Zero Dark Thirty (FILM REVIEW)
Zero Dark Thirty
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Riveting Docudrama Recounts International Manhunt for Bin Laden
After 9/11, the United States
intensified its efforts in the international manhunt for Osama bin Laden (Ricky Sekhon). Nevertheless, the elusive mastermind
of the terrorist attack continued to orchestrate mass murders in Bali, Istanbul,
London, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere around
the world.
Dismayed by the ever-mounting death
toll, the authorities rationalized the use of rough interrogation tactics
bordering on torture in the hope of expediting the capture, dead or alive, of
the slippery al-Qaida leader. He was ultimately tracked down to a walled compound
in Abbottabad, Pakistan where he died on May 2, 2011 during a daring, helicopter
raid conducted by Navy SEAL Team Six,
Directed by two-time, Academy
Award-winner Kathryn Bigelow (for The Hurt Locker), Zero Dark Thirty (military
speak for 12:30 AM) is a riveting, super-realistic account of the decade-long search
for bin Laden. Bigelow has again collaborated with Oscar-winning scriptwriter
Mark Boal (also for The Hurt Locker), with the pair apparently gaining access to
classified materials in preparing the project.
The film is structured as a tale of female
empowerment revolving around Maya (Jessica Chastain), a cool, calm and
collected CIA agent who manages to keep her head even when so many around her seem
to be losing theirs, literally and/or figuratively. She also has an uncanny
knack for deciphering which clues might be worth following, cutting a sharp
contrast in this regard to bumbling colleagues who fritter away most of their
time on wild goose chases.
At the point of departure, we find Maya
finally getting her first taste of fieldwork after starting her career boning-up
on bin Laden behind a desk in Washington,
D.C. She’s been reassigned to
participate in the questioning of al-Qaida members and sympathizers being
detained at secret sites located outside the U.S. where the Geneva Conventions
provisions relating to torture presumably don’t apply.
Soon, Maya’s chasing clues from Pakistan to Kuwait
to Afghanistan
and back, alongside tone-deaf bosses (Jason Clarke and Kyle Chandler) who could
crack the case quickly if they weren’t such male chauvinists suffering from
Persistent Disbelief Syndrome. That’s the shopworn plot device which pits a frustrated,
unappreciated protagonist against an army of stubbornly skeptical naysayers.
Whether a convenient, cinematic
contrivance or an accurate portrayal of what transpired, Zero Dark Thirty’s version of history certainly makes for a very convincing piece of
patriotic storytelling. Credit Jessica Chastain for imbuing her character, Maya,
with a compelling combination of vulnerability, sagacity and steely resolve in
a memorable, Oscar-quality performance.
CIA Agent Strangelove, or how I
learned to stop worrying and love waterboarding!
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R for profanity, disturbing images and graphic violence.
Running time: 157 minutes
Distributor: Columbia Pictures
To see a trailer for Zero
Dark Thirty, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ly77Wgd-DHA
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