Three Kings (2000)
Don't be fooled (put off?) by the trailers for Three Kings, which depict it
as an all-out gung-ho macho posturing action comedy: a Kelly's Heroes Do Iraq
kind of thing.
Sure, elements of both action and comedy abound in David O Russell's new
movie, but at its core it deals with the human elements of a war and the question
of how valid US involvement in Saddam's sandpit was. And it deals with this in
a quite remarkably innovative and fundamentally moving way, making Three
Kings one of the more accessible yet also most powerful anti-war movies around.
Four US soldiers extract a map to Saddam's treasure bunkers just as
ceasefire has been declared. Although each have their own reasons, all four are
driven by greed and thoughts of returning home with more than just sand in their
pockets. Soon-to-retire Archie Gates (George Clooney) takes command of Troy Barlow
(Mark Wahlberg), Chief Elgin (Ice Cube) and Conrad Vig (a fantastic Spike Jonze),
and together they set off on a clandestine mission to find gold in them thar
dunes.
Soon their objective becomes a little more complicated than first
anticipated, as they get unavoidably caught up in the plight of the rebels left stranded
by the US withdrawal. Despite selfish intent (mainly from Barlow), the quartet
start to question what is more important to them: the gold or the human
tragedy they (supposedly) became soldiers to combat in the first place.
The cast put in some quite excellent performances, particularly Wahlberg
and Jonze, who captures the naive bravado and fear of his trailer trash
character brilliantly. Clooney - an actor who I have previously had no time for
whatsoever - also impresses, displaying a humanist side to his
battle-hardened role that is equal parts moving and believable. Supporting parts are also
good, particularly the young soldier who interrogates Barlow, who underlines the
futility of the conflict with pathos and emotion.
Russell's direction elevates the movie also, using some innovative and
hard-hitting techniques such as grainy film stock and remarkable action
sequences (the gunfights are superbly handled, being a kind of cross
between The Matrix's pioneering slo-mo and unflinching Tarantino-esque carnage).
Indeed, the bruatlity of war is shown for exactly what it is: terrifying,
brutal and disgusting; shown inventively by the graphic internal depictions
of entry wounds and mutilated organs.
Some aspects of the film work less well - particularly the relatively
heavy-handed satire of the media's involvement in the conflict - but on the
whole Three Kings is a powerful piece - well acted, scripted and directed -
that succeeds in its tricky balance between providing an extremely
entertaining movie and a refreshingly intelligent one.
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