Showing posts with label Anthony Mackie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Mackie. Show all posts

7/10/2009

Movie Review: The Hurt Locker (2009)



Read Film Intuition's Interview With Jeremy Renner


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The way that Anthony Mackie describes his character Sergeant J.T. Sanborn in the film The Hurt Locker is that-- given his “seven years in intelligence before joining EOD [Explosive Ordinance Disposal a.k.a. the Bomb Squad]-- he’s a smart, capable, reliable, [and] charismatic guy.” But nonetheless as the “film’s Everyman,” he is likewise one, “who has never encountered a whirlwind like [actor Jeremy Renner’s character] James before.”



Of course, neither has the audience and it’s likely that both the character of Renner’s Sergeant William James and the actor playing him is one we won’t soon forget. James is an individual-- as I had the sheer pleasure to personally tell Renner-- that's not just a role but one of those great and unspeakably rare Cool Hand Luke parts blended along with what I can only call the mischievous “Kubrick face” of madness and joy.



And he is brought into the film after its harrowing roughly eight minute opener that finds a major movie star and the leader of the EOD’s three man unit dead in a chilling sequence that puts the viewers on the ground with the soldiers. Following the introduction where dialogue is necessarily minimal given the danger of the Iraqi “kill zone," Renner’s Sergeant William James is given a perfunctory introduction when he tells Sanborn that he won’t try to fill the deceased’s shoes but just do the best he can.



However, his “big moment,” comes when the trio (also consisting of the film’s “heart” in the form of Brian Geraghty’s Eldridge whom director Kathryn Bigelow described as “every mother’s son”) go out on their first routine op. More specifically it occurs when Sanborn and Eldridge test his mettle in the hummer on the way there, noting that “pretty much the bottom line is if you’re in Iraq, you’re dead.” Of course, this is before we discover that James had not only been previously in Afghanistan but has also dismantled 873 bombs before he joined their team.



Instead of allowing his second-in-command Sanborn to talk him into sending a “bot” or remote control wagon down to investigate the possible danger, James just goes right down at it like a Wild West cowboy, breaking protocol the first of many times throughout when he uses a smoke canister to create a diversion. Additionally, as opposed to just taking cover, he stands calmly in the middle of the street when an Iraqi cabbie drives full speed past the screaming soldiers, stopping just short of plowing down James.

Drawing out his pistol, firing warning shots first near the car and then through the windshield until he rests the gun solely on the man’s forehead—again without backup until the guy finally does back up, James coolly deadpans into his mic, “well, if he wasn’t an insurgent, he sure the hell is now.”

This is all foreplay of course, before he proceeds to just get right down on the ground like a kid playing in a sandbox, stroking the bombs with fetishistic pleasure, appreciating the artistry so much that he keeps the parts of some of the things that almost kill him (along with his wedding ring and a photo of his son) under his bed.

Taking care of the threat and informing Sanborn that “we’re good to go”—soon, just like the way the opening of the film suddenly changed in an instant with the previously unseen bystander who evolved into “dude’s got a phone,” James finds another wire that leads him to an endless string of IEDs that became the film’s incredibly eerie poster image.



While he handles that threat, sure enough we do see another “dude with a phone” make a break for it out of his eye-line. And in what is easily the best film of the year so far and the best war film I’ve seen in several years—this is just one of countless obstacles, explosions, gunfire, and complications that the trio’s Bravo company experiences in Bigelow’s fittingly “experiential” film during the 38 days they have left in rotation before they can finally return home.

Still, the fact that remains—although nothing detonated that day (and in fact the title comes from the soldiers’ own description of Mark Boal’s time spent with a special bomb unit who described the impact of explosions as putting yourself “in the hurt locker” as the production notes reveal), Sergeant James’s handling of the situation is anything but by-the-book and it becomes a bone of contention between him and Sanborn.



Essentially the personification of the quote that opens the film that “war is a drug"-- James is one of the most psychologically fascinating characters to be found in a war film since Platoon, Full Metal Jacket, and Apocalypse Now (incidentally three films Bigelow cites throughout Nick Dawson’s must-read article in Filmmaker Magazine’s Spring 2009 issue).



And this is all the more confounding because you can’t write him off as a simple thrill junkie, nor as Mackie angrily charges after a dangerous display of swaggering bravado “a redneck piece of trailer trash,” since he does what very few people in the world would be able to do. Yet he dismisses it to a falling-all-over-himself complimentary superior (David Morse) as attempting to do so “the way you don’t die, sir.”



As a former Ranger with such an impressive record of doing it “the way you don’t die," James also in another dynamite sequence throws not only his 100 pound suit off but his headset and link to Sanborn in order to concentrate on a highly elaborate bomb wired into a car at a UN building—having decided that if he’s going to die, he’ll at least "die comfortably" and without the excess gear. And in moments such as these, you’re able to understand the psyche the job requires. For because the soldiers have developed split second, flip a switch, left or right, yes or no decisions--when they’re away from the kill zone, they’re never fully at ease or able to feel that desperately alive at-- say-- the grocery store.



Yet it's all part of the daily routine working in a field that originated in World War II which found US and British soldiers collaborating in tandem to make pencil diagrams of time-delayed explosive devices which they tried to dismantle with commonplace tools. And in Locker, Bigelow and the journalist turned screenwriter Mark Boal-- who also turned his experiences into another psychological exploration of after-effects with the Tommy Lee Jones' Oscar nominated effort In the Valley of Elah-- educate us about what it takes to walk towards bombs when everyone else walks away.



As I discovered in the thorough and informative notes provided by Summit Entertainment—EOD soldiers are so rare, specialized, and in such a dangerous field that the technicians were not only “five times more likely to die than all other soldiers” and relationship difficulties are so mainstream that an in-joke is that EOD also means “every one divorced” but “the insurgency reportedly placed a $25,000 bounty on the heads of EOD techs.”



Of course, while stateside citizens dial 911 to report suspicious activity—whenever military personnel is both unfortunate enough to find an insurgent-made IED yet fortunate enough not to be one of the casualties from the opposition’s deadliest weapon of choice, EOD takes the call. And as Mark Boal notes, “sometimes [this occurs up to] 10 or 20 times a day… and the bomb squad has to deal with it while everyone else in the military pulls back.”



“The fact that these men live in mortal danger every day make their lives inherently tense, iconic and cinematic and on a metaphorical level, they seemed to suggest both the heroism and the futility of the war,” as Bigelow explains. And by using her trademark multiple camera set-up and visual arts background (Point Break, Strange Days) to keep the actors on their toes in long takes with 4 cameras constantly moving and out of sight-- like the ninjas that Renner likened them to since he never knew where they were during the 44 day shoot in Jordan-- Bigelow brings the audience into the EOD unit.



Easily described as a docudrama but also one that Boal likened to naturalism or “true fiction,” by avoiding trendy rapid video-game style cuts or abrupt changes in orientation since Bigelow proves her belief from the powerful beginning that “it’s really important to never let the audience lose a sense of geography,” she takes great pains to “draw them further and further into this vortex of information,” (Filmmaker, pg. 37).



And this is precisely why the film was honored with the SIGNIS and Human Rights Film Award at the Venice Film Festival since as they noted it “avoids dry ideology” and offers “an uncompromising approach to the Iraq war and its consequences seen through the experience [of the EOD]…for whom war is an addiction rather than a cause." And by doing so, “Kathryn Bigelow challenges the audiences view of war in general and the current war in particular [by] demonstrating the struggle between violence to the body and psychological alienation.”



So instead of an overt message movie, Bigelow was more fascinated by telling a simple and engrossing story about the war from the point-of-view of a handful of soldiers we come to know much better than in traditional war pictures where we can only tell them apart because of the names on their helmets or the high profile actors playing them because this time we’re in it completely along with them.



For, as she told Filmmaker’s Nick Dawson, “literature can be reflective, but film can be experiential,” and she loves it when both the mediums of photography (which was given a powerful boost by the amazingly gifted Bourne Supremacy, Bourne Ultimatum, and United 93 cinematographer Barry Ackroyd) and cinema can do just that as, “the gift of traveling you from [here] to… wherever” is what drives her (37).



Although The Hurt Locker had the misfortune of following the box office disasters of countless Iraq-themed pictures which made funding and distribution an incredible uphill climb for Bigelow and those involved, additionally it gave her unprecedented creative freedom of not being tied to “yes men” or studio execs. And the film, which marks the director’s return to feature filmmaking for the first time since 2002's K-19: The Widowmaker is the best example of her own unique brand of experiential moviemaking and moreover, her strongest work so far.



Yet throughout the process of planning the film out so precisely that “the directing, script, camera work, music, editing—was conceived from the beginning with the single goal of creating that heightened sense of realism that underscores the tension,” she’s completely correct in stating that ultimately the film doesn’t allow itself to be too “cinematic” so that it takes away from the complexities of the characters.



I, for one have not been able to stop thinking about the soldiers of Locker for weeks. Moreover I believe that not only will it stay ingrained in your memory long after the movie ends but it will haunt you the way that excellent cinema should by going off the screen and into your life, filling the air of your conversations with others as you realize that similar to Mackie’s warning-- nothing has ever prepared you “for a whirlwind like” Renner’s James or The Hurt Locker style of genre-busting war film before.



Text ©2009, Film Intuition, LLC; All Rights Reserved. http://www.filmintuition.com
Unauthorized Reproduction or Publication Elsewhere is Strictly Prohibited.

5/01/2009

DVD Review: Notorious (2009) -- Collector's Edition; Unrated Director's Cut


"Biggie, Biggie, Biggie, Can't You See?
Sometimes Your Words Just Hypnotize Me..."

Let the Movie Do The Same:
Now Available on DVD & Blu-ray





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Instead of opting for a clichéd American Gangster like framework in bringing the story of the late Notorious B.I.G. to the screen, the film which came from the heart and soul of the woman who knew the man best and brought him into this world—Ms. Voletta Wallace—makes the bold decision to avoid traditional biopic trappings in simply presenting us with the rapper we saw on MTV.



And in doing so, she gives us the unexpectedly tender and intimate story of Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn native Christopher Wallace who we first meet in the form of Christopher Jordan Wallace—the late Wallace’s own son-- who sadly we ascertain in the plethora of extras in this two disc DVD set never met his father, having only been four months old when the twenty-four year old B.I.G. was assassinated in L.A.

Despite the film’s opening ominous opening set on the night he was shot twelve years ago where we hear him eerily confess that he may not be around when asked where he’d be in ten years, we initially become acquainted with “Chrissy-Pooh” as his mother (portrayed by Academy Award nominee Angela Basset) sweetly dubs him when the future star was a shy, soft-spoken ten year old honor student at his Catholic school.

Ridiculed by others for being “too fat, black, and ugly,” we’re quick to realize that perhaps-- inspired by the “stories” his mother was so fond of listening to in country western records—the young Christopher Wallace who we first see turn to rapping after being disappointed by an absent let-down father sublimated his own pain, frustrations, and surroundings into some extraordinarily vivid, ferocious, and intricate rhymes that would later become his creative outlet and vocation.

As a teen, turning to peddling crack on street corners as he explains in the narration that while users became hooked after one hit, he became addicted to money—we uncover the beginning of a double life Wallace leads putting on one face as the incredibly devoted and loving son to his mother and best friend before he’d escape to the roof of his apartment building to dig into the locked box that possessed his beeper, clothing, gold jewelry and other items he needed “to get into character.”



Referring to dealing on the streets as though it was a monotonous factory job, Wallace (now played by the amazingly naturalistic and dead-on newcomer Jamal Woolard) starts to kill time musically, both rapping and engaging in rhyme offs that begin to draw a crowd for the natural charisma, confidence, and incredible gift for improvisation that filters through the gritty raps as he utilizes not country western but the sound of his era in the late ‘80s to tell his own personal stories.

After his mother realizes how her son is spending her days which is intensified even more upon discovering that the teenager is an expectant father, Voletta refuses to stand by and watch, going as far as to offer to simply pray for him in a stunningly brave act of tough love when Wallace lands in prison.



With nothing to do but stare at three walls and the bars keeping him in lock-down, Wallace spends time endlessly writing rhymes out of boredom and by the time he leaves—especially after meeting his baby daughter in a moving scene where Voletta tells him he needs to be a great father—he tries to figure out the best way to support his family.



While the lure of the streets threaten to send him back to jail, a demo tape recorded amongst friends manages to find precisely the right advocate in the intelligent and forward thinking Sean Combs (Derek Luke). And although it’s hard to see Combs as anything but the modern day rap version of the Rat Packer he “plays” as a celebrity icon with his merchandising savvy, the talented Luke (Antwone Fisher, Pieces of April) plays him simply as an innovative producer and PR wizard who promises the man who went from Biggie Smalls to the Notorious B.I.G. that if he stops dealing and devotes his energy to music, he’ll be a millionaire by the age of twenty-one.



Beginning with college shows and steadily building a fan base as the East Coast’s answer to Snoop, Dre, and Tupac—soon with hits like “Party and Bulls**t,” B.I.G. catches on, quickly becoming tight with Juice star and rapper Tupac Shakur (Anthony Mackie) until the dynamic changes following rivalry, misunderstanding, a media-fueled war, and one tragic shooting in New York that finds Tupac nearly killed right by Bad Boy Records helps set in motion the horrific events that followed on both coasts.



It’s about this time that the otherwise solidly written work (penned by journalist and Biggie expert Cheo Hodari Coker and talented scripter Reggie Rock Bythewood) begins to lose momentum from the intimate and fascinating details of Wallace’s life to the stories and legends we already knew before the film began.



Despite this, it’s bolstered by terrific performances—most notably by Woolard who was so perfectly cast that early in the process and after seeing an endless string of hopefuls, Voletta told the casting directors “that’s my son” and routinely solid work by Luke, Mackie, as well as one dynamic turn by Naturi Naughton as the beautiful department store employee that Biggie became romantically involved with before trying to turn her into the “Marilyn Monroe of hip-hop” as Lil’ Kim.

While the events nearing the close of Wallace’s short and tragic life seem rushed especially concerning his complex relationship with Kim and the regal R&B singer Faith Evans he would eventually marry and--moreover-- we finish the film with a number of questions concerning just how everything went down between the “war” with Tupac Shakur and the west coast in comparison to the extremely focused and authentic first two acts, overall it’s a successful work from director George Tillman (Soul Food, Men of Honor).



Heavily benefiting from its attention to detail given the fact that not only Ms. Wallace but Sean Combs and countless others who knew the man best were involved throughout the production to ensure accuracy—this labor of love that chronicled the brief life of a rapper who has sold more than fifteen million albums despite the fact that only one record was released before his death (followed by a posthumous number one smash follow-up album), nonetheless falters in helping to shed any additional light on a man who was cut down before he would meet his son and become a fully-fledged superstar.



However, its stellar production values make it a class act all the way. Shot in a breakneck thirty-eight days entirely on location including filming in the exact apartment building in which Wallace had resided with his mother in Brooklyn, Notorious is augmented by some wonderful and largely hand-held docudrama style cinematography by Factory Girl’s lensman Michael Grady strengthened by the rich production design by Blood Simple’s Jane Musky.



The three who all “collaborated on creating a different color scheme for the different stages of Christopher’s evolution,” craft a visually striking picture filled with the immediacy and urgency of the rapid shoot that only serves as a potent reminder of how fast and short Wallace’s life was before his ’97 death.



While in the end you’re still longing for more resolution about the events or a firmer sense of closure than served up in Notorious--it’s an impressive achievement and accurate reflection of a recent time and place that’s given the deluxe treatment by Fox Searchlight Pictures via its DVD and Blu-ray release of the “Unrated Director’s Cut Collector’s Edition."



The nicely packaged sets include both Tillman’s own edit and the theatrical release, numerous commentary tracks and several featurettes on the evolution of the film from Voletta’s concept to the finished product. Likewise, it takes you behind the scenes for candid recollections from the cast, crew, and those in B.I.G.’s circle as well as bringing us into the casting process and “Biggie Boot Camp” to prep the actors in the daunting act of portraying distinct pop culture icons.

Impressively, it’s a DVD of stunning quality that manages to stand out in the world of Blu-ray with a sharp transfer and concert level sound sure to make you feel like you're back there listening to the man turned posthumous icon whose words "just hypnotized" the hip-hop generation.