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The Hurt Locker (2008) Certificate 15

The Hurt Locker
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Rated 4.0 stars
Average rating
(79%)
 
Starring: Jeremy Renner | Anthony Mackie | Brian Geraghty | Guy Pearce | Ralph Fiennes | David Morse | Evangeline Lilly | Christian Camargo
Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Studio: LIONS GATE HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 126 mins
Collections: Best Picture Oscar Winners
Genres: Action/Adventure
Languages: English
Hearing-impaired: English
Released: December 28, 2009

Iraq. Forced to play a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse in the chaos of war, an elite Army bomb squad unit must come together in a city where everyone is a potential enemy and every object could be a deadly bomb.

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Rating of 4 stars out of 5
Time Out

Click here to read an interview with director BigelowBest known for 1991s Point Break, Kathryn Bigelow is back...

Highest rated reviews

173 out of 174 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
"If I'm gonna die, I want to die comfortable."

Vivacia from , 18th August, 2009

Premiering at the 2008 Venice Film Festival, 'The Hurt Locker' received a ten minute standing ovation at the end of its screening. Subject to much critical praise, the film will finally reach British shores with its theatrical release in August 2009. Few films about the conflict in Iraq or Afghanistan have managed to capture the essence of what it means to be fighting in a country where anyone and everyone is a potential enemy, and the understandable stresses that places on the human mind and body. With a highly realistic aesthetic and almost non-stop tension 'The Hurt Locker' allows us mere mortals a glimpse of what it really means to fight for your country. Opening with a regular day for an 'Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit' (bomb squad to you and me) the film starts as it means to go on with a very sudden and violent end for one of the team. Sergeant First Class William James (Jeremy Renner) is moved in to replace the lost soldier, and he is quick to prove to his fellow team members that he is a lot less concerned with his own safety then his predecessor. This is aptly shown when he suits up in the 'bomb suit' to investigate a suspected device personally rather than send in the bomb disposal robot first. Understandably his new colleagues aren't impressed, particularly Sergeant J.T. Sandborn (Anthony Mackie) who has trouble adjusting to a team leader who takes his earpiece out whenever the word “withdraw” is mentioned. The last member of the team, Specialist Owen Eldridge (Brian Geraghty), is also disturbed by the change in the team, but is too busy dealing with his own guilt over the death that brought James into their unit to really get worked up about him. With the characters established the story takes us through a selection of the incidents the unit have to deal with during their rotation, not least of which is a sniper shoot out in the Iraqi desert, which is so painfully accurate it’s almost uncomfortable. Kathryn Bigelow (director of “Strange Days” and “Point Break” among others) amps up the tension in every scene of the conflict, keeping the audience not only on the edge of their seat but at times making them fall off it, and making you question if these highly likable characters are going to make it. Excellent performances round out an almost perfect film, with believable dialogue and very naturalistic acting from not only the leads but the supporting cast and the extras, many of whom were genuine Iraqis living in Jordan, where the film was made. Combined with the camera work, that resembles embed journalist film rather than Hollywood shots, “The Hurt locker” amounts to a fantastic film experience, that still manages to not trivialise its subject matter, and will leave audiences wondering – “is it wrong that I don’t want this to end?”

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48 out of 49 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Was i watching the same film as everyone else?

Awais from , 31st December, 2009

After watching the trailer i was expecting a fantastic film, which would keep me glued to the screen........ but it didn't. A real disappointment. Quite frankly i got bored of the film after 20 minutes, for me this film had no sense of direction and i was really expecting more after all the hype. If you want to watch a laborious, and lifeless film about an EOD unit defusing bombs then this is the film for you. For me it was a real waste of time....... Was i watching the same film as everyone else?

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30 out of 33 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3.0 stars
tick tick tick

Nootlin from , 19th August, 2009

The Hurt Locker is a pretty unconventional war film in that it completely side-swipes the politics and simply and effectively conveys the role of the soldier, and more specifically the bomb squad. And unlike the banality and inaction of war in Jarhead, as you might imagine from Kathryn Bigelow it's a tension-filled, action-packed ride from start to finish. These soldiers (or at least one of them) are having fun! It IS conventional in other ways, and although I think the script is terrific and dialogue sparse - a good thing - it did remind me of Murtaugh and Riggs from the Lethal Weapon series at times. At one point Sergeant James utters 'I'm too old for this s**t'... The death of one particular character is also very predictable. Great acting all round, could have done without the cameos, and sometimes the score is intrusive, The Hurt Locker doesn't really add anything new to the genre, but a pretty solid addition to the arsenal.

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19 out of 19 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
BE WARNED!This is not just another war movie....

A Customer from SW London, 29th August, 2009

War movies are not usually my cup of tea.I find the killing and bleakness of war too depressng for words, but this isn't just any war movie.This movie was a work of collaboration between Mark Boal (journalist who was embedded in the EOD in Iraq) and Bigelow, who produced a worthy work of art. The intended reason to make this film was to put the spotlight on the unsung heroes of war: the Explosive Ordanance Disposal Squad. The army elite that look for and disarm bombs. Soldier venacular refers to an explosion as being sent to the hurt locker, hence the title of the movie. To me this movie felt like it was shot as a documentary, but with alot more substance. Renner who plays William James was flawless in this role.What really scared me is that the characters are based on people Boal met while embedded in EOD. Basically to me this film is about the relationship between life and death. We follow the team headed by James and with Sanborn and Eldridge coming along for the ride.Each of them deals with the trials of their job differently. Eldridge gets hurt and it is really interesting to see James lack of reaction towards him.Sanborn looks at death in the eyes and he realises in the end that he wants to go home and have a family, something he wasn't too keen on in the first place. The most fascinating character for me was William James who is unlike Sanborn and Eldridge because he has clearly lost some of his humanity. He pursues danger unncessarily (which is why Eldridge gets shot) and you get the sense he only feels truly alive when he is looking at death in the face. The only thing more dangerous than the enemy is being in a squad with a man like James because he has a complete disregard for his own safety and the safety of others. He is a man that lives too close to the edge. I feel sorry for the character because in the end all he has left of his humanity is his love for the 'fix' the need to feel the danger coursing throw this veins and the tick tock of what one day will be invevitable for him:death. It is sad that for someone like James the prospect of civilian life and family just doesn't do it for him .....because somewhere along the line as he explains to his baby in the end he only loves one thing and that love is a very sad one indeed. A gripping movie, done with a masterful touch that allows you to look deep into the psyche of those involved in such a dangerous job.A remarkable film, not to be missed.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 2.0 stars
Oscar winning really.....???????????

gazl from , 22nd March, 2010

Ive come to the conclusion Oscars only promote films that no one wants to see to try and make some money. Before seeing this film I read plenty of scathing reviews about it not being realistic etc. etc.. however i gave these the benefit of the doubt and watched the film. yes the direction is god, yes the sound is amazing. yes the cinematography is brilliant but that's where it ends. I appreciate that this film is no documentary on Iraq and can forgive the obvious fiction but that's no excuse to cook up a movie with no story & no plot its like a bad fly on the wall documentary, it makes Ibiza uncovered look Oscar winning. I have seen better movies this year that deserve a shot at Oscar fame. I categorize this film as..... not even on a Sunday afternoon on five ...low priority

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*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 1.5 stars
The Hurt Locker

jonom from , 22nd March, 2010

Only reasonable. Ridiculous and annoying scene with British military contractors or SAS, which ended up with American bomb disposal saving day and with most of British being rubbish and getting killed by a sniper.

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Rated 2.5 stars
Oscar? How come?

A Customer from Northampton, 21st March, 2010

A very average kind of film.Stereotypical, two dimensional characters. A predictable slushy American home scene. The action sequences however are extremely powerful and engaging. The clever part of the film is it doesn't take obviously sides: pro or anti war. Both camps could find stuff in the film to celebrate and think was backing their point of view. I am sure that is why it has succeeded with the American Oscars

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Rated 2.0 stars
Not worthy of Oscar

A Customer from Surrey, 21st March, 2010

there are very few films that I fast forward, but I found myself doing this twice. Not sure what all the fuss was about, An average film, which I have soon forgotten and not worthy of best film Oscar?!? Must've been more gripping in the cinema, as I didn't feel suspence or warm to the characters. I was disappointed.

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