Good Kill (DVD REVIEW)
Good
Kill
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Ethan Hawke and Zoe Kravitz Co-Star as Drone Pilots in Afghan War
Flick
Tom
Egan (Ethan Hawke) is a U.S. fighter pilot who was grudgingly
grounded to fight the War on Terrorism via drone technology. The good
news was that the reassignment meant his life would no longer be in
jeopardy, since he’d now be stationed in New Mexico on a base
located in the desert where he’d engaged the enemy 7,000 miles away
from the theater of conflict. He was also guaranteed to see his wife,
Molly (January Jones), and daughter, Jessie (Sachie Capitani), every
day after work; and they no longer needed to worry about his safety.
Nevertheless,
orchestrating remote attacks still took an unexpected toll on Tom,
given the dispassionate fashion in which he was expected to bomb the
Taliban and even accept the occasional killing of innocent civilians
with friendly fire as mere collateral damage. Because he’s
developed the proverbial 1,000-yard stare of a soldier who’s seen
too much combat, Molly started accusing him of being emotionally
distant.
His
complaint to her that “I am a pilot; I am not flying,” only falls
on deaf ears. He doesn’t like the fact that he has to wear a flight
suit either. Consequently, he only finds solace in a bottle of
alcohol, and in crying on the shoulder of his co-pilot, Vera Suarez
(Zoe Kravitz). She’s just as disillusioned about the grisly
business of dropping warheads on foreheads.
By
comparison, their relatively-cavalier colleague, Danny (Michael
Sheets) claims to be “Living the dream!” He’s the gung-ho type
who doesn’t lose any sleep following orders from their immediate
superior (Bruce Greenwood), despite the periodic presence of
non-combatants in the kill zone. After all, he’s more concerned
with providing critical support for the American boots on the ground.
Thus
unfolds Good Kill, an Afghan War saga directed by Andrew Niccol
(Gattaca). The purpose of this modern morality play is ostensibly to
question the wisdom of the widespread use of military drones. In the
end, it rather effectively drives home the point that there is no
such thing as a surgical strike and that a soldier doesn’t have to
be deployed overseas to develop PTSD.
The
film features a number of noteworthy performances, especially those
by Ethan
Hawke, Zoe Kravitz, January Jones and Bruce Greenwood. In sum, a
sobering, anti-war parable designed to remind the Playstation
Generation, desensitized to violence, of the grim consequences of
joysticks haphazardly delivering deadly payloads.
Excellent
(3.5
stars)
Rated
R for
violence, rape, profanity and sexuality
Running
time: 102 minutes
Distributor:
Paramount Home Entertainment
Blu-ray
Extras: Good Kill: Behind the Scenes.
To
see a trailer for Good Kill, visit:
http://www.ifcfilms.com/videos/good-kill
To order
a copy of Good Kill on DVD, visit:
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