The Hurt Locker
is Kathryn Bigelow’s Academy Award winning masterpiece which follows a bomb
disposal team in Iraq. It is a fantastically engaging film which you almost
can’t help but get involved with, and as such you end up with a magnificent
appreciation of the film afterwards.
The film follows
one bomb disposal team and we are initially introduced during an attempt to
deactivate a bomb. Bigelow immediately conveys that the three members of the
team are incredibly close. The initial bomb disposal scene is incredibly tense,
but this is just a sign of things to come. I was watching this with my
flatmates, and we all remarked at how tense we were feeling at this first scene
alone. Little were we to know that this would not be confined to the first
scene, and that for the majority of the film we were still very tense. You
cannot help but feel like you are there with the three guys throughout the
film, and when the lead character finds a series of bombs arranged in a circle
around him there was an amazing sense of fear flowing through me.
Jeremy Renner
stars as Sergeant William James who is the new team leader of the bomb disposal
unit. Throughout the film I found myself worrying about this character. While I
rarely got the sense that he was likely to be killed there is a dangerous
element to him. He is pointed out throughout the film to be an adrenaline
junkie, and this is conveyed expertly by Renner. He starts off as being a
thoroughly dislikable character, and with the progression of the film I wouldn't say that he becomes more likeable, but I found myself sympathising
with him more and more. The scene where he is back at home and looking for
cereal is one of the most poignant pieces of filmmaking I have seen in a while,
and perfectly reflected how mundane everyday life is after a tour in Iraq.
Both Anthony
Mackie and Brian Geraghty (the other two members of the bomb disposal team)
work perfectly with Renner to create the unit. Bigelow is on record as stating
that the unknown nature of the actors leads to a level of uncertainty in the
film, and this is evident throughout The Hurt Locker (Time’s Up: Kathryn
Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker by Nick Dawson – filmmakermagazine.com). There is no
sense of knowing what an actor will do, or how they will react because you have
never seen them before. The emotion and engagement that the audience feels
towards the three characters (particularly Mackie and Geraghty) is an obvious
parallel to the intimacy of the trio, but cracks are obvious, and they are both
concerned about James’ state of mind. When this climaxes in Eldridge (Geraghty)
being injured and taken home, harsh words are exchanged between him and James
which Mackie does nothing to console him about. However, by the end there is
almost an entente between Mackie and Renner as the film takes an almost cyclic
turn to leave us right back where we started. This is beautifully indicative of
the ongoing nature of the Iraqi conflict, and is another piece of expert
filmmaking.
Another thing
about The Hurt Locker is how authentic it is. While it wasn't filmed in Iraq,
the whole thing was shot in Jordan, very close to the Iraqi border, and the
cast and crew all experienced life in the Middle East. From the heat to the
illnesses to the tension on set which is conveyed to the screen this film is as
authentic as safety allows, and this is excellent. When you consider some of
the films that The Hurt Locker beat to Best Picture in the year that it was
released this should give you some idea of how good it is. I mean Avatar isn't a ‘great’ film in my opinion, but it is the highest grossing film of all-time,
and it didn't win Best Picture because The Hurt Locker did. Inglorious
Basterds, District 9 and Up are other examples of films nominated for Best
Picture that lost out to The Hurt Locker. Bigelow also won Best Director, but
if you've already seen it, this is not hard to see why.
There is so much
more to say about the Hurt Locker, but to fit it all in would make for very
long and tedious reading. There are some very memorable characters, from the
little boy ‘Beckham’ who plays such a big part in the later scenes of the film
to the surprise appearance from Ralph Fiennes who always manages to brighten my
day. There are a lot of parallels to Zero Dark Thirty in The Hurt Locker, and
they both have incredible cinematography behind them. Kathryn Bigelow’s
footprint on both movies is unmistakable, from the casting of relative unknowns
to the reflection of the war in the scenes that follow from the action.
There is little doubt
in my mind that The Hurt Locker will be remembered for a long time to come. It
is without a shadow of a doubt one of the best films I have seen in a while and
I can only encourage you to watch it if you haven’t already.
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