Three inter-cut stories paint a larger picture about U.S. foreign policy and the war in Iraq. In one vignette, a leftwing reporter (Meryl Streep) sits uncomfortably in a congressmans (Tom Cruise) office as he outlines his new "solution to the war on terror. In the second, an earnest professor (Redford) tries to get to the bottom of why one of his brightest students has lost his passion for politics. In the third, two young soldiers are stranded on a snowy ridge in Afghanistan, surrounded by the enemy while waiting for a rescue plane that just cant come soon enough. Slowly, as the critique of Americas current political situation comes into sharper relief, the links between the three tales become more and more apparent, until we realise were watching the same story from three different angles. The acting heres impeccable, the script is clever and well researched, and the point the film is ultimately trying to make is a good one. However, something about films like these makes me uncomfortable. They offer a frank, honest and incisive critique of the governments misdeeds and the publics apathy. It feels sort of like it should be subversive in some way but it lacks the heart to get that across. I know this isnt exactly revolutionary art but should films like this be so
easy to digest? Shouldnt they jolt us out of our complacency instead of making us feel reassured that we "get how the world really works? The film draws parallels between Vietnam and Iraq several times, and I cant help but feel like the major difference between the two eras is that a film like this might have been made with the intent to shock or disturb back then. Theres a directors commentary, an interesting "making of featurette and lots of interview footage of Redford and the films writer, Matthew Michael Carnahan. He sure did a lot of research to write that script!
(MGM/UA)Lions for Lambs
Robert Redford
BY Katarina GligorijevicPublished Apr 4, 2008