Genre:
Adventure/Drama/Thriller
Director: Edward Zwick
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Connelly,
Dijimon Hounsou, Arnold Vosloo, Stephen Collins, Michael Sheen
RunTime: 2 hrs 18 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: NC-16 (Violence)
Opening
Day: 4 January 2007
Synopsis
:
Set
against the backdrop of civil war and chaos in 1990's Sierra
Leone, Blood Diamond is the story of Danny Archer (Leonardo
DiCaprio) - a South African mercenary - and Solomon Vandy
(Djimon Hounsou) - a Mende fisherman. Both men are African,
but their histories as different as any can be, until their
fates become joined in a common quest to recover a rare pink
diamond that can transform their lives. While in prison for
smuggling, Archer learns that Solomon - who was taken from
his family and forced to work in the diamond fields - has
found and hidden the extraordinary rough stone. With the help
of Maddy Bowen (Jennifer Connelly), an American journalist
whose idealism is tempered by a deepening connection with
Archer, the two men embark on a trek through rebel territory,
a journey that could save Solomon's family and give Archer
the second chance he thought he would never have.
Movie
Review:
There’s an almost obligatory stink of condescension
towards its execrable subject matter in Edward Zwick’s
“Blood Diamond”. Going against the wisely sowed
musings of various Africans in the film regarding a human
being’s essential nature, it blithely tosses the blame
card to the West and any first-world countries that do not
involve themselves in the African misery. It predictably wears
its heart on its sleeve, but is so easily prone to the complicated
mire of good intentions that it is regrettably unglued to
the film’s pursuit of being a mildly entertaining action
melodrama.
The
controversy surrounding these ‘conflict diamonds’
started months before the film’s release, ironically
doing more good in corporate circles that actually have a
direct voice in opposing the effects of these baleful gemstones.
And perhaps to jewelers everywhere that are even the slightest
bit concerned of the film’s backlash can take heed in
that the “Blood Diamond” is essentially set in
the late 90s, during a time when there wasn’t something
called the Kimberley Process, which certifies that diamond
acquisitions have not been used to finance armed rebels.
1999,
Sierra Leone is in a midst of a civil war and Solomon Vandy
(Djimon Hounsou) is a loving family man unexpectedly captured
and separated from his wife and children, forced to mine for
diamonds by radical rebellion forces that fund their murderous
agendas by selling these gems to outside bidders through a
intricate network of smugglers, middlemen and buyers. Its
early scenes take no prisoners and are duly uncompromising.
But in an absurdly crafted plot device, Solomon becomes complicit
in a scheme forced onto him by a white Zimbabwean diamond
smuggler named Danny Archer (Leonardo DiCaprio) in just one
of the many allusions to white devil, black slave dependency
that Zwick accentuates throughout their tumultuous relationship.
They join up with the dashingly amoral smuggler’s “love
interest”, Maddy Bowen (Jennifer Connelly), a suitably
inconsequential character that only services parts of the
plot and not enough of its overarching message in the film’s
sanctimonious pursuit of impeachment and responsibility.
While
the film address too many of issues and tries to fix the entire
spectra of Africa’s problems, its contradictory message
between its main players end up becoming racialist. There’s
no discernable creative benefits of casting a white actor
in the lead role aside from the throwaway lines of the stupefying
rah-rah rhetoric of “we are African, we bleed red”
tripe that negates the tenuous characterisation of DiCaprio’s
Archer when he straddles the moral quandaries of his character’s
African-ness. In fact, every white character becomes increasingly
important while the dark-skinned masses that are torn to shreds
by the automatic gunfire seem to be noticeably anonymous.
DiCaprio
and Hounsou give all they can in their performances. An unhinged
Hounsou overpowers DiCaprio's performance thoroughly in every
scene they share. Running the full gamut of emotions, it’s
a wonder he has anything left in the tank soon after an underdeveloped
subplot surrounding the brainwashing and realignment of moral
lines in children by the conscious-stripping, soul engulfing
brutality of genocide.
Now,
despite its overly earnest moral aptitude, its inflated runtime
and the overhyped publicity machine, “Blood Diamond”
does use fact to support its fiction. The continent’s
natural resources are bait for vulturous gangs, as it is statistically
proven that strife increases as new resources are mined with
rival gangs marking their territory with blood. Unfortunately,
while it insists that diamond and trading companies don’t
just deal with the tangibility of gemstones but with the lives
and blood of millions of Africans, its underlying cynicism
just does not sit well with its preachy self-fellating deliberateness
that ends the moment the reel does.
Movie
Rating:
(Hollow and detached storytelling of a tale that needed to
be told)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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