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The Hurt Locker could also have been a horror movie... with insurgents standing in as the crazed hockey mask-wearing killers, ready to murder their unsuspecting victims at every corner. The tension is certainly as intense as that in any horror movie in recent memory. Many have said that war is the closest thing to a true-life horror movie, but few filmmakers have been successful in their attempts to transport that horror from battlefield to big screen. Kathryn Bigelow being an exception.
The film doesn’t really have a conventional plot, but the story is built around the last 38 days the three men in the EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) squad have remaining in their Iraq rotation. Spc. Owen Eldridge (Brian Geraghty), just a kid but beginning to crack under the pressure, and the sensible Sgt. Sanborn (Anthony Mackie), are simply trying to avoid the titular place that represents “ultimate pain.” They’re both getting over the recent loss of a teammate to what seems like total randomness as to who lives and who dies. The new replacement, Staff Sergeant William James (Jeremy Renner) is a wild cowboy of sorts (as pegged by his superior officers), who prefers to detonate devices without his protective suit. “If I’m gonna die... I wanna die comfortable,” quips the cocksure sergeant. To his teammates, James’s recklessness represents a danger to their own well-being. They begin to wonder which is a greater threat, the bomb on the ground or the man in the bomb suit. But Bigelow doesn’t allow us to form any judgments. Sgt. James is good at what he does, and what he does makes his fellow soldiers safer. To us, that’s all that matters. One particularly unique aspect of The Hurt Locker that sets it apart from many of these Iraq and Afghanistan war films of late is that we’re never really persuaded to pick a side in the conflict. Though the story by Mark Boal comes from his experiences as a journalist embedded with an Army bomb squad in Iraq, it could have taken place at any time in history, anywhere in the world. The purpose of our presence in Iraq is never used for an emotional push, nor does the lack of an attachment to any particular character ever really matter. They’re all just soldiers hoping to get out alive and we the audience don’t want to see them get blown up. Our natural inclination to care about other humans gives us a strong emotional attachment to the film. Though Bigelow does ask some difficult questions about the cost of heroism and what the experience of war does to a soldier, the message never comes across as burdensome or heavy-handed. The film’s focus is narrowed to dramatizing the dangerous work of the EOD squads, and the film does that exceptionally well. As the credits begin to roll, we slowly tear our fingers from the armrests, hoping no one notices the damage to the upholstery. Horror, western, psychological thriller, or war drama... pick a genre. The Hurt Locker is one of the most intense and thrilling representatives from any genre to come down the pike in quite some time. Blu-ray disc review The Blu-Ray release is disappointing as there are only a minimum of extra features for such a monumental film. Screen Formats: 1.78:1
Number of Discs: 1 50GB Blu-ray Disc with Keepcase Packaging
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