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This makeshift investigative team (taking the Law & Order mold of gruff older cop and uneasy younger cop to the extreme) stumbles upon some misdeeds by soldiers off the base, and begins to unravel the mystery themselves. While an issue of anti-immigration is briefly presented, the real border politics are between the military and the civilians, and Haggis wisely chooses to go beyond jurisdictional matters and explore that conflict a little.
Let's face it, though: this movie is really about the war. The son's damaged cell phone contains scrambled video images of his experiences in and out of combat. We learn vicariously what happened abroad that made his fellow soldiers so disaffected now that they've returned. The movie seems to ask: if war is hell, what does that make its surviving veterans? An answer is provided eventually, and we're not supposed to like it.
There is an element of emotional manipulation here, but it's hard to complain when Tommy Lee Jones is so marvelously stoic. I mentioned Law & Order before, and this film plays out much like a TV crime procedural. But it's Jones and his no-nonsense attitude that frames the entire movie, gives a dark subject a bit of levity, and makes the experience much better than it should have been. As I watched, I thought about how long ago that Oscar from The Fugitive was (1993), and how it might be his time again.
2 comments:
No kidding--I hadn't heard about this movie yet, and given the rather low quality of films that are being made and shown, I tend to attempt to save my money rather than spend it. However, I am a crime drama fan, so perhaps this may not be a bad buy. Let's see.
Well, if you see only one movie this fall... wait for something else.
(Unless you're a huge Tommy Lee Jones fan.)
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