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A Mighty Heart

Rated - 4 stars

A Mighty Heart

Michael Winterbottom directing Angelina Jolie in a movie produced by her beau, Brad Pitt? Has Britain's most prolific filmmaker finally sold out and gone Hollywood?

Don't you believe it! Only a complete cynic would question the motives behind this gripping, honest movie about the disappearance of US journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan, January, 2002.

The South Asia bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal, Pearl flew in to Islamabad, September 12, 2001. He would spend the next four months reporting on the Afghanistan situation and Operation Enduring Freedom. He and his pregnant wife, Mariane (a reporter for French public radio) celebrated the New Year in the sprawling city of Karachi, a nexus for gun-runners and drug-smugglers; dirt poor, and decidedly dangerous.

The evening of January 23, the last day of his assignment, Danny Pearl went to interview Sheik Mubarak Ali Shah Gilani. He never returned.

Based on Mariane Pearl's memoir of the same name, A Mighty Heart is a breathless account of the events of that January day and the nightmarish five weeks that followed, as US intelligence and Pakistan's counter-terrorist agency worked hand in hand with Mariane to hunt the kidnappers.

Give the tabloid's favorite celebrity conjunction some credit: this is hardly a conventional star vehicle. Several months pregnant and essentially a passive figure in the drama, Mariane scarcely leaves her friend Asra's house, save for an infuriatingly unproductive meeting with a local Government minister and an interview with CNN.

A Mighty Heart

The large, gated home becomes the unofficial command centre for the search and rescue operation, manned by Asra (Archie Panjabi); the Journal's Foreign editor, John Bussey (Denis O'Hare); Randall Bennett (Will Patton) from the US consul; and Pakistan CID's 'Captain' (Irfan Khan - the charismatic Bollywood star from The Namesake).

Set in the very eye of the War on Terror, this is necessarily a grim and painful movie, but the tense, raw alliance of reporters and public officials from three continents has us hoping against hope for a breakthrough. We might discern one too, in their shared concern for Mariane and her baby.

Famously prolific and congenitally unsentimental, Winterbottom is at his weakest supplying rote flashbacks to the Pearls' loving marriage. The movie is much more convincing when it sticks with place and process and lets the emotions take care of themselves.

This is the third non-fiction drama Winterbottom has made in Pakistan since September 11, but it's the first that feels like the work of an outsider. (The others were In This World and The Road to Guantanamo.) It's an authentically jumbled snapshot of the impenetrable, overwhelming poverty of a Third World slum city (exteriors were shot in Karachi, the house scenes in India). Few shots last more than a couple of seconds, and most are punctuated with the clamor of horns and brakes. As dusk falls, it really does feel like we're encroaching on some dark heart.

A Mighty Heart

The movie's clipped procedural mode hots up as the authorities begin to connect the dots - or rather the cell numbers and ISPs. In the most troubling sequence, with time running out, Captain tortures a suspect. The information he extracts is valuable but the effort is ultimately futile. Were his actions justified? Winterbottom doesn't exactly suppress the question but he leaves it hanging. That's the privilege but also the handicap of such a committed neutral observer.

Jolie has attracted some negative comment for playing the dark-skinned French (Dutch-Afro-Cuban-Chinese) journalist, but whatever you think of the casting, her restrained, unshowy performance and soft, subtle accent hit the right notes: this woman (a practicing Buddhist) is smart and articulate, resolute in her convictions even as she is pushed to her very limits. Her grief erupts in one heart-rending sequence, but it's her dignity and empathy that stay with you; the adamant refusal to surrender her compassion. This kind of heroism is worth celebrating, surely?

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Dave Calhoun, Time Out

Michael Winterbottoms films are like a Sunday paper: sprawling in focus yet at the same time identifiable in their... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 0 starsDidn't watch

Rima from Cambridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 06/03/2008

I couldn't rate this as I turned it off when I realised what the content was. I don't watch films about the atrocities of war. I only got it cos Angelina was in it. Don't let me put you off though. Just not for me.

  137 out of 151 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsA Mighty Heart

ValleyJohn [Highly rated reviewer] , 10/12/2007

You have to wonder what motivated a journalist to risk their lives in a melting pot hell hole like Pakistan . Recently BBC reporter Alan Johnson was released after 114 days from being kidnapped in Gaza , he was one of the Lucky ones.

On Jan. 23, 2002, Mariane Pearl's world changed forever. Her husband Daniel, South Asia bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal, was researching a story on shoe bomber Richard Reid. The story drew them to Karachi where a go-between had promised access to an elusive source. As Danny left for the meeting, he told Mariane he might be late for dinner. He never returned.

This is a fantastic insight in to what goes on when a kidnapping occurs in Muslim country. How the local police and security forces handle the investigation and how these Islamic factions kidnap legitimate journalists to further their pathetic causes.

Don't ever let it be said that Angelina Jolie cant act . Her performance in A Mighty Heart is a fascinating , moving and masterful display of a remarkable woman who goes through so much pain and heartache but has it in her heart not to hate .

Her portrayal of Mariane Pearl is one of the finest performances i have seen in a long while. maybe even the best acting performance i have seen this year.

8 out of 10

  55 out of 56 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsA Mighty Heart

SAI81 from Tonbridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 25/09/2007

Michael Winterbottom is one of the most brilliant filmmakers in the UK. His films are completely uncategorisable ranging from doom laden Hardy adaptation Jude, to the hardcore relationship film 9 Songs and from lesbian Thelma and Louise Butterfly Kiss to this, a docudrama telling of the story behind the kidnapping and subsequent murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002.

I’m always excited about a new Michael Winterbottom film but I was a bit sceptical about this one because of the presence of Angelina Jolie in the leading role of Marianne Pearl. I’ve never rated her as much of an actress, having only enjoyed her in a single film; Gia and the prospect of her darkening her skin and adopting an accent to play Marianne just set alarm bells ringing for me. However Jolie is outstanding. It’s a little strange for about 10 minutes but the actress disappears quickly, leaving behind only the character. This was a passion project for Jolie and it shows in her performance, which gets to extremes of emotion I doubted she was capable of. There are a couple of scenes of particular note first is a mid-movie TV interview in which Marianne is asked what she’d say if she could see her husband at that moment, I defy anyone to remain unmoved by Jolie’s reading of “I love you”. The moment that is likely to bring an Oscar nomination though is after Marianne is told, “Danny didn’t make it” Jolie rips your heart out as she screams from her very soul in an absolutely devastating moment.

Equally strong, but destined to get lost in the rush to praise Jolie, is Dan Futterman. He makes Danny immediately engaging and likeable, painting a remarkably full portrait of the man with very limited screen time.

The other performances are also exemplary, with particularly strong contributions from British actress Archie Panjabi as Marianne’s best friend and Irfan Khan as the Pakistani policeman leading the hunt for Danny.

It’s sad to say but the problems with A Mighty Heart come, more often than not, from the directorial side. In the sequences following the police hunt for Danny Winterbottom appears to have caught the same disease that afflicted Paul Greengrass on The Bourne Ultimatum. His camera simply can’t stay still, and this makes what should be exciting sequences a trial to watch as you try to follow the detail in the frame and keep your lunch where it is meant to be. Fortunately within the house, where most of the movie takes place, his work is more sedate and that section of the film is very much easier to watch.

There’s a bigger, and harder to define, problem at work too. Despite the fact that the acting is terrific and, outside of the pursuit sequences, Winterbottom’s direction is strong until the last 20 minutes I found that the film kept me at arms length. It felt long on detail, but short on emotion. By the end, of course, you can’t help but be caught in the sheer horror of events but it does take rather a long time to get there.

A Mighty Heart is definitely worth seeing, if only for Jolie’s brilliant performance, but next time out I’d really like to see Michael Winterbottom tackle something close to his, rather than someone else’s, heart.

  38 out of 40 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsWorthwhile story well told...

PaulaWestwood from Ashton-Under-Lyne [Highly rated reviewer] , 24/09/2007

A really thought provoking documentary style film about the terrorist kidnap of Danny Pearl in Pakistan, seen through the eyes of his wife, friends, colleagues and the local police and media, this documents the events that unfold surrounding the detection, reporting and final outcome of the story. The way this is filmed feels so accurate that you actually become involved in the whole thing and get carried along with it. An important film that does not pull any punches or hide any problems in the hugely populated city of Karachi and Pakistan as a whole with its internal problems and difficulties with neighbouring countries. It really highlights modern political, and terrorist, problems and difficulties in family and friends coming to terms with such awful situations, one of the worst thing you could imagine having to deal with. Worth a watch.

  33 out of 45 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsA Mighty Heart

ValleyJohn [Highly rated reviewer] , 10/12/2007

You have to wonder what motivated a journalist to risk their lives in a melting pot hell hole like Pakistan . Recently BBC reporter Alan Johnson was released after 114 days from being kidnapped in Gaza , he was one of the Lucky ones.

On Jan. 23, 2002, Mariane Pearl's world changed forever. Her husband Daniel, South Asia bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal, was researching a story on shoe bomber Richard Reid. The story drew them to Karachi where a go-between had promised access to an elusive source. As Danny left for the meeting, he told Mariane he might be late for dinner. He never returned.

This is a fantastic insight in to what goes on when a kidnapping occurs in Muslim country. How the local police and security forces handle the investigation and how these Islamic factions kidnap legitimate journalists to further their pathetic causes.

Don't ever let it be said that Angelina Jolie cant act . Her performance in A Mighty Heart is a fascinating , moving and masterful display of a remarkable woman who goes through so much pain and heartache but has it in her heart not to hate .

Her portrayal of Mariane Pearl is one of the finest performances i have seen in a long while. maybe even the best acting performance i have seen this year.

8 out of 10

  55 out of 56 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsWell worth a watch

FilmyC from Runcorn [Highly rated reviewer] , 01/05/2008

This is an excellent film, based on the true story of a kidnapped US journalist in Pakistan. Rather than make statements on terrorism or the middle east, the film focuses on the actions of the family of the kidnap victim, particularly his wife, played by the surprising excellent Angelie Jolie. Filming in a documentary style with hand held cameras gives the picture a hightened sense of realism.

Irrfan Khan gives the outstanding performance as the police chief tasked to investigate the kidnapping.

The best US film I've seen on the post 9/11 conflicts

I'm off to find more Michael Winterbottom films.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

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