twins review – intense tale of inseparable sisters
Perfectly mirrored performances from Letitia Wright and Tamara Lawrance distinguish Agnieszka Smoczyńska’s stylistically bold drama based on a true story

Mark Kermode, Observer film critic

11, Dec, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
The 15:17 to Paris review – a truly dull tale of real-life derring-do
Three US tourists who foiled a terror attack on a French train play themselves. Poor call by director Clint Eastwood

Wendy Ide

11, Feb, 2018 @7:55 AM

Article image
Nocturnal Animals review – Tom Ford’s seductive cautionary tale
This stylish psychodrama is a skilful synthesis of the mood of Hitchock, the skewed reality of Lynch and Kubrick’s obsessive attention to detail

Mark Kermode

06, Nov, 2016 @9:00 AM

Article image
King Richard review – Will Smith aces it as the Williams sisters’ tennis-coaching dad
Smith gets to the heart of Richard Williams in this sympathetic, very watchable biopic

Wendy Ide

21, Nov, 2021 @11:30 AM

Article image
The Mule review – crime in the slow lane
Clint Eastwood plays a drug mule for a Mexican cartel in a watchable but plodding film

Wendy Ide

27, Jan, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
Sully; The Birth of a Nation; Four Days in France and more – review
A lighter hand on the controls might have helped Clint Eastwood’s film about the Miracle on the Hudson, but Nate Parker’s account of a 19th-century slave rebellion is just a macho mess

Guy Lodge

16, Apr, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
Tolkien review – lumpen life story
The magic is missing from this biopic of the Lord of the Rings author

Wendy Ide

05, May, 2019 @7:00 AM