• Trust Weighted
    Pretty Bad
  • 66
    Trust Points

Wick's Review

Summary - Pretty Bad 1.5

Anger and pity suffuse this superficially sympathetic portrait of the US Army’s casualty notification service. GIs are uniformly depicted as damaged, deluded or destructive: those uninjured as much as the wounded. Families of the fallen are depicted as unsupportive of their loved one’s enlistment decision, or as estranged from them, or otherwise in a dysfunctional relationship with their now dead soldier.

Sadly, this cynicism passes for patriotism. It’s not surprising that Hollywood would make such a condescending movie or that antiwar extremist Woody Harrelson would star in it. The entertainment-industrial complex is reluctant to treat US soldiers as ethically, emotionally and intellectually upright. The one Iraq War movie that broke the mold – The Hurt Locker – was also the only one to be embraced by the country.

The handling of Army casualties from Iraq is much better depicted in HBO’s Taking Chance, a true story. Watch that instead of this crass agitprop.

Acting - Good 3.0

Woody can act. It’s the thinking that gets him in trouble.

Male Stars - Good 3.0

Woody was great, Ben Foster was good.

Female Stars - Good 3.0

Female Costars - OK 2.5

Male Costars - Good 3.0

Film - Pretty Awful 0.5

While technically competent, the film’s arrogance was awful.

Direction - Awful 0.0

Dialogue - Awful 0.0

Music - Barely OK 2.0

Visuals - OK 2.5

Edge - Risqué 2.0

Sex Titillating 1.7

Violence Fierce 1.7

Rudeness Profane 2.7

Reality - Glib 1.2

The soldiers and Marines I know are balanced and sound, more so than many people one meets in the general population, in my experience. Are others psychologically wounded? Of course. War too often has that effect on veterans. That doesn’t excuse the savage cynicism of The Messenger.

A good primer for how our service members think and feel – in their own words – can be found in the National Endowment for the Arts’ 2006 book Operation Homecoming: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Home Front, in the Words of U.S. Troops and Their Families. Hundreds of letters, poems and stories are collected from a diverse group of men and women, those wearing the uniform and their families, depicting soundness of mind in the face of great challenge and responsibility.

To pity them is to not honor them. To respect them is. To revere them is optional, though it’s hard to identify another self-selected cohort more deserving.

Circumstantial - Glib 1.7

Biological - Natural 1.0

Physical - Natural 1.0

1 Comment

  • BrianSez Jun 23, 2010 8:11PM

    Thanks, I was considering seeing this, but now won’t bother. If you are interested in this subject, see what I thought was a great film with Kevin Bacon: “Taking Chance” (http://www.wikpik.com/movies/379854-taking-chance).

More reviews on The Messenger More reviews by Wick

© 2006-2024 WikPik, Inc. All rights reserved.

Go to the full ViewGuide