Review: Bryan Cranston entertains with dangerous spy game in 'The Infiltrator'
Bryan Cranston is an actor, you know what I mean? Capital A. He relishes the work, probably because it took him a decade or two, pre-"Breaking Bad," to snag the roles he deserved. (Guest stints on "CHiPs" and "Hill Street Blues" came a long time ago.) With that voice of steel and a face that can go from hangdog to top dog in 0.3 seconds flat, Cranston is gleefully capable of chewing scenery with the best of them -- I believe he's still picking little bits of "Trumbo" out of his teeth -- but at this busy point in his career, his mixture of confidence and technique is reliably, wholly entertaining.