Tampilkan postingan dengan label Thirty. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Thirty. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 20 Januari 2013

Review: ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Surrenders No Easy Answers — Which Is Just the Point

Kathryn Bigelow’s “Zero Dark Thirty” isn’t strictly designed to make us morally uncomfortable, which is exactly why it’s morally discomfiting. Bigelow’s aim is not to tell us what to think; she even refuses to tell us outright what she thinks. At first, Jessica Chastain’s Maya, a junior CIA agent who’s just learning the ropes of interrogation, flinches as she watches an eerily delicate form of brutality being inflicted upon a prisoner. Later, Maya takes a hand in the captive’s torture herself, seemingly without the flicker of an eyelid.

Is this evidence of Bigelow’s revulsion at the methods the United States government used to smoke out Osama Bin Laden, or of her moral disengagement from the whole issue? That question is up for interpretation until the end of “Zero Dark Thirty” and beyond. Because “Zero Dark Thirty” isn’t a brief, the multiplex’s equivalent of a white paper, a thing we can sum up in a two-minute takeaway. (Though that hasn’t stopped people from trying, in some cases even before they’ve seen the movie, as columnists Glenn Greenwald and Andrew Sullivan have done.) Instead, it’s a stunning, confident, tensile piece of work held together by doubt rather than moral certainty – as if Bigelow and her screenwriter Mark Boal were operating from the idea that doubt is dynamic, while moral certainty is just another kind of stasis.

Chastain’s Maya is the steely soul of “Zero Dark Thirty,” a footsoldier so driven to locate the mastermind behind 9/11 that her mania defines her very core. She would be the ultimate government lackey, dutiful to the point of zealotry, except she’s her own harshest judge: Serving her country may be hard enough; pleasing herself is harder. She delivers the movie’s most rousing catch phrase – its only catch phrase; you’ll know it when you hear it – in a scene where a group of blowhard male Langley types, led by James Gandolfini as a stand-in for Leon Panetta, assume credit for her work as if she weren’t even in the room.

Maya has a friendly-prickly competitive relationship with her female coworkers — as personified by a fellow agent played by Jennifer Ehle, with her customary ironclad coolness – and barely even entertains the notion of flirting with the guys, even when she’s stuck in remote desert outposts with them for days on end. The prime candidate for that kind of monkey business would be Jason Clarke’s Dan, the senior agent who shows her the ropes of interrogation, but their relationship is strictly professional. Dan, in fact, is burning out on the job just as Maya is warming up. Even he seems to know the work is soul-killing. “There’s no shame if you want to watch from the monitor,” he tells her during their first torture-training session, an offer she refuses – as if watching from the monitor, distancing oneself from the horrible reality, would bring a kind of shame.

You could read that as Bigelow’s view of torture, too. There are several lines of dialogue, put in the mouths of characters who are in a position to know, that attest to the inefficacy of torture rather than its effectiveness. The movie takes the view, in fact, that Bin Laden was captured and killed thanks to a combination of intelligence (both the brain-cell kind and the government-sponsored kind), perseverance and more than a few strokes of dumb luck. Information gleaned by torture may have played a role, but when Bigelow shows an instance of waterboarding, its suffocating horror is precisely the point: The sound of a man who’s drowning, or who even just believes he’s drowning — the cacophony of gurgling and choking — is the stuff of nightmares, and Bigelow doesn’t shy away from it. It’s worth remembering that her last movie, “The Hurt Locker,” was less about the horrors of war in any general sense than about the ways humans survive stress, handling emotional strain not by breaking down but by getting tougher – sometimes until there’s barely any self left.

In the weeks since “Zero Dark Thirty” began screening for critics and other movie professionals, the conversation has buzzed mostly around whether or not the picture glorifies torture. Yet that kind of interrogation figures in only a small portion of the film; Maya’s obsession with getting information, the right kind of information, plays out in far more tedious tasks, like tracing cell phone calls, surreptitiously trailing suspicious vehicles and the like. Bigelow and Boal, himself a former reporter who spent time embedded with a bomb unit in Iraq, had access to officials with intimate knowledge of the Navy SEAL mission that eventually killed bin Laden (though they deny rumors that they had access to any classified information). But they don’t get to that raid until the last 40 minutes or so of the picture. The first three-quarters of “Zero Dark Thirty” are precise and clinical, almost to a Le Carre-like degree, and the movie’s fixation on detail becomes hypnotic rather than boring.

But the final section of “Zero Dark Thirty” is astonishing. It’s more tense than it is rousing, unnervingly suspenseful even though we all know how it’s going to turn out: The action is staged in a way that drives home how wrong everything could have gone. Bigelow is an extraordinarily clear visual thinker, maybe the finest we’ve got among directors currently working in the mainstream. She and cinematographer Greig Fraser map the actors’ movements with clinical precision; it’s always clear who’s coming from where, and the cutting, by editors William Goldenberg and Dylan Tichenor, is almost languorous. No one moves very fast, which only heightens the sense that anyone’s fate could change on a hairpin turn.

As those SEALs drop down into that compound, equipped with night goggles that make them look like strange sea creatures, or green-tinged rejects from some alternative Emerald City, Alexandre Desplat’s score shifts into what sounds like a conscious nod to John Barry’s stunning “Capsule in Space” from “You Only Live Twice,” a theme that’s both magisterial and mournful – it’s music that attaches a cost to experience. And when Bin Laden is killed, the moment is swift, efficient and grim. Minutes later, the soldier who pulled the trigger recounts the event in one dazed, oblique sentence, unable to grasp the reality of it himself.

Some may see jingoism, or at least a sense of proud heroism, in that moment. The team that killed Bin Laden should think of themselves as heroes; he was a geopolitical threat whose actions defied any kind of morality. Still, Bigelow would rather send you shuffling out in silence than cheering. And the movie’s coda, in which Maya reckons with what she’s just pulled off – or doesn’t reckon with it, as the case may be – hits yet another off-chord of uncertainty. It’s Chastain’s finest moment, in a performance that’s sturdy but not transcendent. “Zero Dark Thirty” is precise, definitive filmmaking, yet Bigelow refuses to hand over easy answers. Some people call that evasion. I call it the ultimate despair.

Grade: A

Categories: Reviews

Tags: jessica chastain, kathryn bigelow, Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty, Zero Dark Thirty

Kamis, 17 Januari 2013

Box Office Report: ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Number One With a Bullet

“Zero Dark Thirty” director Kathryn Bigelow may have been shockingly snubbed by the Academy Awards when they released their nominations last week, but now she’s getting the last laugh as her acclaimed and controversial film about the hunt for Osama bin Laden dominated the box office with a strong $24 million opening weekend.

That was more than enough to make the ”Zero Dark Thirty” opening Bigelow’s biggest ever, which is saying something considering she has won both Best Director and Best Picture (for “The Hurt Locker”) and has cult classics like “Point Break” on her resume.

The good news for Bigelow came at a price, namely bad news for “Gangster Squad,” which opened in third place with a disappointing $16.7 million. Despite an all-star cast that includes Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone and Josh Brolin, audiences seemed uninterested in the period action piece about cops fighting gangsters; even solid word of mouth, as shown by the film’s solid B+ Cinemascore, wasn’t enough to provide a bump.

The Marlon Wayans spoof “A Haunted House,” on the other hand, did surpringly well, landing in second place with a robust $18.8 million. The only new comedy on the market, “A Haunted House” proved to be a smart bit of counter-programming for moviegoers uninterested in good movies.

For everyone else, the Oscar nominations provided a significant bump; besides the huge opening for “Zero Dark Thirty,” a slew of other nominees received major upswings in viewership, with “Silver Linings Playbook” (up 57% on Thursday following the announcements) ”Lincoln” (up 43%) and “Life of Pi” (up 29%) all benefiting.

Next week should be interesting, with major new releases “The Last Stand,” “Broken City” and “Mama” competing against an array of returning films that will have received a push from tonight’s Golden Globes. For now, though, here’s the complete box office from this weekend, courtesy of Hollywood.com:

1. “Zero Dark Thirty” – $24 (our review)
2. “A Haunted House” – $18.8 (our review)
3. “Gangster Squad” – $16.7 (our review)
4. “Django Unchained” – $11.1m (our review)
5. “Les Misérables” – $10.1m (our review)
6. “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” – $9.1m (our review)
7. “Lincoln” – $6.3m (our review)
8. “Parental Guidance” – $6.1 m (our review)
9. “Texas Chainsaw 3D” – $5.1m (our review)
10. “Silver Linings Playbook” – $5m (our review)

Categories: News

Tags: box office, Gangster Squad, Zero Dark Thirty, Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling, Kathryn Bigelow, Jessica Chastain, A Haunted House

Minggu, 23 Desember 2012

Alt Weekly: ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ and More

Welcome back to Alt Weekly, a column in which we shine a spotlight on the independent films brave enough to open opposite Hollywood’s behemoth blockbusters before rolling out in wider release.


This week puts the hunt for Osama bin Laden and the aftermath of 2004's devastating tsunami up against the likes of “Jack Reacher,” “The Guilt Trip” and “This is 40.”


‘AMOUR’


Filmmaker Cred: This is the latest endurance test from acclaimed director Michael Haneke (“Caché,” “The White Ribbon”).
Star Power: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Emmanuelle Riva, Isabelle Huppert, a pigeon.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This harrowing drama concerning the limits of an elderly couple’s devotion to one another premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, where it won the coveted Palme D’Or prize. Here is our review from the New York Film Festival.
Release Details: NY/LA this Friday, and these markets to follow.
See This If… You’re willing and able to cope with a very deliberate look at the horrifying heartbreak that comes with old age.


‘THE IMPOSSIBLE’


Filmmaker Cred: Director J.A. Bayona made his debut with the 2007 ghost story, “The Orphanage.”
Star Power: Naomi Watts, Ewan McGregor, Tom Holland.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This intense look at the impact of 2004's South Asian tsunami and one family’s struggle to reunite in the aftermath premiered to strong praise at the Toronto International Film Festival last September, though some criticize the more tear-jerking second half. Our review can be found here.
Release Details: 14 screens across the country this week, with further expansion to follow in January.
See This If… You won’t let the queasy subject matter get in the way of some tremendous performances and visual effects work.


‘NOT FADE AWAY’


Filmmaker Cred: This is the first film from “The Sopranos” showrunner David Chase.
Star Power: James Gandolfini.


Festival/Awards Buzz: A semiautobiographical look at New Jersey teens attempting to start their own rock band in the ’60s, we reviewed it following its New York Film Festival bow in October.
Release Details: Two screens in NYC this weekend, along with one in LA.
See This If… You’re interested in a “struggles of a band” story that’s a little less rose-tinted than “Almost Famous” or “That Thing You Do!”.


‘ON THE ROAD’


Filmmaker Cred: Director Walter Salles (“The Motorcycle Diaries”) finally brings Jack Kerouac’s classic Beat novel to the big screen.
Star Power: Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart, Viggo Mortensen, Amy Adams, Kirsten Dunst.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This long-awaited, star-studded adaptation debuted to mixed reviews at Cannes, but has since been recut and reportedly improved in time for the fall’s film festivals. Our reviewer approved.
Release Details: NY/LA this weekend, although expansion plans are ill-defined at the moment.
See This If… You’re eager to see Kerouac’s prose translated to the silver screen.


‘ZERO DARK THIRTY’


Filmmaker Cred: Kathryn Bigelow took home the Best Director Oscar for her last war drama, 2009's “The Hurt Locker.”
Star Power: Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke, Joel Edgerton, Chris Pratt, James Gandolfini, Mark Strong, Mark Duplass, Kyle Chandler.
Festival/Awards Buzz: This docudrama about the manhunt that led to the death of Osama bin Laden skipped the festival circuit, yet has earned considerable year-end acclaim all the same, including our own.
Release Details: NY/LA this Wednesday, with plans to expand nationwide on January 11th.
See This If… You’re likely to be engaged by a film that places more of an emphasis on intelligence gathering and moral ambiguity than hardcore action (although the climactic raid certainly satisfies in that regard).

Categories: Alt Weekly, Columns

Tags: alt weekly, Amour, amy adams, david chase, ewan mcgregor, garrett hedlund, j.a. bayona, jack kerouac, james gandolfini, jason clarke, jessica chastain, kathryn bigelow, Kirsten Dunst, kristen stewart, michael haneke, naomi watts, not fade away, On the Road, Sam Riley, The Impossible, walter salles, Zero Dark Thirty, On the Road, Amour, Not Fade Away, Zero Dark Thirty