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The Hurt Locker Review

24 Aug 2009
Critics rating: 5 stars out of 5
Reviewed by Tom Charity , LOVEFiLM
The Hurt Locker

"Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag," the Tommies used to sing when they marched off to the trenches during the Great War. "And smile, smile, smile!"

The Hurt Locker is where the US soldiers in Iraq pack up their troubles – a private space which no one else can see. Sneak a peek into staff sergeant William James (Jeremy Renner)’s closet, you’ll find the strangest skeletons, or rather, the ghosts of skeletons: little mementoes from the bombs and booby traps that almost claimed him.

As for smiling, James sports a grin as big as a fist whenever he’s called on to do his job – which is quite something, considering that in his line of work he could be blown into a million tiny pieces at any moment.

It’s not (just) that he’s brave. On some sick level, James gets an adrenaline buzz from gambling with imminent extinction. It’s when he’s most alive.

Cast details

All of which makes him the latest specimen in the long line of existential thrill junkies who populate the films of director Kathryn Bigelow. See, for instance, Ralph Fiennes’ Lenny Nero in the terminally underrated science fantasy thriller Strange Days, hooked on vicarious multi-sensory memory loops… the itinerant alternative family of vampires in Near Dark (a grungier Twilight)… the surfing, sky-diving bank robbers of Point Break or the psychotic merchant banker who is the cop’s doppelganger in Blue Steel.

Movies like these made Bigelow something of a critical fetish object in the 1990s. For a while, she was probably the most successful woman director in Hollywood, and certainly the only one making waves as an action director. But the commercial failure of Strange Days through her off her stride, and it’s been a while since she made anything up to her previous standards.

The Hurt Locker looks like it will be a game-changer for her. In the US the reviews have been ecstatic, with many critics talking it up as a leading Oscar contender. Given a slow and steady roll out, it hasn’t threatened the supremacy of the summer blockbusters, but it has held its own.

 

The Hurt Locker: Guy Pearce

Like Bigelow’s best, it’s an edge-of–your-seat adrenaline rush from first to last. Renner (you may recognise him from Entourage) is outstanding as the reckless bomb disposal expert. James’s cowboy antics are thrilling to watch, but don’t win him friends among the other men in his company, who would obviously prefer a more discreet, safety-first attitude (they even discuss giving destiny a helping hand).

This may be an extreme character, but as scripted by journalist Mark Boal – who also co-wrote In The Valley Of ElahThe Hurt Locker presents an all-too real American vision of Iraq (circa 2004) where every public space is a terrifying danger zone. It’s an environment where someone like James can thrive – at least for a while.

Like Bigelow's best, it's an edge-of-your-seat adrenaline rush from first to last.

It would probably be quite hard to make a bomb disposal thriller that wasn’t heart-in-mouth suspenseful, but Bigelow goes further, constantly unearthing fresh dramatic and visual ideas to hold our attention, and always digging deeper into James’ troubling psychology.

I’ll stand by what I wrote at the Toronto International Film Festival last September: with its apolitical you-are-there point of view and palm-sweating intensity this should be one Iraq movie that doesn’t bomb.

The Hurt Locker Reviews

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LOVEFiLM Review Hurt Locker, The

  • 5 stars out of 5  

    By Tom Charity from LOVEFiLM

    Check out our five star review of this gripping Iraq drama.

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Most helpful review Hurt Locker, The

  • "If I'm gonna die, I want to die comfortable."

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By Vivacia (28 reviews) from London , 18 Aug 2009

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Premiering at the 2008 Venice Film Festival, 'The Hurt Locker' received a ten minute standing ovation at the end of its screening. Subject to much critical praise, the film will finally reach British shores with its theatrical release in August 2009. Few films about the conflict in Iraq or Afghanistan have managed to capture the essence of what it means to be fighting in a country where anyone and everyone is a potential enemy, and the understandable stresses that places on the human mind and body. With a highly realistic aesthetic and almost non-stop tension 'The Hurt Locker' allows us mere mortals a glimpse of what it really means to fight for your country.

    Opening with a regular day for an 'Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit' (bomb squad to you and me) the film starts as it means to go on with a very sudden and violent end for one of the team. Sergeant First Class William James (Jeremy Renner) is moved in to replace the lost soldier, and he is quick to prove to his fellow team members that he is a lot less concerned with his own safety then his predecessor. This is aptly shown when he suits up in the 'bomb suit' to investigate a suspected device personally rather than send in the bomb disposal robot first. Understandably his new colleagues aren't impressed, particularly Sergeant J.T. Sandborn (Anthony Mackie) who has trouble adjusting to a team leader who takes his earpiece out whenever the word “withdraw” is mentioned. The last member of the team, Specialist Owen Eldridge (Brian Geraghty), is also disturbed by the change in the team, but is too busy dealing with his own guilt over the death that brought James into their unit to really get worked up about him.

    With the characters established the story takes us through a selection of the incidents the unit have to deal with during their rotation, not least of which is a sniper shoot out in the Iraqi desert, which is so painfully accurate it’s almost uncomfortable. Kathryn Bigelow (director of “Strange Days” and “Point Break” among others) amps up the tension in every scene of the conflict, keeping the audience not only on the edge of their seat but at times making them fall off it, and making you question if these highly likable characters are going to make it.

    Excellent performances round out an almost perfect film, with believable dialogue and very naturalistic acting from not only the leads but the supporting cast and the extras, many of whom were genuine Iraqis living in Jordan, where the film was made. Combined with the camera work, that resembles embed journalist film rather than Hollywood shots, “The Hurt locker” amounts to a fantastic film experience, that still manages to not trivialise its subject matter, and will leave audiences wondering – “is it wrong that I don’t want this to end?”
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All reviews

(1099)
  • What a let down!!!

    Rated - 0.5 stars  
    By lemond (3 reviews) , 18 May 2013
    No dialogue, poor acting, probably ranks as one of the most tedious films i've sat through, i agree with jaseyboys' review comments. Can't believe people giving it 4-5 stars, probably eating 1/4pounder with cheeses while watching it!
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  • Disappointing after all the hype

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By lizcam (8 reviews) , 17 May 2013

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Just watched this movie and although tense and gripping at times and top class acting, it didn't really do it for me, or my hubby. We both thought it lacked depth and was a bit of the same old same old. Got a bit bored with it as it just didn't flow very smoothly.
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  • Only so many bombs can be diffused..

    Rated - 2.5 stars  
    By Jaseyboy (4 reviews) , 17 May 2013
    Just another yankee documentry style film showing the trigger happy cowboys justify their cause. Politics aside, Kathryn Bigelow made a reasonable attempt at portraying the misery and tension these poor souls sign up for. There is some small touches which are nice but overall the characters lack any depth and have little onscreen impact. The film just falls shy of good, it would have been excellent had a little more violence and gore been utilised more effectively in line with the theme to really bring home the gritty nature of serving in Iraq.
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  • True Grit

    Rated - 4.5 stars  
    By a customer , 12 May 2013
    Hard hitting and tense - compulsive viewing, paints a very human picture of the struggles and personal cost of those caught up in Afghanistan. Gripping.
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  • Well worth watching

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer , 05 Apr 2013
    Excellent film. Great attention to the fine details. Kept me on edge for most of the film. Jeremy Renner was excellent. The character he played made me ask myself why do they do the job again and again?
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