In 1996, American investigative reporter Gary Webb stumbled
upon, and uncovered CIA involvement in cocaine trafficking into the United
States. It was the story of a lifetime which would ultimately undo his career,
marriage, and possibly could have cost him his life. It was an important, yet
often forgotten part of U.S. history, brought now to light by director Michael
Cuesta and his new film, KILL THE MESSENGER.
Small-time investigative newspaper journalist Gary Webb
(Jeremy Renner), travels the world to uncover the truth behind the CIA’s involvement
in drug trafficking into the U.S., and keeps his investigations going despite
attention which threatens his career, family, and life.
KILL THE MESSENGER is put together very much in the spirit
of the king of journalist/espionage movies, ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN (1976).
Only this time, the film goes a step further and shows the important aftermath
of the big uncovering. KILL THE MESSENGER is basically divided into two parts;
the first focusing on Webb’s relentless investigation, and the second on the unraveling
of his career as his story and facts are called into question. The first-half
of the film is incredibly engaging; a near-perfect procedural investigation
story taking us to various corners of the world and introducing us to many
shady characters in and out of our own country. The second-half is equally
important, as Webb’s credibility is called into question as pressure from a
denying U.S. Government mounts and his sources begin to deny ever talking to
him. As well as the film operates in getting your attention and holding onto
it, it stumbles a little in the character department. Director Michael Cuesta
keeps his main character a little distant and just out of arms reach. Although
a lot of time is spent on Webb and his family before and after the
discrediting, the main character is only explored just enough. What we get does
work, but it could have been a little more as we don’t once weep for him when
his troubles rise higher and higher.
The lightness in character can be forgiven, because KILL THE
MESSENGER clearly wants the plot to take precedence. A great deal of work is
put into the factual occurrences to make what could have been a very hard plot
to follow easy to understand. Great detail can be seen in the surroundings, and
a lot of fine work is put into the usage of archival footage. From a technical
standpoint, KILL THE MESSENGER is masterfully put together.
Jeremy Renner is outstanding from beginning to end. He
shoulders the burden of carrying the film on his back perfectly in having to
wear many hats; a father, husband, family man, reporter, and broken man. His
character has many ups and downs through the film and he sells it every time.
The rest of the large cast is balanced and perfectly cast; Michael Sheen, Andy
Garcia, Ray Liotta, Barry Pepper, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Rosemarie DeWitt,
Paz Vega, Oliver Platt, Richard Schiff, Robert Patrick, Tim Blake Nelson, and Michael K. Williams
are all excellent.
KILL THE MESSENGER doesn’t have much of an emotional arc,
nor does have a large climax. It’s an odd way to wrap the film and it feels like
something is missing once the credits roll. But considering the true-story
source material being explored, there probably wasn’t much that could have been
done without putting a standard Hollywood-spin on it. KILL THE MESSENGER doesn’t
seem to care if we go through an emotional journey, but instead wants us to
take in a history lesson which should outrage and enlighten us…and that is a
mission accomplished.
BOTTOM LINE: See it
No comments:
Post a Comment
A few rules:
1. Personal attacks not tolerated.
2. Haters welcome, if you can justify it.
3. Swearing is goddamn OK.