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‘Zero Dark Thirty’ simply nails it

Movie brings it all back and puts it into a new perspective

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But if you’re looking for a rousing Hollywood spectacle, this isn’t it. Hollywood spectacles often offer big speeches by the heroes. Here, there aren’t any big, impassioned speeches, except for one, given by a top CIA official played by Mark Strong, but it falls flat and for a reason.

He’s speaking to hunters about hunting, and all his noise is just that — noise. The hunters aren’t armed with guns, but with their brains. They’re CIA analysts and operations people tracking bin Laden and his people down, so the Navy SEALs can kill them.

The movie begins where it began for America, on Sept. 11, 2001. The screen is dark and emergency calls are being made, from terrified people trapped in the twin towers in New York City that are about to fall and claim nearly 3,000 lives.

“I can’t breathe!” says a woman. “I’m on the floor, and I can’t breathe. I’m going to die here. It’s so hot I’m burning up!”

It’s important to remember that we watched it all happen, watched them jump, watched the buildings crash. Soon we knew who was responsible. But while many of us went on with our lives and let others fight the wars, the bin Laden hunters had only the hunt.

The lead CIA officer character, Maya, played by Jessica Chastain, is the one who remains constant. Some of her colleagues take refuge in bureaucracy. Others in zealotry, brutalizing prisoners (and in the process, brutalizing themselves), burning out after weighing themselves down with sin.

But she doesn’t break. Sin isn’t heavy on her shoulders. She’s a hunter. And she’s relentless.

“Politics are changing,” she’s told by Dan, her CIA boss, played by Jason Clarke, after he’s just waterboarded another al-Qaida figure. “You don’t want to be the last one holding the dog collar when the oversight committee comes.”

This movie gets the politics. Some characters know they have to sacrifice themselves to political hearings run by politicians of the publicly clean hands. They do so to win favors in order to get intelligence they need. One even agrees to testify before a committee if he’s given a vital phone number. It involves a Lamborghini, but I won’t spoil that for you.

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