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By Ray Pride Pride@moviecitynews.com

DVDs: The Hurt Locker: I like to be surprised

After a season of flurries of nods from critics’ groups, Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker is out on DVD and Blu-Ray (Summit, $27/$35). Will the further gusts of publicity and perhaps a few more of the “right” viewers lead to all the right Oscar nominations (and wins)? Written by magazine journalist Mark Boal, who returned from an embed with a unit with technicians who disarmed Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), The Hurt Locker is note-perfect in execution, as taut a thriller as Hollywood hasn’t made in some time. (It reads well on the page, too: click and pdf downloads.) Bigelow’s gifts as a director of cool, elegant, lyrical action filmmaking well serve the sequence of taut set-pieces that define the movie’s structure. The central character is Staff Sergeant William James, played by Jeremy Renner (Dahmer) with uncommon physicality and quicksilver moods.


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There are scenes inside the blast suit and simply crossing the frame where the character feels fully fleshed out, I tell Bigelow and Boal during an abbreviated interview in Chicago last July. As a past collaborator of Bigelow’s, the writer-director Walter Hill liked to insist, character is revealed through action. Renner reveals character with every bit of his body. “I know! And he’s in a bomb suit, no less,” she laughs. “It was so hot,” Boal adds, “it was hard for Jeremy to be in that bomb suit all of the time. The thing weighs like 85 pounds, it’s a real bomb suit. Naturally, you’re like, well maybe we can get a stunt guy to do some of this walking stuff and save Jeremy so he doesn’t die. The sets are really long and he’s walking up and down, we thought, shit, what if he gets heatstroke? He’d had heatstroke before. It’s what 100 degrees outside? We tried, I probably grabbed every white guy in Jordan to audition for [Bigelow]: actor, non-actor, soldier, worked at the U. N., whatever.”
“They studied his gait,” she says, “they’d watch his walk. Couldn’t do it.” “We couldn’t get a double,” Boal continues. “Just put on the suit, walk down the street, that was the job.” “Every single time, it was Jeremy,” she says. “I tried it, everybody tried it!” “There’s that kind of almost jauntiness to his gait, and cadence, that was unreplicatable. It was also part of that character.”
Boal returned from his Iraqi embed with stories about the men who do this work. How does the more diffuse form of reportage become a film this well-calibrated? “I think it’s like a jazz riff. Maybe, maybe not,” Bigelow says. “I don’t know, I’ve never written any jazz, riffed any jazz,” he says. “It felt to me like a writer-editor thing that I had been lucky enough to have with some of the great magazine editors in New York. You’re both trying to achieve the same thing, but you’re coming at it from different vantage points. At least with the magazine editors, I’m the guy who’s on the ground and he’s the guy who’s sitting in the office and I’m coming in fresh from the ground with all this stuff that I think is really cool. He has a little more perspective on it because he hasn’t seen it. I feel like Kathryn was in that position, she hadn’t been to Baghdad, but she was the one who was going to translate the script into a visual medium. She was able, I think, to help me focus on certain elements in the way an editor would.”


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“I was really hungry for specificity,” Bigelow says,” And because had been there and he’s a reporter, he had that in large quantities. If you’re going to direct something you’ve got to be able to look at the big picture but then look at the smallest, smallest, smallest detail. Then, how does the micro and the macro, how do you hang it together and create a kind of grid or frame that’s going to sustain itself for 120 minutes.”
“Then there’s the old-fashioned way. I would write something, and give it to her, and she would say, this is great, or, this is… not that great. Joan Didion has a line in ‘About Henry,’ and she talks about her book editor, and she says that the main function editors have for writers is that they give the writer a sense of themselves. It’s not really about craft, it’s [the editor saying], ‘Just give it to me, whatever it is.’ That’s very important when you’re sitting alone and looking at a blank page. Kathryn gave me a sense that I could write a movie script, for one thing, which I have never done before. It’s not like I had ten scripts in the drawer, I don’t have any of those. I’d just written articles.”
While the editing of the action scenes, covered simultaneously by four camera operators, is electrifying, there are other cuts, including one that defines James at film’s end that are knockouts. “Transitions are something that are really key to storytelling,” Bigelow says. “That particular transition was something we had arrived at very early on, first draft. That transition never changed. Just trying to compress… taking language and then putting it into the visual, there’s a compression and expansion that happens simultaneously. It’s like trapping light in a glass. You have to have a certain amount of design and intention that allows for spontaneity. Once we had a draft, we boarded it, to be sure key moments worked.”
I mentioned the names of several contemporary directors, but Bigelow demurs at comparison. “I think it’s really important to keep up with all mediums. Be it film, art… Yeah. I like to be surprised. I think that’s what underscores my interests in art. I like to be surprised.”

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It shows how out of it I was in trying to be in it, acknowledging that I was out of it to myself, and then thinking, “Okay, how do I stop being out of it? Well, I get some legitimate illogical narrative ideas” — some novel, you know?

So I decided on three writers that I might be able to option their material and get some producer, or myself as producer, and then get some writer to do a screenplay on it, and maybe make a movie.

And so the three projects were “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep,” “Naked Lunch” and a collection of Bukowski. Which, in 1975, forget it — I mean, that was nuts. Hollywood would not touch any of that, but I was looking for something commercial, and I thought that all of these things were coming.

There would be no Blade Runner if there was no Ray Bradbury. I couldn’t find Philip K. Dick. His agent didn’t even know where he was. And so I gave up.

I was walking down the street and I ran into Bradbury — he directed a play that I was going to do as an actor, so we know each other, but he yelled “hi” — and I’d forgot who he was.

So at my girlfriend Barbara Hershey’s urging — I was with her at that moment — she said, “Talk to him! That guy really wants to talk to you,” and I said “No, fuck him,” and keep walking.

But then I did, and then I realized who it was, and I thought, “Wait, he’s in that realm, maybe he knows Philip K. Dick.” I said, “You know a guy named—” “Yeah, sure — you want his phone number?”

My friend paid my rent for a year while I wrote, because it turned out we couldn’t get a writer. My friends kept on me about, well, if you can’t get a writer, then you write.”
~ Hampton Fancher

“That was the most disappointing thing to me in how this thing was played. Is that I’m on the phone with you now, after all that’s been said, and the fundamental distinction between what James is dealing with in these other cases is not actually brought to the fore. The fundamental difference is that James Franco didn’t seek to use his position to have sex with anyone. There’s not a case of that. He wasn’t using his position or status to try to solicit a sexual favor from anyone. If he had — if that were what the accusation involved — the show would not have gone on. We would have folded up shop and we would have not completed the show. Because then it would have been the same as Harvey Weinstein, or Les Moonves, or any of these cases that are fundamental to this new paradigm. Did you not notice that? Why did you not notice that? Is that not something notable to say, journalistically? Because nobody could find the voice to say it. I’m not just being rhetorical. Why is it that you and the other critics, none of you could find the voice to say, “You know, it’s not this, it’s that”? Because — let me go on and speak further to this. If you go back to the L.A. Times piece, that’s what it lacked. That’s what they were not able to deliver. The one example in the five that involved an issue of a sexual act was between James and a woman he was dating, who he was not working with. There was no professional dynamic in any capacity.

~ David Simon