Zero Dark Thirty works as an action movie, writes Raja Sen.
Sometime after 9/11, seminal comic book artist (and frequent shock jock) Frank Miller announced the ultimate America-in-vengeance-mode comic book.
Tastelessly titled Holy Terror, Batman!, it was meant to be a tale of the Dark Knight taking on Osama Bin Laden, a bigger baddie even than The Joker.
Somewhere down the line Batman was booted from the equation and Miller went his way to create Holy Terror, an awful, awful comic that pretty much vilified Islam itself. The caped crusader would have been disgusted.
Zero Dark Thirty, directed by Kathryn Bigelow, is the sort of film Frank Miller would envision before he turned it into a bloody, politically-incorrect mess.
In it there is a determined young heroine (played by the increasingly ubiquitous Jessica Chastain, who features in virtually everything worth seeing) and she is an unflinching superheroine. Two parts Batman, two parts Maverick from Top Gun, with several pinches of gunpowder.
2012 may have given us The Avengers, Tony Mendez, Django and even, hell, Batman himself, but it is Chastain’s Maya who stands as the most macho hero of them all.
Which wouldn’t be such a bad thing if Bigelow wasn’t so goddamned proud of it. All of Zero Dark Thirty -- based, it implies, on classified Intelligence information -- is about how Maya had one helluva hunch (that Osama’s hiding in plain sight) and how right she was.
Chastain rides that cocky-awesome horse with flair and makes for a highly effective cowgirl, but that shouldn’t disguise the plain fact of it all: replace her with another Jessica, say Alba, and this would be a Michael Bay movie.
Fine, that might be an exaggeration, but Zero Dark Thirty is an action movie. Which is it’s own kind of awesome. Bigelow has always been a very solid action movie director, and this movie belongs more on the Point Break side of her filmography than to the Hurt Locker