This is a
film that takes the viewer on a journey into the sort of decisions you and I
will never have to make but which someone does. In the present day an
opportunity to annihilate terrorist suspects in a Kenyan village becomes a
debate on the morality and implications of the act. Several sets of characters
are involved and we see the situation from each of their perspectives yet the
movie also asks something of the audience. As the narrative progresses you
inevitably start to reach your own conclusions and it is a shock to realise you
are rooting for something to happen that will inevitably involve collateral
damage. Though it’s a fiction, the film inevitably draws from arguments that
have been going on in recent years and the result is a tense, gripping and
unsettling story that it is soon clear will not have a happy ending whatever decision
is made.
At first
we witness standard military and political protocol; everyone is reasonably calm
and efficient and sure of what they want. The mission that has been approved is
to lift two suspects from the village and bring them home to the US to face
trial. Yet it soon becomes clear that this will not be possible and British commander
Colonel Katherine Powell (Helen Mirren) is clear the aim must change once spy
cameras witness a suicide bomber being prepared. She pushes strongly for the
house to be taken out by a missile that will be fired from a US drone watching
proceedings.
It is here
that the dramatic screw starts to turn. Though she has an ally in Lt General
Frank Benson (Alan Rickman) who is in charge at the London end, his attempts to
get approval for the change are constantly denied. Some civilian advisors have
doubts, other politicians do not want to give the go ahead without “referring
up”, a process that causes delays much to Powell’s frustration. Then when permission
is granted Steve Watts (Aaron Paul), one of the drone’s remote `pilots` spots a
little girl from the village selling bread right in front of the target.
Thus the
arguments shift from the political to the moral. Powell in particular puts
considerable pressure on her risk assessment officer to find a way to get the
risk below an acceptable level. Meanwhile Watts and his co-pilot Carrie Gershon
(Phoebe Fox) can only watch knowing they will be the ones actually firing.
Meanwhile stuck in the middle of it all undercover Kenyan agent Jama Farah
(Barkhad Abdi) gives us a different angle on the dangers.
It twists
and turns into a fascinating yet increasingly worrying dilemma and there is a
point in the film where you realise you want Powell to win the argument and the
potential terrorists to be taken out despite the child’s presence. The story
has been accused of being manipulative- had the bread seller been an adult
would it have been such an issue? Also there is the one flaw in the plot in
that all concerned overlook the possibility of anyone else wandering into the
target area.
Even so
it is such an absorbing drama that it keeps you hooked right up to the end.
Visually there are few tricks even with the drone-eye-view shots but the number
of multiple screens on which those making the decisions giving them what
appears to be a Gods’ view of below. Gavin Hood's direction takes us right into the heart of things without being showy. The cast convince in their roles though perhaps
Helen Mirren’s Powell is a touch over emotional for someone in such a senior
position. There is even light humour to be wrung from such a dark subject as
the vacillations of politicians frustrate the soldiers; Alan Rickman in what
turned out to be his final film is a past master at reacting with just enough
facial expression to let you know the character is annoyed. It would be too big
a spoiler to say how the film ends but it is really well worth seeing if only
to find out what conclusion you reach by those final credits.
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