Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Green Zone - % % % %


Green Zone is the latest film by Paul Greengrass, best known for the Bourne films, but also the filmmaker who created United 93, a suspenseful, dread-filled docu-drama. Green Zone is a combination of these two styles – a tension filled spy action film crossed with a political historical drama. As king of the low-light shakey cam, Greengrass pulls off a twisting turning suspense with incredible shots of helicopters and a taut military procedural plot. But as a historical political film, it indicts the Pentagon and makes the CIA look like noble handlers of the world. Matt Damon’s character, Chief Miller, has just landed in Iraq in March 2003 and leads a team to investigate suspected and empty locations for WMDs. He begins to question the Pentagon intelligence and this leads him on a chase through Baghdad with his new friend, Freddy, played by Khalid Abdalla, from the Kite Runner. As a military procedural it is exciting like Black Hawk Down. But as a drama, it misses. By exciting the audience with semi-accurate portrayals of historical events, almost like a dramatized episode of Frontline, it fails by being a fictionalized account of a very serious issue, the fabrication and falsification of the reasons for the invasion of Iraq. I agree with the sentiments expressed in the film that the American public was lied to and failed by our government officials and the press, but by fictionalizing and generalizing a subject of such massive importance, Greengrass dulls his blade. Matt Damon, who has no character other than wanting the truth and doing his job well, gets to shout condemning statements at the Pentagon official played by Greg Kinnear, but it’s truly pointless with our knowledge of the quagmire that is to come. That is one thing that Green Zone does get right. It ends with a devastatingly defeated feeling that many of us feel about Iraq. It’s a disaster and there’s so little that we can do about it. The come-uppance at the end can’t be satisfying because it’s so tragic.

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I love opinions. But I must say that honey catches more flies than vinegar, and even though I made it through Salo, I don't want to live my life with tons of vile nastiness. So please be honest and polite.