Monday, November 14, 2005

Lord of War


I went to see a late showing of Lord of War last night and as it's the first new movie I've seen at the cinema in a while I thought I'd review it quickly.
The basic idea is Nicholas Cage plays Uri, an arms merchant/smuggler who makes his fortune selling arms to warring African and eastern European warzones in the 80's and 90's. He's damned good at it and manages to keep his entire family in the dark about the illegality of his business.
For a change, this is a Hollywood movie about guns/tanks/gunships that actually doesn't go too far. Sure there are a few scenes that are just artistic license, but for the most part the action is very believable and in some parts horrifying as the end credits claim that it is based on real events, though it does not go so far as to tell you how much has been changed from the truth.
Something I did like was, that while it was a serious theme, there was a bit of humour in it as well. No, not all out slap-stick, but character traits that got the odd chuckle from the scarcely populated cinema. One scene for this was when Uri leaves his cargo plain in the middle of nowhere in Africa. The motion is speeded up as the locals pick the plane apart for every nut, bolt and metal sheet. Resembling something from the Discovery Channel where insects pick apart a carcass. In 24 hours Uri is left with the skeleton of a large cargo plane with some local men rolling the last of the giant wheels down the road.
The message from the film is overwhelmingly about how the big nations are just as to blame for the death of a child in Africa from an AK47 than the small-to-big-time arms runners.

I do recommend this film as a decent watch and well worth the time and money spent going to a cinema.

Right, I'm off to get lunch. I really need to post more often, I'll try harder in future.

4 Comments:

Blogger Paul Watson said...

Please tell me Cage doesn't try on a bad Eastern European (Uri sounds EE to me) accent. He is terrible at accents (think of his "Italian" accent in Captain Corelli.)

3:43 pm  
Blogger Jon said...

No, his character moved from eastern europe to New York as a child, so he just sounds like Cage normally does.

4:42 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Blog damn you, I'm bored

4:16 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

top tip of the film jonny

All the best for 2006
Barrett

1:09 am  

Post a Comment

<< Home