
The Hurt Locker begins with a quote that includes the line “war is a drug.”

I have read a few reviews that have called this film one of the most defining of the decade, or one of the all-time great war films. I think they are right about it being a film defining its time, but to think that this film can stand up against the like of Apocalypse Now or The Bridge on the River Kwai seems a little over-insinuating. These films stand the test of time because of their timeless stories and characters.
No one can argue with the great intensity brought on by the powerful camera work displayed in the film. Director Kathryn Bigelow accomplishes this by using the increasingly popular docu-style technique of jittery cameras and fast cutting. The film does not at all lack suspense. The film also does an excellent job of defining its characters, although they stay relatively flat for the length of movie. Sgt. Sanborn is the only character that really arcs. Overall, this is a pretty fantastic war movie, one that truly embraces the soldiers who fight, and the time it defines.
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