Lives of Drudgery And Peril

Kathryn Bigelow’s “The Hurt Locker� is an intense war movie about a team of bomb removal specialists in Iraq. When an improvised explosive device is located, these are the guys who come in to deal with it.

   The film opens with the team’s leader, Sgt. Thompson (Guy Pearce), getting killed and a new man, Staff Sergeant William James (Jeremy Renner) replacing him.

   Right from the outset, it’s clear that the cocksure James is no ordinary bomb defuser, as he calmly takes extraordinary risks in already hair raising situations.

   This confuses and angers his fellow soldiers, the cool Sergeant J.T. Sanborn (Anthony Mackie) and the jittery Specialist Owen Eldridge (Brian Geraghty), who at one point briefly consider blowing him up “by accident.â€�

   The film’s narrative is held together by titles that announce the days left in Bravo Company’s tour of duty. As the horrific incidents pile up, a picture emerges of a soldier’s life in Iraq — drudgery followed by extremely perilous moments in an alien and hostile environment where death is around every corner.

   “The Hurt Lockerâ€� is not an anti-war movie, nor does it glorify the conflict. There really aren’t any “bad guys,â€� (apart from one colonel who is star-struck by the technically brilliant James).

   If there is such a thing as a soldier’s film, this might be it.

   There is nothing bombastic about this movie. Special effects are minimal, and effective. The story meanders a little, but it’s not a problem.

   When James returns home, and is confronted by the complexities of the American supermarket, there is a nice sequence in which he stares, bewildered and bemused, at the infinite varieties of cereal.

   The film closes as he returns for another tour. Clearly, life Stateside does not provide the adrenaline fix he requires.

  The film is tense, taut and occasionally gory. It is economical and focused. It slips with a subplot intended to help illuminate the contradictions in James’ character, which adds little.

   But this is the best American film I’ve seen in ages, and deserves a place alongside “Apocalypse Nowâ€� and “Paths of Gloryâ€� in the ranks of war movies.

“The Hurt Locker� is at the Movie House in Millerton, NY. It is rated R for war violence and language.

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