Chicago Sun-Times

HE MEANS WAR Pitt’s broad acting as general overseas suits military satire

- BY RICHARD ROEPER

YMovie Columnist ou might be so turned off by Brad Pitt’s broadly comic performanc­e in “War Machine” you’ll bail on this wartime satire within the first hour.

You might think: What is he even doing?

Pitt clenches his jaw as if he’s just seen “Sling Blade,” speaks in an attention- getting bark, makes weird hand gestures and even walks ( and runs) with a stride so uniquely strange he looks like a cartoon character come to life.

It’s deliberate­ly over the top, and I wouldn’t be surprised if some observers say Pitt made huge miscalcula­tions in his acting choices with the result being the worst performanc­e of his career — but I found it to be a brazenly effective piece of work, well- suited to the material. Writer- director David Michôd’s “War Machine” is a pitch- black wartime comedy in the tradition of “Dr. Strangelov­e,” “Catch- 22,” “M* A* S* H” ( the movie), “Wag the Dog” and “Three Kings.”

Based on Michael Hastings’ nonfiction book “The Operators,” this is a thinly disguised dramatizat­ion of the American war effort in Afghanista­n in the late 2000s as spearheade­d by Gen. Stanley McChrystal. After Hastings published an extraordin­ary article in Rolling Stone magazine in which McChrystal was openly critical of high- ranking government officials, McChrystal was forced to resign as Commander of U. S. and NATO Coalition Forces in Afghanista­n.

In “War Machine,” Pitt isn’t playing Gen. McChrystal, not at all! He’s Gen. Glen McMahon, a made- up character! Ahem. Scoot McNairy plays Sean Cullen, the doppelgang­er for journalist Hastings. Cullen’s voice- over narration provides invaluable guidance through the chaos and tumult and uncertaint­y of the American military mission in Afghanista­n.

During one strategy session about the counter- insurgency effort, a Marine raises his hand and has a question: What exactly is the end game here? Keep the peace, protect the people, avoid conflict at all costs, gun down the bad guys, what? He’s all for executing the plan if someone would just tell him the damn plan.

Enter Pitt’s Gen. McMahon, a supremely confident commander who arrives on the scene, announces he will break the Taliban’s seemingly unbreakabl­e grip on the Helmand province, “turn this thing around” and claim total victory for U. S. forces thanks to “the power of [ our] … ideals.”

Barks McMahon: “We will win this thing!”

It’s as if a World War II caricature has been parachuted in time and has landed in 2009.

Nearly every scene in “War Machine” is bolstered by some terrific supporting work courtesy of nearly a dozen familiar ( and most welcome) faces.

Ben Kingsley — I’m sorry, Sir Ben Kingsley — is the Afghan president, who isn’t sure how to react to this gung- ho American general.

Anthony Michael Hall, continuing his string of beefed- up character roles a million miles removed from his teen- geek John Hughes days, is McMahon’s second in command Pulver. ( At one point when McMahon flies off the handle during a black- tie dinner, complainin­g there’s not even a single Afghan sitting at their table, Pulver deadpans, “Um boss, I’m pretty sure the Afghan ambassador here is from Afghanista­n.”)

Meg Tilly is McMahon’s longsuffer­ing wife. Topher Grace is McMahon’s media advisor. Griffin Dunne and Alan Ruck ( speaking of John Hughes alums) drop by. Will Poulter (“The Revenant”) and Lakeith Stanfield (“Get Out”) represent the soldiers risking their lives for … whatever it is they’re risking their lives for.

We even get a cameo by Reggie Brown, the Chicago actor- comedian who burst onto the scene with his Barack Obama impersonat­ion early in Obama’s first term — and yes, he plays Obama in a key scene that illustrate­s McMahon’s disillusio­nment with the president.

At the center of it all is Pitt’s Gen. McMahon, who might be a little bit crazy and might be out of touch, but is wholeheart­edly and unabashedl­y dedicated to his country and to his troops. He all but invites us to laugh at him, and yet there’s something admirable about the guy, even in his most absurd moments, because he always comes across as committed and sincere.

 ??  ?? In “War Machine,” Brad Pitt plays a U. S. general based on Stanley McChrystal.
| NETFLIX
In “War Machine,” Brad Pitt plays a U. S. general based on Stanley McChrystal. | NETFLIX

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