SEAL Team Six in 'Zero Dark Thirty' (Photo: Columbia Pictures)
"The Hurt Locker"
was a stark, uncompromising, and non-political examination of the Iraq
War, and its gritty depiction of the conflict helped it earn six Academy
Awards, including Best Picture. The film created a remarkable level of
tension an unease as it followed bomb disposal techs as they risked life
and limb to defuse improvised explosives. Now, the Oscar-winning
director and screenwriter are back with another
plucked-from-the-headlines story, and this one might be even more
polarizing and tough to watch.
"Zero Dark Thirty"
tells the story of the decade-long mission to find Osama bin Ladin,
going into the shadowy world of intelligence operatives to uncover how
the largest manhunt in history went down. And director Kathryn Bigelow
and writer Mark Boal don't shy away from depicting the "enhanced
interrogation" techniques like waterboarding that were used along the
way. "The new movie is not for the faint of heart or for those expecting
typical Hollywood fare," is how The New York Times put it. And it's not just for the clear-eyed depiction of torture, but also what The Hollywood Reporter describes as "its denial of conventional emotionalism and non-gung ho approach to cathartic revenge-taking."
In Richard Corliss's review in Time Magazine,
he describes a scene where a captured suspect, held in a CIA "black
site," is pushed to the edge by being deprived of food, bombarded with
ear-splitting noise, and submitted to waterboarding. His interrogator
tells him "In the end, bro, everybody breaks. It's biology." And while
scenes of torture have become commonplace in spy stories like "Casino Royale"
and TV's "24," the impact here is far greater not only for reopening a
still-painful wound inflicted on the nation, but because the film is
entirely based on the firsthand accounts of the people who were
involved.
When asked about the interrogation scenes by Entertainment Weekly,
Boal said, "It's part of the history, and we wanted to show the
history... You try to be faithful to the research." Boal, who was a
print journalist and author before becoming a screenwriter, spent years
interviewing personnel who were directly involved with the search.
Names and personal details were changed in some cases to protect sources
who are still clandestine operatives, but the facts of the case are
meticulously researched. Director Bigelow said the when it came to
depicting torture, "There's no question it was difficult, but to deny it
would have been to be inaccurate."
Boal and Bigelow were readying a script about the search for bin
Ladin in the mountains of Tora Bora when news broke that the fugitive
terrorist leader had been killed in Pakistan. They had to completely
throw out the screenplay they had and start another from page one. The
resulting script culminates in the raid by Navy SEAL Team Six on bin
Ladin's compound in Abbottabad, and according to early reviews, it is a
tense, methodical sequence made all the more impressive by the fact that
you know exactly how it will end.
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Bigelow shot the raid in a full-scale recreation of the compound
built especially for the production in Jordan. The crew attempted to
re-enact the operation as close to the actual event as possible, and
that included filming in what Bigelow said was "not just night
photography, it's no-light photography. You're in an environment that's
pitch-black." In his review for The Hollywood Reporter,
Todd McCarthy said the sequence, with its green night-vision look and
precise execution, invokes "a feeling of being suspended in time that's
unlike any equivalent climactic action sequence that comes to mind."
This is the second high-profile film based on a true, top-secret CIA
event this year, after Ben Affleck's "Argo." Both are predicted to be
top Oscar contenders, but Time Magazine's review of "Zero Dark Thirty"
said it "blows ["Argo"] out of the water." The Hollywood Reporter said
of the film, "it could well be the most impressive film Bigelow has
made, as well as possibly her most personal." Variety was respectful
but not quite as effusive: "The ultra-professional result may be easier
to respect than enjoy, but there's no denying its power."
"Zero Dark Thirty"
will open in limited release on December 19, and will be in theaters
nationwide on January 11. Check back with Yahoo! Movies on Wednesday
morning to see an exclusive first look at a clip from the film.
Watch trailers for 'Zero Dark Thirty':