
What happens when you take a CIA thriller, strip it of personality, and add brown contact lenses? Body of Lies (2008) is the rare war-on-terror drama that forgets itself while you’re still watching it.
Released in 2008 by Warner Bros. and directed by Ridley Scott, Body of Lies stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a CIA operative running ground operations in Jordan and Russell Crowe as his remote, micromanaging superior. Based on a novel by Washington Post journalist David Ignatius and adapted by The Departed screenwriter William Monahan, the film aims to unpack the moral murk of post-9/11 intelligence work—but ends up lost in its own signal noise. While DiCaprio chases terrorists, navigates drone surveillance, and courts a Jordanian nurse, Crowe barks orders from soccer practice and derails every plan by phone. Though it opened wide and grossed over $100 million worldwide, the film was quickly forgotten—its high-caliber cast, serious subject matter, and prestige trappings fading into a blur of glassy spy thrillers and Sunday dad naps.
WHAT YOU’LL HEAR
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How Body of Lies tries to critique U.S. counterterrorism—and forgets to have a point
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A full debrief on Ridley Scott’s technical precision, emotional frost, and Russell Crowe’s “dad weight” era
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The accidental comedy of DiCaprio’s brown contacts, deleted Poseidon jokes, and a romance built on rabies shots
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Tags: Body of Lies, Ridley Scott, Leonardo DiCaprio, Russell Crowe, 2008, Spy Thriller, War on Terror, Forgotten Movies
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Why this movie may have inspired more dad dreams than actual fans
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