Black
Hawk Down
Rating:
****/*****, or 7/10
Ridley
Scott's account of the U.S. Marine incident in Somalia of October 3,
1993. Scott provides the drama, producer Jerry Bruckheimer ensures
the expected carnage and explosions (plus a bunch of actual Black Hawk helicopters!). A wonderfully diverse cast of
both top actors (Tom Sizemore, Ewan McGregor, Sam Shepard) and former
unknowns (among them, Eric Bana, William Fichtner, Tom Hardy, Nicolaj
Coster-Waldau and Orlando Bloom) portrays the various Army Rangers
and their commanding officers, who set out to perform a mission that
soon spins out of everybody's control, resulting in a spectacular but
horrific onslaught. Dispatched to arrest several high ranking
officers of a vicious local warlord in Mogadishu, their objective
swiftly turns into a basic fight to get out alive as the soldiers
find themselves severely outnumbered when confronted with thousands
of angry Somalis. All hell breaks loose on the city streets as a
humongous firefight ensues that will witness several Americans gutted
publicly and not one but two Black Hawk helicopters taken out. Not to mention
the hundreds upon hundreds of Somali footsoldiers that got themselves
killed in their attempt to simply overrun their highly trained
opponents instead of going about their business with any tactical
sense. Starting things at a surprisingly slow pace, an eerie calm before the storm you know will follow, Scott introduces
the platoon of sympathetic young soldiers at his leisure, portraying
them as fairly naive and rather bored by the lack of action, clearly
not entirely grasping the gravity of the tense political situation they're in. But
then, how could they predict things would get this bad, considering it wasn't supposed to go down the
way it ended up doing? The moment they go in, there's no more time
for levity and laughs since what follows is two hours of non-stop
action where these boys have to deal with everything their military
education had hoped them to avoid. Scott proves completely
uncompromising, revealing the absolute brutality of the events in all
its graphic horror, resulting in a harrowing viewing experience
that's clearly not suited for everybody: if you're uncomfortable at
the sight of bloody operations without sedatives or any type of gory
dismemberment, you had better stay away from this film. As sudden as
it started the fight is over and we're simply left numb and combat
fatigued, wondering how things could have gotten so terribly out of
hand so fast (even though the mission wasn't actually a failure by
definition, as its goal was secured!). Despite its powerful punch,
the movie tends to feel monotonous after 80 minutes of relentless
gunfire, while it's a shame the Somali point of view is only briefly
adressed (since 90% of the Somalis in this film end up as cannon
fodder, it would have been nice to know what they thought they were
fighting for). Nevertheless, Sir Ridley has clearly proven he's just
as adapt at making daring, gripping war movies as he is at historical
epics and science fiction pictures. Though there's little doubt
audiences will prove as adapt at sitting through this cinematic
battle from hell without any sense of shock and horror.
Starring:
Eric Bana, Ewan McGregor, Josh Hartnett
Directed
by Ridley Scott
USA/UK:
Revolution Studios, 2001
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