Film Review
The Hurt Locker: a war masterpiece
Films about the war on terror have not been high on audiences’ must-see list. Yet the makers of the latest, The Hurt Locker, hope they have the ingredients that box-office duds about Iraq and Afghanistan have lacked.
Director Kathryn Bigelow and her colleagues deliver nail-biting tension and a remarkable you-are-there feeling with The Hurt Locker, giving viewers a real sense of the lives of bomb-defusing technicians in Baghdad.
They also tell a story from today’s volunteer-military point of view, following troops who chose to go to war, the story stripped of US foreign-policy critiques that made such recent war films as Rendition,Lions for Lambs and In the Valley of Elah sound preachy.
“There’s no hidden political agenda in this,” said Jeremy Renner, who stars in The Hurt Locker as an ace bomb technician whose rash approach to the job alarms the other two members of his team (Anthony Mackie and Brian Geraghty). “We were all adamant that we wanted to tell a pretty accurate account of this interesting job, and pretty much, that’s it.”
Bigelow, who has directed big action thrillers such as Keanu Reeves-Patrick Swayze’s Point Break and Harrison Ford’s K-19: The Widowmaker, takes a close and claustrophobic approach here. Shot in a documentary style using handheld cameras, the film is remarkably effective at putting the audience in the heart of the suspense that goes with inching up to a bomb.
Renner stars as Sgt. William James, who takes over the team of Sgt. J.T. Sanborn (Mackie) and Specialist Owen Eldridge (Geraghty) after their beloved leader is killed in a blast. James is the opposite of his by-the-book predecessor, a cowboy so confident in his skills that he flaunts safety protocols, leaving Sanborn and Eldridge in fear of their lives.
The actors prepared for the roles by going through bomb technician training at Fort Irwin in California. Wearing a protective suit of steel and Kevlar weighing as much as 100 pounds, one of the exercises he had to practice was to move a stack of paper clips one at time to another pile 15 feet away.
Based on journalist and screenwriter Marc Boal’s experiences with a bomb unit in Iraq, The Hurt Locker was shot in Jordan, some scenes filmed within a few miles of the Iraqi border.
To keep things real, Bigelow shot one sequence without telling Renner exactly where the movie prop crew had planted the bomb he was to defuse.
He had to march in and carefully sift through the scene the way a real bomb technician would have, the cameras capturing all his moves.
“Part of the opportunity of keeping this piece reportorial and raw and visceral and immediate is putting you, the audience, where the reporter was and where the soldier might be,” Bigelow said.
The film has drawn raves from critics since it debuted at key film festivals last year.
Summit Entertainment snapped it up for US distribution, seeing commercial potential in The Hurt Locker despite audience apathy for earlier war-on-terror tales that included Redacted, Stop-Loss and Grace Is Gone.
Summit started rolling the film out in limited release, then increasing to more cinemas. Can the film succeed where other terrorism-themed movies have failed?
“I’m just a filmmaker, so it’s hard for me to take that kind of temperature reading,” Bigelow said.
“I certainly think that there’s an intersection of entertainment and substance, meaning you’ve got a film that’s a real nail-biter.”
And they’re up against...
and the oscar goes to...
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced the nominations on Tuesday for the 82nd annual Academy Awards.
Following is a list of the main Oscar contenders. The awards will be handed out in Hollywood on March 7.
BEST PICTURE
—Avatar
—The Blind Side‘
—District 9
—An Education
—The Hurt Locker
—Inglourious Basterds
—Precious: Based on the Novel ’Push’ by Sapphire
—A Serious Man
—Up
—Up in the Air
BEST ACTOR
—Jeff Bridges — Crazy Heart
—George Clooney — Up in the Air
—Colin Firth — A Single Man
—Morgan Freeman — Invictus
—Jeremy Renner — The Hurt Locker
BEST ACTRESS
Sandra Bullock — The Blind Side
Helen Mirren — The Last Station
—Carey Mulligan — An Education
—Gabourey Sidibe — Precious: Based on the Novel ’Push’ by Sapphire
—Meryl Streep — Julie & Julia
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
—Matt Damon — Invictus
—Woody Harrelson — The Messenger
—Christopher Plummer — The Last Station
—Stanley Tucci — The Lovely Bones
—Christoph Waltz — Inglourious Basterds
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
—Penélope Cruz — Nine
—Vera Farmiga — Up in the Air
—Maggie Gyllenhaal in Crazy Heart
—Anna Kendrick — Up in the Air
—Mo’Nique — Precious: Based on the Novel ’Push’ by Sapphire
BEST DIRECTOR
—James Cameron — Avatar
—Kathryn Bigelow — The Hurt Locker
—Quentin Tarantino — Inglourious Basterds
—Lee Daniels — Precious: Based on the Novel ’Push’ by Sapphire
—Jason Reitman — Up in the Air
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
—Ajami — Israel
—The Secret In Her Eyes (El Secreto de Sus Ojos) — Argentina
—The Milk of Sorrow (La teta asustada) — Peru
—Un Prophete — France
—The White Ribbon — Germany
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