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The Hurt Locker


Directed by: Kathryn Bigelow
Starring: Jeremy Renner
Genre:
Action/ Adventure
Run Time: 131
min.
Release Date: June 2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
I was beginning to hold out some hope (however little) that the
Oscars might have been steering away from political correctness and
social appeasement when, last year,
SLUMDOG
MILLIONAIRE took home 8 of the 10 categories it was
nominated in, including Best Picture. A "feel-good" movie made on a $15
million budget with no-name actors, it came out of nowhere and
blindsided many viewers and Academy voters. Pleasantly surprised, I
flipped on the Oscars this year (2010) and watched the who’s who for
films in 2009.
I’m not going to take any large swings at THE HURT LOCKER because it
was a good movie. I enjoyed the action, the tension, the acting. It was
all nicely pulled together. But, out of the ten Best Picture nominees
this year, was it really the stand-out? I felt that the Academy was
slipping, once again, into the realm of trying to be "significant" and
"modern" by voting for something that’s on everyone’s mind (the war in
Iraq). Again, the movie was okay. Good. Adequate. But head-and-shoulders
above such films as
INGLORIOUS BASTERDS?
DISTRICT 9?
UP IN THE AIR? I
humbly disagree that it was. And there was nothing in it that we haven’t
seen before: a war movie with internal angst and a man lost amidst
society when he returns home. Jeremy Renner (28 WEEKS LATER) did a fine
job as the risk-taking Sergeant James but, again, he was channeling
every other warrior brought into a tough situation that we’ve seen on
celluloid a gazillion times.
From reading what you’ve read of my review so far, you might think
that I’m being more critical of the Academy than the film. That’s
partially correct. But when so much attention is heaped upon one film
(including Best Director ...which we’ll cover in a moment) and so many
people think that this is "the film to watch" and not the other nominees
that won little or nothing, I believe of informing those who might
choose to read this of their folly should they not see something like
District 9 or — one that didn’t even get mentioned —
MOON.
Let’s hit on the Best Director item...
No female director has ever won an Oscar before Kathryn Bigelow did
for The Hurt Locker. So what! We never elected a black President before
Obama. Does that mean we should give him every break just because no
other black man has ever sat in the White House? No! You win because you
deserve to win, not because it’s never happened to someone of your kind
before. Was the directing of The Hurt Locker better than Inglorious Basterds? Was it? Sorry, but I completely disagree if you think it was.
I will say that I’m glad
AVATAR didn’t win Best Picture or Best
Director. But to completely blank out such phenomenal films as
DISTRICT
9 and other worthy competitors is simply ridiculous.
I think it’s important for me to say here that I completely support
our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan; they risk their lives daily so that
I can live the life I do over here in the U.S. They risk they’re lives
so that I can write something like this about a film they may care
deeply about. But caring deeply about a subject like The Hurt Locker and
elevating it above other films does a disservice to the art of
film-making and film-makers when you over-rate a movie based on it’s
significance in the world today and not on its art.
For me, the top films of 2009 were DISTRICT 9, INGLORIOUS BASTERDS
and MOON. Two got a smidgin of notice and one never saw the light of the
Oscar ballots. Check those films out before deciding where the awards
should’ve landed for movies made in 2009. Please.
(back to top) |
Image from The Hurt Locker

DVD cost: $31.74
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The production had a hard
time booking key crew members and department heads, since the film was
shot on location in the Middle East (specifically in Jordan, the country
right next door to Iraq).
Movie Quote: "There's
enough bang in there to blow us all to Jesus. If I'm gonna die, I want
to die comfortable."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Hurt Locker
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