Why “The Hurt Locker” Hurts


The Oscar for Best Picture this year went to Kathryn Bigelow’s “The Hurt Locker,” and rightfully so. It was a great movie with a powerful message. But what message? Some critics said it was pro-war, while others declared it antiwar. Regardless of its political slant, one thing remains clear: “The Hurt Locker” is about war-and war is awful.

The Hurt Locker follows a unit of Army specialists whose daily, often deadly mission is to defuse and dispose of “IED” bombs (Improvised Explosive Devices), placed intentionally by insurgents along roads, in cars, inside the bodies of murdered children, strapped to crying adult men and pretty much anywhere else imaginable. Led by Staff Sergeant William James (actor Jeremy Renner, also nominated for best actor), James somewhat reckless, cowboy attitude is unnerving to his fellow soldiers, whose main concern is simply surviving each mission. Without getting into too many of the gory details (and scenes that will disturb and stay with the viewer), “The Hurt Locker” is a story of American soldiers, who in dealing with inhumanity every day, become satisfied with just making it through another day.

The characters in this film do not talk about “victory,” or “winning” or the politics of the situation in which they find themselves. Indeed, given the everyday situations these soldiers experience, notions of victory seem almost laughable. The closest thing to political commentary is when an Iraqi taxi driver is manhandled by American soldiers, Renner’s character remarks “If he wasn’t an insurgent, he sure the hell is now.” Former CIA terrorism expert Michael Scheuer recently criticized “Obama’s brass” for “continuing to reassuringly chant the Bush-Clinton-Bush lie to Americans that Islamists attack us because of our way of life not because of our interventionism.” Though still hard for some Americans to comprehend, Scheuer’s observation that US foreign military intervention breeds Islamic terrorists would not be considered controversial, but fairly obvious, to the soldiers in this film.

The film’s intention is to make us think about the Iraq war in realistic terms, and it accomplishes this, or as much as any Hollywood production possibly could. Writing for the Japan Times online, film critic Giovanni Fazio explains the hopelessness of “The Hurt Locker”: “The whole question of ‘why we should/shouldn’t be in Iraq’ is practically a moot point. American soldiers walk down devastated streets… count the days until their tour is up, and view every Iraqi they see as a potential threat. Iraqis, glimpsed in windows and doorways, are just as wary of the Americans, viewing them with fear, curiosity or hostile intent. The gulf between them is immense. All that neocon talk about ‘flowers in the streets’ and ‘an Iraqi Marshall Plan’ now seems like so much la-la faerie-land head-tripping. The only goal left seems to be – survive.”

Indeed. It is not the soldier’s job to ask questions. Soldiers simply do their duty, and hopefully, survive. Asking questions is our job. When leaving the theater after seeing this movie in July, my first, obvious question was “was Iraq worth all that?”

Virtually everything we were told about our reasons for invading Iraq — Saddam Hussein being behind 9/11, possessing weapons of mass destruction or threatening the U.S. — turned out to be untrue. Though there is plenty of evidence to suggest that Bush administration had been less than forthright from the beginning, let’s just say, for argument’s sake, that the intelligence leading up to the Iraq war had been a succession of honest mistakes. Why do so many continue to still say the Iraq war was “worth it?” If this is true, then any war our government can possibly conceive of could be considered “worth it.”

Americans too often tend to justify war for its own sake. As citizens we neglect our important role of questioning our government, and that neglect has translated into too many de facto endorsements of the reckless use of our military. It seems we would rather eternally send more soldiers into even more “hurt lockers” than ever confront and deal with gross government incompetence on foreign policy. As with Vietnam, if Iraq wasn’t a mistake, it’s hard to imagine Americans admitting any war was a mistake.

Typically couched in a vague context of yellow ribbons, waving flags and political rhetoric, questions of war become questions of patriotism in the most wrong-headed ways imaginable. If our government pushes for national healthcare or stimulus spending — there is no end to the questioning. But if our government decides to go to war-too many Americans assume that it is their patriotic “duty” to support those wars without question. This is obscene, as the only thing standing between a soldier and a bad government decision is the American public. With the invasion of Iraq, Americans did not “support the troops”-we needlessly abused them. “The Hurt Locker” is a movie about that abuse.

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10 Responses to “Why “The Hurt Locker” Hurts”

  1. What a crock.

  2. Spot on with much of this. Mr Hunter seems to be a cut above your average Yank “conservative” in his comprehension of the real world.

    Still not sure if it’s worth watching Hurt Locker, mind. I have just assumed it would be more of the usual Hollywood propaganda output.

  3. 2nd it–a overflowning crock
    Here me out–Most obtuse Americans after watching this far fetched brave men movie,will come out thinking how bad these Arabs planting bombs are. Terrorists! but,how about
    Kathryn Bigelow coming out with a new sequence movie-called-Shock & Awe (Shock and awe, technically known as rapid dominance, is a military doctrine based on the use of overwhelming power, dominant battlefield ) How about leaving out the battlefield and instead–Sleeping folks in cities.
    I guess Americans cann’t stomach such a movie–the once numerous porch stars and strips flags have weathered away and rarely seen on display.Shameful reporting-Xwife and Hubby get awards–equalizers–only in America–garbage to fool the masses :^/

  4. hurt locker is an awesome movie

  5. I disagree with this column. THL was pro war and jingoistic and should not have won. The main thing is it’s a boring movie. Military people say it’s very inauthentic too. It was made on the cheap and it shows. Jeremy Renner is a good actor, but this movie is very overrated. Funny how no one saw it in theaters even as the critics were all copying one another saying how great it was. I saw it in an empty theater in the middle of it’s release.

    Avatar should have won, or Inglorious Basterds which was a great war movie.

  6. Whilst THL shows the ugliness of war, Avatar shows the monstrocity of war that has been redefined into patriotic defense of “free trade”.

    The last 100 years has seen the US become the Pogo-like enemy “Us” in its march to global and military hegemony.

    The destruction of cultures has been with us since time immemorial. But the willful and deliberate Orwellan-like erasing of the direct results of the military and historical destruction of the cultures that “stand in the way of progress” is not something to glamorize or honor or defend.

    Hollywood and its “evil twin” media convey the images and stories that the owners of wish to convey…has been that way for 100 years..

    the imagery of Avatar and the bravery and courage of those Natives defending their culture was powerful…and its analogy to the last 100(300 with native Americans?) has not cracked enough heads in America to realize this message…the conditioned Americans saw the CGI…..and the ‘conservative” movement marched in unison to condemn the anti-imperialist message as unpatriotic and amatueurish.

    Which of course it wasnt/isnt

    The impending financial and cultural collapse of America should give an impetus for those “patriots” to realize the cost of the militarization and imperialism…in not just dollars but cost on our own culture..

  7. [...] http://www.amconmag.com/tactv/2010/03/12/why-the-hurt-locker-hurts/ [...]

  8. best of all was “the Green Zone”. good for alot of laughs, especially the jack of knaves card, a bald liddy-esque goon being chased thru the baghdad suq at night by damon and apache helocopters with FLIR.

  9. [...] http://www.amconmag.com/tactv/2010/03/12/why-the-hurt-locker-hurts/ [...]

  10. Have to agree with Jim about the movie not closely following the facts on the ground.

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