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WearetheMovies Forum :: Dubai's Finest Film Discussion Community  |  Movies  |  Sunset Boulevard  |  The Messenger (Moverman, 2009)
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Author Topic: The Messenger (Moverman, 2009)  (Read 280 times)
shariqq
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« on: January 17, 2010, 05:24:PM »



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Directed by: Oren Moverman
Starring: Ben Foster, Woody Harrelson, Samantha Morton, Jena Malone, others.
Release date: November 13, 2009 (US, Limited)

The Messenger treads a noteworthy path. It is a slice-of-life film, focusing on essentially three characters in everyday America, yet is about a lot more than it shows. It brings a global conflict to our door-step and down to a personal level. Although it is about grief, the movie is not heavy-laden with the emotion itself. This becomes the movie's biggest accomplishment.

Will Montgomery (Ben Foster) has three months left in active duty after mostly recovering from an injury on-field in Iraq. To complete service, he is assigned to the army's Casualty Notification Service under seasoned notifier Capt. Tony Stone (Woody Harrelson). Stone follows the rule-book: arrive at the next-of-kin's as soon as news of the soldier’s death is received; inform the family in a rehearsed precise and concise manner; leave. No compassion or explanation is to be offered. While Montgomery initially follows the rule book, his experiences with heart-broken parents and spouses eventually move him to be benevolent. He eventually befriends a grieving widow, taking it to the point of a budding romantic relationship.

The characters of Montgomery and Stone are interestingly different. While Montgomery has seen combat up-close and is even a decorated war-hero, Stone never went to the war-zone. Yet, it is Stone who takes on an apathetic mannerism in his somber work, while Montgomery sees a need for compassion. What they do share is loneliness. The Messenger looks at these two people intimately, preferring to explore the sorrow and solitude of these two characters instead of the grieving relatives that they bring tragic news to. Montgomery’s pre-service girl-friend (Jena Malone) did not wait for him, and is getting married. She does not want Montgomery to attend. Stone is a recovering alcoholic. So while Montgomery finds comfort in the company of an army widow (Samantha Morton), Stone finds comfort in the company his new aide. In one powerful scene, Montgomery narrates to Stone the incident that got him his medal. Afterwards when left alone in the room, Stone breaks down crying in what becomes the crescendo of a wonderful and heartfelt performance by Harrelson. Samantha Morton’s widow character goes through her period of doubt and uncertainty, unsure of the possibility of a relationship with Montgomery. Ben Foster, in a restrained seething performance himself, portrays Montgomery as a suffering hero. By concentrating on such intimate characters, director Moverman enlightens the plight of the veiled victims of war – the survivors, soldiers and civilians alike.

Do not look for melodramatic exposition here, there is none. The Messenger is a war-movie that does not show us a war, or its horrors. It instead shows the perceptive effect of death and loss on the loved ones, the detachment that awaits returning soldiers and the sense of worthlessness in soldiers who did not fight. It brings the futility of war to its endpoint.

My rating --> 4 of 5
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« Reply #1 on: February 20, 2010, 01:24:AM »

did this movie get released in the gulf? i kinda remember a movie with the same title that was released earlier this year but i ain't sure,so any of you homies know?
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« Reply #2 on: February 20, 2010, 02:54:AM »

No  idea. I don't think it was released.

Keep running home, boy.
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« Reply #3 on: December 31, 2011, 10:35:AM »

I found THE MESSENGER to be one of the most artfully-made commercial films I have seen in recent times. The writing (dialog) has a natural yet lyrical quality, the cinematography is organic and beautifully intimate, and the performances by Ben Foster and Woody Harrelson are very memorable (it's the best kind of "movie acting" where the characters feel like exaggerated extensions of their real-life versions).

I have since learned that Oren Moverman was originally only supposed to be the co-writer, and looking for a "humanist, experience" director. But the producers suggested he take a crack at directing, and he did, with the blessings of his co-writer Alessandro Camon.

The structure is obtained from your standard buddy cop/master-mentor/war-is-hell formula, but the novelty of the main idea (casualty notification to next of kin) and the sincerity of the filmmakers hides the very designed aspects of the script. Fundamentally, THE MESSENGER is to catharsis and war what SIDEWAYS was to relationships and wine.

P.S. Investors in Bahrain also helped get the film made. Weird and, in hindsight, supremely ironic given the Arab Spring.
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« Reply #4 on: December 31, 2011, 12:26:PM »

Investors in Bahrain? are you serious? more on this please..
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"There's this whole school of thought that movies are always so great when you're 10 or 12 years old, and the reality of it is, when you're 10 or 12 years old, you've only seen 100 stories. By the time you get to be 25, you've seen 3,000. You've seen every permutation of every dramatic arc. And when somebody takes that and stands it on its head, that can be exciting." David Fincher
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« Reply #5 on: December 31, 2011, 06:39:PM »

I agree about the dialogues of The Messenger - they are gut wrenchingly in your face. The film is grim but watchable thanks to its two leads. Some of its greatness is undone by two scenes - where the cop pulls them over for speeding and the half-drunk scene creation at the wedding towards the end - otherwise the film is pitch perfect. Too bad about the director's sophomore effort, the underwhelming, unfocused Rampart with its experimental camera work and dull storytelling.
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« Reply #6 on: January 01, 2012, 03:20:AM »

Watching RAMPART in two weeks. Interesting to hear about the dreaded "sophomore slump".
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