Film Review: Zero Dark Thirty

Zero Dark Thirty, directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal, sets out to depict – but according to Bigelow not necessarily endorse – the “greatest manhunt in history”, the hunt for Osama bin Laden. Despite Bigelow’s claims of artistic neutrality, her film is a grotesque and blatant propaganda piece for US foreign policy post 9/11 and its criminal use of torture in particular.

Zero Dark Thirty, directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal, sets out to depict – but according to Bigelow not necessarily endorse – the “greatest manhunt in history”, the hunt for Osama bin Laden. Despite Bigelow’s claims of artistic neutrality, her film is a grotesque and blatant propaganda piece for US foreign policy post 9/11 and its criminal use of torture in particular.

The film follows the story of a young CIA agent, Maya (Jessica Chastain), whose unwavering determination over a decade – which is fuelled by her belief in a certain destiny – is key to the successful extra-judicial killing of bin Laden and several other women and men who happen to be in the same house in Pakistan.

Having been nominated for five Academy Awards, the film is surprisingly dull. Shot well and with insights into the operations of the CIA that could only have come from close collaboration with the US government itself, the film does provide an accurate portrayal of the brutality of torture. However the plot is not exactly unpredictable; it’s drawn out over two and a half hours and none of the characters have any depth, including Maya, who is a cold, merciless loner who was recruited to the CIA straight from high school – she’s essentially a robot.

Revealingly, the working title for the film was “For God and Country”, which more clearly expresses the kind of chauvinistic message that the film contains. A debate has emerged between critics and defenders of the film, as to whether it endorses and justifies the use of torture.

The film begins with images from the horrific attack on the World Trade Centre in New York on 11 September 2001 and is interspersed with images of other reprehensible suicide bombings carried out by Al Qaeda-linked groups, such as the 7/7 bombings in London. But the timing of such scenes speaks volumes, as the torture is depicted as a direct response to these atrocities. The information that led to the whereabouts of Bin Laden, a triumph for Maya, the CIA and the US government, came as a result of torture and in this sense the film didactically advocates for the use of vile human rights abuses such as water-boarding, by US imperialism.

But what is most telling about the film is what’s left out. The invasion and continuing occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, which included the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of innocent people by US imperialism, hardly gets a mention. Nor is the impact of US foreign policy in the Middle East before 9/11 ever referenced. 2001 is clearly year zero as far as the filmmakers are concerned.

Also left out is the fact that while cynically reaping praise from the establishment in the US for killing bin Laden and apparently striking a blow against terrorists around the world, the Obama regime through the CIA has been funding those very same Al Qaeda groups in Libya and Syria, as it now suits their interests – as it did in the 1980s.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Begg's support for Property Tax makes mockery of ICTU's alleged opposition to austerity

Next Article

Brutal force used on peaceful anti-Property Tax protesters

Related Posts
Read More

Joe Higgins responds to Mick Wallace’s false claims

In an interview with Marian Finucane, on RTE on 6 October, Independent TD Mick Wallace said that he had informed me about his tax evasion and falsification of VAT returns long before these became public knowledge. Claiming to be surprised about my ‘negativity’ following the revelations of his actions, he said, ‘I told Joe about [the under declaration of the VAT] months before that and he didn’t seem near as perturbed about it…. it really only became a big issue for people like Joe when the media hounded him.’

Read More

The need for a united European response of workers against the attacks

joe_shell-1 Attacks on working people are mounting right across Europe. The so-called PIGS (Portugal, Ireland & Italy, Greece, Spain) countries have been to the forefront of these attacks. In Ireland, we have seen €7 billion of cutbacks, seriously damaging public services, including health and education. In Greece, there has been a 10% cut in wages and spending in the public sector, together with an increased retirement age, VAT increases and the freezing of pensions. Portugal has a plan to cut its deficit by €11bn over four years through a crisis tax on wages and cutbacks in public services. The Spanish Parliament has passed cutbacks worth €15bn on top of €50bn already agreed. Italy is due to implement "emergency-cutbacks" of €24 bn.

Read More

Olympics 2012: London – a tale of two cities

The Olympics will be staged in London this summer. The Con-Dems and their big business friends expect that the Games and the Queen’s Golden Jubilee in June will bring tourists, consumer spending and profits. But perhaps most importantly, they hope they will deflect the attention of London’s working and middle class from the severe austerity and economic meltdown that will actually be the main features of London in 2012. They are hoping to emulate the policy of the Ancient Roman emperors to keep the masses in check.