The Georgia Straight

Iraqi sniper takes aim at Hollywood heroics

REVIEWS

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Two guys, a crumbling wall, a 2

few guns, and enough dust to make you practicall­y taste the grit. That’s about all director Doug Liman needed to make this tense, claustroph­obic little war movie.

It’s an odd choice for the director of such outsized action epics as Edge of Tomorrow. The Wall is a taut mix of horror, war, and, surprising­ly, serial-killer movie, managing to bust genres even as it slips occasional­ly into convention. Extra points for avoiding the flag-waving heroics of American Sniper.

The setup is simple. Two American soldiers in Iraq become wounded, and trapped, by an unseen—and apparently rogue— sniper. George H.W. Bush has just announced the end of the Gulf War, but, predictabl­y, somebody didn’t get the memo. Staff Sgt. Shane Matthews (WWE hulk John Cena) is lying unconsciou­s on an open stretch of desert. His spotter, Allan “Ize” Isaac (Aaron Taylorjohn­son), is stuck baking behind a flimsy rubble wall, with a leaking water bottle, a glitching radio, and a giant hunk of lead lodged in his mangled leg.

When Ize switches to a working local radio channel, the psychologi­cal terror begins: the Iraqi sniper wants to talk to him, and taunt him, from his unseen outpost. While the gunman probes him for details about his life, the soldier tries to figure out how to fight his way out.

Taylor-johnson, so memorable as a bad guy in Nocturnal Animals, is on his own here, and he mostly rises to the task—a simple kid trying to remember his training amid the terror, with an ingrained good-ol’ boy racism in his exchanges with the “haji”. As for Laith Nakli’s Iraqi, screenwrit­er Dwain Worrell can’t seem to make up his mind about whether he’s a sensitive war victim or a psychopath: one minute the sniper’s spouting poetry and grieving the loss of a school to bombs, the next he’s talking about gouging out eyeballs and stapling someone’s tongue to his chin.

Still, you get a you-are-there feel for the heat and the dust, thanks to the bleak palette, rendered on anamorphic 16mm film. The nearunbear­able tension will remind you of such similarly small-scale nailbiters as Frozen (the one with the chairlift from hell, not the singing snowman) and Open Water.

With its dust and gore, The Wall also draws inevitable comparison­s to the equally claustroph­obic Kilo Two Bravo. The latter is more compelling because it’s true; gripping as it is, the former has almost as many holes as the decrepit wall Ize cringes behind.

Still, The Wall is probably the only war movie you’ll see this year where the Iraqi soldier is smarter than the Americans.

> JANET SMITH

The Wall.

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