
Director:Ridley Scott (Gladiator, Thelma & Louise)
Writer: Steve Zaillian and Ken Nolan. Adapted from book by Mark Bowden
Cast:Josh Hartnett, Ewan McGregor, Tom Sizemore, William Fichtner, Sam Shepard, Orlando Bloom, Ron Eldard, Eric Bana
Rating:R
Run Time:143 minutes
THE SKINNY
A powerful recounting of the 1993 U.S. military operation in Somalia in which two black hawk helicopters are shot down over the hostile city of Mogadishu
THE BOTTOM LINE
This is truly a “must see” film, even for the squeamish
THE FULL REVIEW
While Black Hawk Down may not be the best American film of the year; it is certainly the most important one. Unfortunately, many people will avoid seeing this film for the very reason they should see it. Adapted from Mark Bowden’s best selling book of the same name, Black Hawk Down tells of the fateful military operation in Mogadishu, Somalia in October 1993 that resulted in the death of 18 U.S. soldiers (estimates of Somali fighters killed number as much as 1,000). What was intended to be a “routine” Special Forces operation to extricate the genocidal warlord Mohammed Farrah Aidid, turned out to be (or at least was perceived to be) a disastrous episode for the U.S. military that had wide-ranging implications for U.S. foreign policy for the remainder of the decade.
Director Ridley Scott’s quasi-documentary approach to shooting the film lands the viewer directly in the middle of the action. The violence is relentless and for a punishing 90 minutes the audience has no place to hide. To suggest that an hour and a half of discomfort in a movie theater could offer even a taste of the true chaotic terror that those American soldiers endured for 15 straight hours would be laughable. But, it would be nearly impossible for those who choose to see Black Hawk Down (perhaps most for those normally too squeamish to see such a film) to leave the theater without having a greater appreciation and empathy for the young men and women who put their lives on the line each day protecting U.S. security interests (and do so whether they agree or disagree with U.S. involvement in any particular military action).
The film does not pretend that these soldiers were without flaws. It is made clear that seemingly minor mistakes by several of the soldiers could have, and in some cases did, lead to dire consequences. This somehow makes these soldiers and all that happened to them seem more real and perhaps allows us to believe the film’s lead character, played by Josh Hartnett, when, at the film’s end, he says, “Nobody asks to be a hero. It just sometimes turns out that way.”
HIGHLIGHTS
* Strong direction from Ridley Scott
* Terrific cinematography from Slavomir Idziak and production design by Arthur Max
* Strong cast (although the strength of the cast was relatively unimportant in this film)
LOWLIGHTS
* One unnecessarily manipulative scene in which a soldier attempts to reach his wife at home by phone just before leaving for the military operation. The wife is scene entering the house as the soldier’s voice is heard completing his loving message on the answering machine (guess what happens to him).
* May view some of dialogue as a bit too preachy
OTHER INFO
* Nudity: None
* Violence: Significant - some extremely graphic
* Humor: Very little
Related Entries
- Dogma  THE SKINNY Chef Kevin Smith, cooks up a tasty dish that is one part Clerks, two parts religious satire. THE REVIEW DOGMA,...
- Shaft THE SKINNY The nephew of the original Shaft takes the law into his own hands in order to capture a racist...
- High Fidelity Director: Stephen Frears (The Grifters, Dangerous Liaisons) Cast: John Cusack, Iben Hjejle, Lisa Bonet, Todd Louiso, Jack Black, Joan Cusack and...
- The Worst Interests of Baseball  If you ever have cause to wonder why baseball is in such bad shape, consider the "man" leading our...
- Reflections on the Films of 2001 By: Craig Ettinger Well, here are CandidCritic's reflections on the films released during 2001. I should note that there are some...












1 Response to “Black Hawk Down”
Please Wait
Leave a Reply