Beirut
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Grieving
Diplomat Returns to Kill Zone in Raw-Edged Revenge Thriller
In
1972, Mason Skiles (Jon Hamm) was a career U.S. diplomat delighted to
be serving his country overseas in Lebanon. In fact, he and his wife
Nadia (Leila Bekhti) were so comfortable living in the Middle East
that they had decided to adopt Karim (Idir Chender), a 13 year-old
Palestinian refugee.
This,
despite the fact that the destabilized region had a history of easily
falling into a state of unrest where warring factions remained on
edge for months, if not years. As a seasoned veteran, Mason had
become fast on his feet and knew to keep the lines of communication
open because the fighting starts once the talking stops.
However,
that philosophy proved futile the fateful day that a colleague, Cal
Riley (Mark Pellegrino), arrived with some shocking news. He
announced that Karim could be a security risk since his older brother
was Abu Rajal (Hicham Ouraqa), an infamous terrorist who had just
taken part in the massacre of 11 Jewish athletes participating in the
Summer Olympics staged in Munich.
Before
Mason had a chance to react, gunmen burst into the house and start
taking hostages. By the time the dust settled, Karim had disappeared
and Nadia lay dead with a bullet in her head. Therefore, Mason never
got a chance to discern whether the orphan they had welcomed into the
family with open arms was secretly a radical Islamist.
Fast-forward
a decade, and we find the still-grieving Mason addicted to alcohol
while pursuing a totally different line of work in Boston. Then, he
receives word that his old pal Cal has just been kidnapped in
Lebanon. It doesn't take much for the U.S. State Department to coax
him out of retirement. But can Mason lay off the booze, and does he
still have what it takes to handle such a sensitive assignment?
That
is the intriguing premise established at the outset of Beirut, an
edge-of-the-seat, political thriller cleverly crafted by
Oscar-nominee Tony Gilroy (for Michael Clayton). The picture was
directed by Brad Anderson and features a top flight cast that
includes Jon Hamm, Rosamund Pike, Dean Norris and Shea Whigham.
The
plot thickens upon Mason's landing in Lebanon when he learns that the
mastermind he must deal with is none other than the now-grown Karim,
who is willing to exchange Cal for his missing brother, rumored to be
languishing in an Israeli prison. A raw, super-realistic tale of
revenge, set in a godforsaken kill zone not on this critic's bucket
list.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R for profanity,
violence and a nude image
In English and Arabic
with subtitles
Running time: 109
minutes
Production Studios:
Radar Pictures / ShivHans Pictures / Kasbah - Film Tanger
Distributor: Bleecker
Street Media
To
see a trailer for Beirut, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SagsqxiVStM
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