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Green Zone review

Posted : 10 years, 11 months ago on 19 May 2013 12:03

US invasion of Iraq to trace and disarm the weapons of mass destructions WMDs. Chief miller in-charge of team carrying out sears of WMDs based on Intelligence tips, however he found that one after another all Intels came out as wrong. He got suspected of something is not fit in the complete scenario and start questioning and figuring out the credibility of intelligence. There he came to know the biggest lie of the war.


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A good movie

Posted : 12 years, 2 months ago on 3 February 2012 10:07

Following ‘The Bourne Supremacy’ and ‘The Bourne Ultimatum’, Matt Damon and Paul Greengrass decided to do something completely different together this time, to the despair of their studio. Eventually, it turned out to be a huge flop when it was released but I still wanted to check it out anyway. Well, the main issue with this movie was that, from the start, you already had the answers about what was going on (Basically, there were no WMDs in Irak, in spite what the Bush administration said). So, as a viewer, it was not really rewarding to watch since there was nothing much at stake. Still, in spite of these flaws, I thought it was an entertaining flick. Indeed, Greengrass is a very talented director, the movie had a really realistic feeling and I enjoyed the decent performances delivered by the cast (Matt Damon, Brendan Gleeson, Greg Kinnear). Above all, it gave a good look (even if it was a fiction) on the war in Irak which was/is pretty dirty and rather messed up. In spite of what they say, it was eventually all about political power and intrigues and it had nothing to do with improving the life of the poor Iraki people. Anyway, to conclude, in spite of its flaws, I still think it was a well made, interesting and entertaining thriller and it is worth a look, especially if you are interested in Paul Greengrass's previous work.



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Greengrass was on a role until this...

Posted : 13 years, 9 months ago on 2 August 2010 02:34

My oh my oh my! When are they going to stop making films about the Iraq war?! As far as I am concerned, none of them are different (except The Hurt Locker). I mean, look at Green Zone in comparison to say... The Kingdom. The plot might be a bit different but because it is in the exact same environment, very similar kinds of characters, they just feel the same. I am not taking away that it was well made and production went well but I just couldn't quite get the hang of this.


The plot unfolds deep in the highest ranks within the Iraqi military, where the country's army General who is hiding in Baghdad talks of an impeding American attack, where he proposes joining them. In the meantime, chief warrant officer Roy Miller (Damon) and his team are busy combing off warehouses in Iraqi they believe hold weapons of Mass destruction to no avail. Miller then goes through a heap of drama which ranges from his top informant being taken into custody by hostile authorities, to realizing that one of the men he is supposed to trust immensely during the exercise is no more than the enemy within, and who happens to be sharing crucial information with the enemy. Miller finds himself on the receiving end when he is kidnapped by Al Rawi's (the Iraqi army commander) men before he kills his captors and then setting out to find the general who has already fled. This is Matt Damon's third collaboration with director Paul Greengrass and I have to say, it wasn't exactly as intense, explosive or exciting as their work together on The Bourne Supremacy and The Bourne Ultimatum were.


Paul Greengrass has always been a director of making films with a fast pace, where the camera would move all over the place like it was a documentary and where it would involve action no matter what genre. I mean, yeah it was well filmed but I just thought the camera was too fast-paced and also I don't really think there was enough action as we saw in the trailer.


Overall, Green Zone is a film that I was overall disappointed with but was impressed with as far as production. Let's hope that Damon and Greengrass's next collaboration will be better than this one (hopefully going to be the fourth Bourne film).


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High-energy political action-thriller

Posted : 14 years ago on 5 April 2010 06:32

"I have something I think you'd be interested in..."


Set your mind back to the year 2003 for a moment, when the invasion of Iraq commenced. Highest levels of American government offered assurances the invasion was a necessity in order to remove the clear and present danger presented by Sadaam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction (or WMDs, as they're more commonly referred to). In 2010, seven years after the initial invasion, the full truth remains murky, but it's indisputable that there were no WMDs, and the intelligence that implicated their existence was faulty. Whether this intelligence failure was the consequence of lies or deliberately manipulated information has been subject to much speculation, and Paul Greengrass' latest motion picture, Green Zone, revisits the question of why America went to war in the form of a high-energy political action-thriller. In the past, Greengrass has helmed two "issue" movies (Bloody Sunday, United 93) and two popcorn actioners (The Bourne Supremacy, The Bourne Ultimatum), and Green Zone represents a merger of these two styles which reunites the director with Bourne star Matt Damon.



Damon plays U.S. Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller, whose job is to track down the WMDs in the newly liberated Iraq. Frustration is setting in, however, because Miller's team are being sent to empty and worthless sites of little worth, and casualties have been absorbed in the process. Bureaucrat Clark Poundstone (Kinnear), who represents the Bush administration in Iraq, asserts that the WMD intelligence is correct, but Miller thinks otherwise. Smelling a rat, he begins asking questions and gradually starts to unravel an elaborate conspiracy involving every layer of government. With help from sympathetic CIA chief Gordon Brown (Gleeson), Miller goes rogue in an attempt to uncover the elusive, uncomfortable truth behind the WMD mystery.


Slowly but surely, director Greengrass amplifies the tension as the tangled web of sinister Pentagon agents, CIA bureaucrats, Iraqi security forces, and Miller himself converge on a shadowy source known only as "Magellan". This is not black-and-white politics; Miller is wading in murky waters during the proceedings, where heroes and villains aren't as easily defined or identified as they once were. Formerly, Miller was a soldier who took orders and carried out the duties assigned to him, but he becomes faced with shifting sands and tough choices. At one stage he asks Gordon "I thought we were all on the same side?" to which Gordon replies with "Don't be naïve". Green Zone is perhaps the most anti-American portrayal of the Iraq War so far.



Although Rajiv Chandrasekaran's novel Imperial Life in the Emerald City is attached to the film, Green Zone is not a straight-up adaptation of it. Greengrass and scenarist Brian Helgeland (Payback, L.A. Confidential) employed background information from the book, but the bones of the plot are almost entirely fictitious. In this way, Helgeland has crafted a fictional story using non-fictional elements, and it manages to interweave fact and fiction into an engaging whole. A key factor in distinguishing Chandrasekaran's novel from Greengrass' film is that the book was unafraid to name names and point fingers, whereas the film opts for fictionalised alter-egos.


Without a doubt, Green Zone is an energetic thriller crafted with impressive zeal by Greengrass. The tension levels start out high, and seldom relent throughout the picture's gripping two-hour running time. Greengrass' career began in journalism, for which he filmed war zones like those within this film, and there's no doubt his signature in-your-face style is a tremendous asset. Barry Ackroyd, who also worked as cinematographer on the Oscar-winning The Hurt Locker, provides the same brand of hand-held immediacy here. The shaky cinematography ratchets up the urgency and amplifies the sense of chaos during the intense action sequences, while John Powell's score further augments the atmosphere and sustains the suspense. Much of the film is about the tense, hair-raising dangers of war, but the climax is a spectacular action set-piece - an exhilarating, thoroughly nail-biting night-time chase through the dark streets of Baghdad. Stuff is blown up and people are shot, and Greengrass places viewers in the thick of it. The photography, which is so often called ugly, is so crucial for instilling a sense of realism, especially the graininess of the visuals. It's possibly to truly feel like you're part of the scene, rather than an innocent bystander tucked safely away in an isolated theatre.



What Green Zone fails to offer, however, is characterisation. Miller is never developed as a flesh-and-blood human - he's instead an underdeveloped protagonist used to progress the plot from point to point. Ditto for the roles allotted to Gleeson and Kinnear - we know what they're up to, but not the why of their actions. The film is merely a slice of life portrayal without flashbacks or deep discussions, but it's not enough. Also, it's undeniable that the narrative of Green Zone is very surface-level, and simplifies the politics of the Iraq War into a very basic narrative structure. Sure, it works, but it could've been superior with more depth.


Anyone who has previously seen a Matt Damon performance should not be surprised at how perfect he is for the role of Roy Miller. Possessing a similar moral fortitude as Jason Bourne (a character no doubt Miller will be compared to) but lacking the physical strength and fighting abilities, the superhero element is removed here, leaving a very human and relatable character. Greg Kinnear and Brendan Gleeson are equally terrific in their respective roles. Khalid Abdalla, who played one of the hijackers in Greengrass' United 93, also features as Miller's reluctant translator who struggles with divided loyalties. One of the most intriguing aspects of Green Zone is that, rather than using extras dressed in battle fatigues, a lot of the men surrounding Damon are apparently soldiers who have spent time fighting in the Iraq War. These men aren't given particularly large roles, but where it counts is in the details - the tactics and movements of the team all feel real.



Every once in a while, a smart, rousing, mature film for adults is released that audiences decide to bypass, and Green Zone is the current example. It's a shame such movies as this aren't well received at the box office, because the cinematic climate would be a better place with more of this kind. On Michael Moore's Twitter, he said of the movie: "I can't believe this film got made. It's been stupidly marketed as action film. It is the most HONEST film about Iraq War made by Hollywood."

7.8/10



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Not Explosive Enough

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 14 March 2010 03:45

Roy Miller is a chief Warrant officer for the Us Army and he is assigned to clear areas of Weapons of Mass destruction, except he begins to notice a pattern, that every area they hit seems to be empty, even the ones that were marked as extremely high risk. As soon as Miller seems to be getting close to finding out some truths other people step in and Miller is expected to step aside and just allow them to figure about what needs to be done. Miller begins to put the pieces together and decides to go Rogue and do what needs to be done, so not only he knows the truth but all of America knows the truth.

Greengrass sets this film about as one of those films that is supposed to deliver small hints as they go along that things aren’t what they seem to be. He drops the major clue to early, and we know what Miller is going to find out, we know the whole reason for going to war will unravel before his is very eyes, so when Greengrass gives those not so subtle hints that something may be up we begin to roll our eyes. That is until Miller actually goes on the mission to find the truth. Once they stop dropping the silent hints then we can see this film for what it truly is. An anti war film that delivers a strong opposition to a cause many Americans have come to agree with. Greengrass creates perhaps one of the only films that’s foundation is rock solid dead set against the war. This film delivers perhaps the biggest anti-Iraq war message of any film to be released about the Iraq war.

The only thing I tend to see as way over the top is Miller was able to get information, classified information on the US army and basically do as he pleased with it. If Miller had this proof, or the American politicians even for one second thought he knew the truth, Miller would have been eliminated in an “accident” before everyone jumps on me for making that statement it happens everywhere else, and the Americans reasoning for being in Iraq or staying in Iraq this long have always been questionable and we as humans do not need a film to tell us this. Now I don’t want to get into this, because my stance on the war has nothing to do with what this film was trying to convey. Now for those who see this is purely anti-war propaganda remember to anything one believes in there will always be those who don’t agree. These war films are relevant whether they speak for or against the war.

The shaky camera syndrome that this film suffers from was one of the things that really irritated me, Greengrass was trying to make big strong political statements and during his electrifying action scenes it was impossible to tell who was firing at whom, and who has been shot and who hadn’t. After the shoot-outs and everything calmed down it went back to being 100 percent straight. Just one of those tiny things that took away from the no-hold barred lay it all on the line action scenes.

What I was hoping for was Matt Damon’s first chance to really convey a character since The Departed. This was Damon’s film, his character was the focal point, and what did it become, one of those single character fights for survival against an entire army looking to bring him down. Damon seemed like he came second to the films ultimate message, and I would say that would be a good thing if this film would have had the explosive ending where the American government suffers greatly from what he was able to find out. I know that didn’t happen in real life , but an ending to that affect would show that there are still people who care about what is right and what is wrong, and there are still people who care about having to be justified in what you are doing. In the end this film gave us these messages of anti-war but nothing came of it. This film lit a fuse early and the fuse burned for nearly 2 hours only to fizzle out before the grand explosion.

Matt Damon of course gives off a performance that is far from bad, but when you look back in about 10 years on what he has accomplished this will just fall into the category of just another performance in a war film that ultimately could not deliver.


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