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Lions For Lambs Review

"Lions For Lambs" reviews

Movie
Lions For Lambs
Author
anonymous
Date reviewed
2007-11-16 01:04:28
Rating
2.5/5 2.5 stars
Provider
CinemaSource
Review

Given that he's one of Hollywood's most famous old-school liberals, Robert Redford's loquacious and theatrical-style Lions for Lambs inevitably but forcefully concludes that the preoccupation with Iraq has brought the war on terror to a standstill.

Story

Lions for Lambs is all talk and very little action. However articulate and astute it is, Matthew Michael Carnahan's screenplay comes across as little more than a transcript of a political-science class debate held three years ago on the Bush administration's post-9/11 military successes and failures. Carnahan, who also wrote The Kingdom, is so intent at getting at the heart of the matter that he ignores the need to contemplate the war on terror within a narrative framework. Instead, Lions for Lambs finds four of its six garrulous protagonists seated behind desks, tossing verbal grenades at each other. In Washington, D.C., young, ambitious and silver-tongued Republican Sen. Jasper Irving (Tom Cruise) lays out his plan to stay the course to skeptical TV journalist Janine Roth (Meryl Streep). In California, wise old college professor Stephen Malley (Robert Redford) tries to persuade slacker Todd Hayes (Andrew Garfield) to apply himself in class by telling him about two former students (Derek Luke and Michael Pena) now in the military. As Malley speaks, his students are executing the first mission under Irving's plan to destroy a revitalized Taliban in Afghanistan. But there's a snafu—of course—and they find themselves injured and cornered by the Taliban. While the action in Afghanistan show how the war is run by a bunch of suits concerned only with advancing their careers, the gunfire thankfully offers a respite from the endless chattering and allows us to step outside of Cruise and Redford's offices. Otherwise, Lions for Lambs would be end up being nothing more than a stage play caught on film for posterity.

Acting

No matter how electrifying he is as the pro-war politician, Cruise brings with him his trademark on-and off-screen cockiness and swagger to a role that would be better suited to an actor whom we would find trustworthy and believable. There's no conviction to be found in what the ever-smiling Cruise says. He's just a salesman selling the war on terror and—by extension—himself as the next U.S. president. Granted, Cruise is playing a senator, so every word out of his mouth must be taken with a pinch of salt. But Cruise's smug presence makes every one of Irving's points about the war on terror come across as simply suspect and self serving. Streep doesn't really put up much of a fight against Cruise. As a representative of a complicit media that's more concerned with ratings than gathering news, Streep looks so school-girlishly enamored of Cruise that she seems more likely to jump him than poke holes in his theories on the war. Redford infuses Malley with the right amount of concern and cynicism, though you're never quite sure what it is that the professor sees in his wayward student. Garfield is combative for the sake of combative as Hayes, and never for a moment do you believe that Malley's words will sink in. As a study in contrasts, Luke and Pena—who offered a similar study in the risks and rewards of serving the greater good in last year's World Trade Center—show much grace under pressure when all hell breaks loose around them.

Direction

"'Nowhere else have I seen such lions led by such lambs," a German general wrote during WWI about the British soldiers sent to their slaughter by their battle-untested commanders. With this thought in mind, director Robert Redford wastes no time revealing his disdain for the Washington D.C. armchair generals who harbor little regard for the troops on the front line. That point is painfully hammered home by the ill-fated mission undertaken by Luke and Pena. And unlike the hysterical Rendition and the bombastic Kingdom, Lions for Lambs distinguishes itself as the most thoughtful, inquisitive and provocative of all the recent films to tackle the U.S. military response to 9/11. Redford and Carnahan explore the military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq from various perspectives, and they even speculate how the U.S. government would justify an attack on Iran. The goal is to prod audiences to question the decisions made by those in power—especially the Commander in Chief—and to loudly protest when they make mistakes that result in many unnecessary deaths. But given that things remain the same as they were before the last presidential election, Lions for Lambs feels like it's too little, too late. Most of the arguments made against the Bush administration are old, even if they are still relevant, and were explored with far greater scrutiny in the damning No End in Sight. Ultimately, Lions for Lambs suffers from bad timing.

Bottom Line

Hollywood.com rated this film 2 1/2 stars.

Copyright © CinemaSource 2007.

Movie
Lions For Lambs
Author
anonymous
Date reviewed
2007-11-02 15:40:30
Provider
Review

This highly charged story addresses today’s contradictions of a wealthy country that’s at war, has an increasingly apathetic public and a news media that’s becoming a lap dog for the government.

A young thrusting American Senator, potentially the next President, sits down with a seasoned network journalist to disclose an explosive story about the ongoing fight in Afghanistan whilst two army recruits sit down for a briefing on their platoon's imminent and potentially fatal mission there. Simultaneously a college Professor sits down with a blasé, but potentially gifted, student. In real time we watch these three stories interweave and unfold to discover the two army recruits are ex-students and the Senator is elemental in their mission taking place. Through their exchanges the machinations that’s taken a country to fracture and begin to split are exposed.

Robert Redford steps behind the camera for the first time in seven years to cover topics that you’d expect to be delivered by a 160 plus minutes of complicated script about the current malaise of America. Instead we get a concise 90 minutes of incisive filmmaking that forces a reawakening to the complicity of the media and general public to their "elected" officials' spurious activities in the 21st century.

The interplay in the discourses between Redford and his student along with Cruise – who’s excellent as the Senator - and Meryl Streep are excellently structured and edited. Those two stories are restrained enough to allow the underlying emotive message to be illustrated perfectly by Pena and Luke as the ex-students/soldiers who carry the emotional detonation of the film.

Writer Matthew Caranahan has delivered the antithesis of his gun-ho CIA shootout, The Kingdom. Redford has proved he can still cleanly distil the American psyche at (multiple) real person level. Cruise has delivered an incendiary performance.

Whilst the film has a clear message for any American viewer it still manages to reach out and make contact with any relative 'bystanders' of other nations. And hopefully will invigorate them to stand up too. Excellent intelligent powerful stuff.

Copyright © 2007.



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