








On May 2, 2011, President Barack Obama went on television and said Osama
Bin Laden was dead. Bin Laden was killed in a military operation that
President Obama ordered. It preceded the ten-year anniversary of
September 11, the day that the terrorist organization Al Qaeda, led by
Bin Laden, attacked the United States, resulting in the deaths of 3,000
people and the total destruction of the World Trade Center in Manhattan.
Bin Laden has been in hiding since September 11, cleverly avoiding
capture.
Zero Dark Thirty details the steps that the CIA took to find him,
as well as the military operation that ultimately killed Bin Laden. The
movie is essentially a CIA procedural that morphs into a very smart,
spy movie and ends on a matter-of-fact action sequence, done almost in
real-time of the real-life mission.
Jessica Chastain (The Tree of Life and The Help) stars as
Maya, the CIA agent who is assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Pakistan. She
makes clear that she didn't request this mission. She was assigned,
which suggests a resistance on her part to be here, especially in light
of the tactics utilized in the opening sequence, those tactics being
torture or what was called "enhanced interrogation techniques."
Whatever that resistance, it soon goes away, as she picks up on a lead
that could reveal where Bin Laden is. For over five years, this lead
continues to elude her, but she never gives it up, even when her boss
Joseph Bradley, played by Emmy winner Kyle Chandler, screams at her and
tells her to let it go. She instead obsesses and makes pursuing this
lead her reason for breathing.
If pursuing this lead involves torture, she's on board. Despite the initial look on her face and a 60 Minutes
clip with President Obama, the use of torture isn't a question or even
much of a moral issue. Maya's resistance isn't even verbalized by the
end. It's a wonder what it truly was.
Even though the torture is a lot of the same stuff in Taxi to the Dark Side,
there was some part of me that thought what was depicted wasn't that
bad. Blood isn't spilled as in torture scenes in films such as The Siege (1998) or Unthinkable (2010). In fact, the average viewer would probably have seen worse torture in FOX's 24 or Showtime's Homeland.
In fact, when it comes to female CIA agents, Claire Danes in Homeland
is no doubt the more interesting character in as much as she is a
fleshed out character with a back story and conflicting feelings. Maya
isn't. She is a laser, and for the first half of the film I wasn't taken
with her. It's only when she screams back at Joseph did I actually feel
something for her.
Up until then, the movie is rather rote. Even though director Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker)
depicts several real-life terrorist attacks, I was still somewhat bored
by the first hour or so of the film. Bigelow re-creates bombing after
bombing and it got repetitive without having any real impact. Bigelow
would put titles on the screen of the dates of these attacks, which
signaled to the audience that another bomb was about to go off. I'm not
sure if this was intended like Hitchcock's way of building suspense by
tipping off the audience to the pending explosion, but I felt often that
it did the opposite. When a character whom Maya befriends dies in a
subsequent bombing, I didn't feel that loss.
What makes up for it though is the fantastic second half of this film,
which in my mind starts after Maya screams at Joseph. We get incredible
performances from a great cast, including Mark Strong, Jason Clarke,
Edgar Ramirez, Jennifer Ehle, James Gandolfini, Mark Duplass, Chris
Pratt, Joel Edgerton and Taylor Kinney.
We also get an amazing, gripping, immersive and intense, 30-minute or so
action sequence that is superbly done. It's chilling, mainly because
it's so matter-of-fact. It's not as exciting or action-filled as any of
the real-life Navy Seal scenarios in Act of Valor (2012), but somehow the actors and Bigelow's style make it a thousand times more powerful and memorable.
I initially wasn't taken with Bigelow's camera work, led by Australian
cinematographer Greig Fraser, but I eventually overlooked all the shaky
cam shots. What helped was the great editing work of Oscar-nominee
William Goldenberg and Dylan Tichenor. I don't know if the haunting
collection of audio from 911 calls on September 11 goes to Goldenberg
and Tichenor or Oscar-winning sound editor Paul N. J. Ottoson (The Hurt Locker) but kudos!
I'll close out with a couple of thoughts. Back on May 2, 2011, I wrote a blog about the announcement of Osama Bin Laden being dead.
My blog was about my conflicted feelings over what I saw on television
that night. Both CNN and FOX News had a live camera outside the White
House, which captured people celebrating his death.
At first, it bothered me that people would celebrate what was
essentially a murder, even if it were the murder of the terrorist
mastermind behind September 11. Given the argument for the increased
drone strikes in Pakistan, the United States or President Obama won't
have to worry with being charged with violating international law or
human-rights.
But, the question remains. The U.S., for example, captured Saddam
Hussein and brought him back alive, and accounts confirm that Hussein
was fully armed, but, according to this film, no attempt was made to
bring Bin Laden back alive. Maya's order to the Navy Seals is
unequivocal. She tells them specifically to kill Bin Laden, not to
capture but to kill him. All is fair in love and war, but why kill Bin
Laden on the ground and not Hussein?
I liked Maya's confidence. Chastain exudes the confidence that's enough
for the so-called canaries who have to fly into the coal mine, and it
was certainly enough for me. I'm not sure though if this movie did much
to assuage my concerns of America's motives or modus operandi when it
comes to the war on terror.
Five Stars out of Five.
Rated R for strong violence including brutal images and language.
Running Time: 2 hrs. and 37 mins.
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