SICARIO (2015)

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An F.B.I. agent is recruited to join a government task force set up to fight the war on drugs in Juarez, Mexico and at the Mexican/U.S. border. A Sicario is a hired assassin.

When Nixon began the official ‘War on Drugs’ in the 1960’s, one would hope that he wasn’t aware of the true cost of this phony war. Hundreds of thousands have died because of it and the death toll doesn’t seem to be abating.

Denis Villeneuve follows his excellent Enemy with this film about the horrific consequences of fighting in such an unwinnable war. As long as these drugs are outlawed by America and the rest of the world the killing will continue. A serious dialogue needs to happen. The war is clearly not working; fifty years on and no sign of any end in sight.
He gives us a tale that eschews deep character development in favour of the bigger picture, but don’t be fooled, this technique works brilliantly by allowing the viewer to be drawn into this crazy, lawless world.

Emily Blunt plays Kate Macer, an F.B.I. special agent who is recruited by Josh Brolin’s Matt Graver, an agent who may not be who he initially appears to be and the great Benicio Tel Toro plays Alejandro, another member of the team whose story will be revealed in due course. Another Brit, Daniel Kaluuya plays Reggie Wayne, Macer’s F.B.I. partner and does a stellar job. Victor Garber is Dave Jennings, Macer’s boss and here, as usual he delivers a sturdy performance. And finally we have Jon Bernthal who, fortunately, is not featured massively. The long term readers of The Movie Musings will know how I feel about this actor, to précis, he acts too much, seems too aware of the camera and tics harder than a tic-tac-toe player on speed. Nuff said. Bernthal aside, everyone brings their A-game to a story that is both important and necessary. Sure, there have been many films about the Mexican Cartel already but if a story or a subject is worth investigating it’s probably worth telling again. Having just watched Narcos on Netflix this subject matter was interesting to me and Villeneuve gives us a different take on it. Here, he also spends time with the victims of this crazy war and seems much more sympathetic to their plight than the usual Hollywood pro-American stance.

Emily Blunt’s character is basically representing the audience in this piece; she gets to know what’s happening when we do, which makes this all the more exciting for the viewer. She plays a by-the-book agent and when thrust into this chaotic, unpredictable world she finds her morals and ideals compromised, as there really are no black and white solutions in this world. Grey areas are much more thought-provoking than tying things all up in a neat little bow.

Jóhann Jóhannsson delivers a killer soundtrack that is all atmosphere and greatly adds to the unsettling nature of the film.

On the subject of his score he says:
“I wanted to create music that had an underlying tension and a sense of coming from below the earth, like a throbbing pulse that resonates from underground or the pounding heartbeat of a wild beast that is charging at you. I also wanted to evoke the sadness and melancholy of the border, the border fences and the tragedy of the drug war.”

He succeeds massively creating this dark, brooding score that helps embed us, as onlookers, in the story, helped along by the screenwriting duties of actor, Taylor Sheridan.

I highly recommend this intelligent take on the effects of the war on drugs in America. Villeneuve is a director of weight and substance and as he has signed up to direct the new Blade Runner project, it may be worth a look.

4/5

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STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON (2015)

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Five young men from Compton in downtown Los Angeles came together in the 1980s to form one of the most influential musical groups of the last 30 years and created N.W.A. This film deals with the forming of the group, the release of their controversial album Straight Outta Compton and the drama that followed the band during and after their short time together.

How is it that most biopics feel like a Hallmark movie of the week?
When it comes to this film I can’t help but feel that the gloss that has been painted onto the script, direction and acting at times does what 3d tends to do, it emotionally distances you from the experience. The over egging of moments to ‘move the crowd’ so to speak, usually does the opposite. We’ll call this the Hollywood effect.

In 1988, when N.W.A. released their album Straight Outta Compton they lit a fuse that would change hip hop forever introducing the world to Gangsta rap, a kind of real life documentation of the streets that hit mainstream the way that Pimp by Iceberg Slim never did, it also being a documentation of L.A. street life. N.W.A. represented the streets who didn’t, at that time, have a platform. Ice Cube, Dr Dre, Eazy E, Mc Ren and DJ Yella kicked in the door waving their AK47s and demanded to be heard. At the time, what seemed to be a fad, gangster rap, would become one of the biggest money earners the music industry has seen in the 20th century and beyond. Switch on MTV and you will easily see the lineage all the way back to N.W.A..

 

Guns, drugs, women and lawlessness were rife in their lyrics and videos, after all they were writing and expressing themselves about their experiences of living in the ghetto. Parts of Compton in the 1980s were suffering with massive gang and drug problems. It had received little attention from the media; all that all changed with N.W.A..

Prior to the release of Straight Outta Compton, the Gangsta rap genre was alive but only available to the underground and those who kept their ears to the street. Schooly D and Ice T were pioneers of the sound but they weren’t as well known to the mainstream until the explosion that was N.W.A. happened. They reported the news from the streets as they lived it and gave voice to a previously maligned section of America, the ghetto. Through their music the group exposed police brutality to the mainstream public so when the Rodney King beating happened a few years later, many weren’t surprised.

“You are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge”

This film is one that demanded to be made, the story is important; bringing to the fore freedom of expression within music and for the uninitiated it may fill some blanks, albeit told with broad strokes, but for those who require more from film and its immense storytelling possibilities this is one to avoid.

There is so much to fit into the two and a half hours that director F Gary Gray just can’t quite get the balance right in this composition. Too much time is wasted along the way and he fails to make this a tight piece of film that has all the right beats and notes. I would suggest you watch a documentary about the group to gain a more honest look at the world. It feels like certain scenes and events are smoothly rounded off and made more palatable for the audience. The five main actors do a good enough job but are not guided well enough to really create something with raw grit. Not their fault.

Special mentions should go to Jason Mitchell who plays Eric ‘Eazy E’ Wright, his emotional journey is touched upon but within the confines of the Hallmark movie he has to work hard to make it work. Also, Aldis Hodge was great in the little he had to do playing MC Ren. R Marcos Taylor came close to capturing the psychotic Suge Knight and looks like an actor to watch out for. Paul Giamatti gives good Heller, playing their manager, seemingly out to exploit this incredible opportunity and screwing them over financially. But it’s nothing we haven’t seen before from him. He can play these parts in his sleep.

It was always going to be the way that the characters of Cube, E and Dre would be featured much more heavily than Ren and Yella as their stories are more popular and recognizable to the public. After all, Ice Cube, Dre and Eazy’s wife, Tomica Woods-Wright were among the producers of this film.

Like watching the shadow or reflection of the events it was depicting, a pale imitation, not once did I feel emotionally connected with the characters, a little bit like watching a bunch of actors trying desperately to recreate these events led by a director who didn’t have the chops to make it happen.

The biggest joy was the music, hearing it loud in a packed cinema was a buzz but it made me think of how much more I would be enjoying a straight up documentary about N.W.A. as opposed to a dramatisation.

This film will make a lot of money, plenty of the multiplex crowd will be willing and happy to pay to see this story and that’s great, better that a film like this makes shitloads rather than a mindless blockbuster. At least it’s shedding a light on a time in our not too distant history even though the lamp is broken.

2.5/5

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