My wife and I saw the Hurt Locker on cable last night. I must have missed Louis 
P's review on it, but amidst all the glowing tributes, dug up this obscure 
short review on Rotten Tomatoes which exactly mirrors our own responses. Anyone 
see any redeeming qualities in the film?

*       *       *

The Hurt Locker Movie Review: Cowboys And Insurgents
By Prairie Miller
Daily Blaze
December 3, 2009
 
A kind of 'Dr. Strangelove: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb' - 
but for real, The Hurt Locker is basically about a military explosives expert 
in Baghdad who gets a huge rush out of his job, and he's not kidding. Which is 
to say that The Hurt Locker and its war is fun mantra - move over videogames 
and those second hand vicarious thrills a minute - is just about as 
irresponsible as can be.

This combo macho glee and military mechanics grating reality show style 
thriller crafted with icy precision and little else, is written by Mark Boal, a 
news reporter who spent time embedded in tanks with the US army in Iraq. And it 
shows. Claustrophobic in the extreme both politically and physically even when 
prowling the wide open spaces of the Iraqi desert, The Hurt Locker dismally 
lacks any point of view. Other than to imply that the Iraqi population ranges 
primarily from predators to ingrates, and without so much as even a hunch as to 
why we're there or what the locals may resent about that. Which is to say that 
the story could just as well be taking place in a cops and robbers inner city 
venue, or right out of a classic western.

And the fact that this war movie is directed by a woman, Kathryn Bigelow - and 
one with impressive unusual creds for making gritty, testosterone fueled films 
about men (Point Break, Strange Days, The Widowmaker) that delve into the raw 
male psyche at that, is inconsequential. Bigelow disappoints here, as a 
director for hire simply following rules in a man's game. Never mind that a 
substantial number of female soldiers are part of these bomb detection crews, 
there's not a military woman in sight.

The hurt locker in question is a souvenir box of Iraqi bomb making material 
that Sgt. William James (Jeremy Renner) hides under his bed between adrenaline 
quick fix danger junkie outings either dismantling explosives or killing 
people. And the other men in the Bravo Company alternate between jealousy and 
admiration for this mysterious guy, who doesn't let a trifling matter like 
dying himself at any moment, ruin his day.

And in the course of this long and tedious movie, seemingly more from the point 
of view of screenwriter Boal peering from inside the relative safety of a tank, 
the audience is subjected to what feels like real time surveillance and 
shootouts for no particular reason at all. And what plays out as he-men 'hadji 
hunting' and occasional boy bonding with the typical 'they all look alike' 
street kid, dubbed 'base rat.'

And we're never allowed to forget for a minute that bomb maven and intermittent 
free lance vigilante James, no matter how depraved from time to time, is a 
man's man. A big clue is that he doesn't even bother to take off his fatigues 
while showering after an especially dangerous mission, that tends to be filmed 
more like a heroin fix or a satisfying sex scene, than warfare. After all, the 
tag line opening the movie is that 'war is a drug.'

So the question is, whose drug. The soldiers, or the filmmakers. And is Bigelow 
more interested now in scrutinizing the male species, or being one. And how 
about impressionable kids watching this movie, and being awed by the razzle 
dazzle industrial light show amidst killing and dying. And with the main 
character pausing to reflect on his addiction with about as much insight as the 
filmmakers: 'I don't know, I guess I don't think about it.'

The Hurt Locker: War is never having to say you're sorry.

Summit Entertainment
Rated R
1 star

Prairie Miller is a multimedia journalist online, in print and on radio. 
Contact her through NewsBlaze.
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