
Until now, there hasn’t been a great film about the ongoing war in Iraq. The contenders have either been too mawkish (Grace is Gone), too depressing (In the Valley of Elah), or too polemical (Stop-Loss).
But Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker is more than just the first great film about Gulf II. It deserves to be ranked among the best war films of all time.
What really sets the film apart is how Bigelow shows the agonizing paradox of war—how you vacillate between numbing boredom and the electric-shock terror of fighting for your life—and her film is about falling in love with the adrenalin rush (“war is a drug” reads a quote as the film begins). It’s about how there’s a certain almost comforting clarity to life in combat—it’s all instinct and reaction, life or death. When you’re fighting for your life, everything else recedes into the background. (In an amazing coda to the film, Bigelow shows one of the main characters back home in the States, contemplating a giant row of cereal at the supermarket. The...







