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(1981) rt: 106 min ****
Director: Stephen Gaghan
Starring: George Clooney, Christopher Plummer, Jeffrey Wright, Matt
Damon, Amanda Peet
Tagline: Everything is connected
Every once in a while I need to
see a serious film. I don't mean serious in like a Sally has a barfing
problem kind of way, but serious in that it has a true point of view
and a message to convey. I also need to see films that don't insult
my intelligence and treat me as if I'm not smart enough to follow
a Clifford pop-up book, let alone a fact-based political thriller.
In a refreshing twist, Syriana throws a dense script at you
and allows the viewer to sink or swim. I saw this thing late in its
theater run, and was warned ahead of time to pay very close attention.
I did, and was rewarded with a wonderful script that managed to treat
everyone not as caricatures but as flesh and blood people. They do
all this while still showing us the inner workings of the oil business,
the struggle for power and money in the Middle East and why people
do what they do. While there is a temptation to make the oilmen and
shady American government officials evil, snarling dogs and the Islamic
fundamentalists mentally deranged lunatics, the movie resists and
shows their actions and motivations in the black and white context
of fear and self-preservation. Nobody is righteous, nobody blameless
and nobody pure evil. There are motivations behind every action, and
often they're the same on both sides. The ending message is a bit
bleak, but that's true life. Call it a cautionary tale--everyone who
tries to break the cycle of insanity that is money and land and inside
deals ends up a smoking crater in the pavement. The oil and money
has a life of its own and is bigger than any one part and is the reason
for everything that is happening in the region. As they say in the
movie, without it they'd still be just a bunch of dudes in tents out
in the middle of the desert, and American businessmen and their government
cronies would be off somewhere else pressing their influence and flexing
their muscles. Adding to the immersive feel of the film was the gritty
film style and spot-on acting. George Clooney has come a long way
from Facts
of Life, and is given free range here to not play George
Clooney. While his range still hovers around some of the more dramatic
ER
episodes, he flashes his charisma (even 50 lbs. heavier) without the
wink that is usually present in his performances. Matt Damon is actually
a pretty underrated actor who always manages to convey an odd tension
in his characters that is subtle but unsettling and effective. He's
not creepy in a Talented
Mr. Ripley kind of way in this film, but is certainly a man
fighting some serious internal battles. The rest of the cast is equally
strong and shows what actors can really do when they know what they're
doing is good. If only there were more filmmaker out there willing
to take that chance. [Movie Theater, MF]
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