From the first second when the lights dim it seems you know exactly what you’re in for in this movie. A black screen with a grim reminder of 9/11: voices from phone calls and radio transmissions of people inside the Twin Towers. Immediately we hate those that caused this tragedy. Maya, played by Jessica Chastain, has just come into Afghanistan from America specially recruited for the mission of finding Osama bin Ladin. She is initiated by viewing her first torture. Quite a controversy in real life and brushed off as necessary in the film. Is this film advocating torture? Definitely. Not only are we continually told that we get good information out of the victims, but when the official policy to stop torture comes in, we get a character telling us “we lost the ability to prove [bin Laden’s location] when we lost the detainee program.” The biggest thing I noticed was we only heard the word torture once, as though saying “detainee program” makes water boarding, sleep deprivation, and dog collaring more pleasant.
We’re supposed to commend the Navy SEALs for going into the Palestinian compound, but I’m not. They’re shooting at women and traumatizing children while whispering “it’s alright.” That does not placate me. Seeing the atrocities committed by al-Qaeda does not justify the American’s use of brutality. This is not a tit-for-tat situation. There are so many greater themes that weren’t touched on in this movie by writers Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal. This movie could have really made me think at the end, but this didn’t. It felt like such a propaganda piece about how the Americans saved the world by killing Osama bin Laden.
There were no surprises and no “I wonder how this will end” moments because everyone knows Osama bin Laden was killed at the beginning of May 2011. Bigelow could have infused this movie with so much life by incorporating the controversies about torture or giving Maya a moral dilemma. Bigelow played it safe on this one, and I left feeling disappointed because I expected so much more from the writer/director pair that also did The Hurt Locker.
Zero Dark Thirty was alright. I wouldn’t give it Best Picture, and I understand why Kathryn Bigelow wasn’t nominated for Best Director. It’s also nominated for Best Original Screenplay (which I personally don’t believe it should get) along with Best Actress for Jessica Chastain who won at the Golden Globes, Best Sound Editing, and Best Film Editing.