Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Newbie Wednesday - The Men Who Stare At Goats


The Men Who Stare at Goats (2009, dir. Grant Heslov)
Starring Ewan McGregor, George Clooney, Jeff Bridges, Kevin Spacey, Stephen Lang

If you remember the jokingly done reports in the media about prisoners of war in Iraq being exposed to Barney the Dinosaur's "I Love You" song on a loop, then you have already heard of the writing of reporter Bob Wilton. In a mix of fantasy and reality we get this very suspect account of a secret unit of the U.S. Army, in operation since the Vietnam War. Director Heslov doesn't deliver a film of any great magnitude, it has its moments, and we end up with a very quirky, very uneven comedy.

Bob Wilton is an Ann Arbor, MI reporter who ends up just outside of Iraq as the war is breaking out. Months earlier he interviewed an odd man who claimed to have been a psychic in the employ of the Army. By chance, Wilton runs in Lyn Cassady (Clooney), the man the interviewee claimed had been the best in their unit. Wilton and Lyn begin a strange journey across Iraq that ends with figures from Lyn's past reappearing and culminating in an LSD fueled finale.

Jeff Bridges plays a ultra hippie, Bill Django, the founder of the New Earth Army, the unit devoted to using peace and love to combat enemy troops. A lot of these ideas won't seem far fetched if you know anything about the experimentation the military has done on the paranormal for combat purposes. The film even brings up the infamous MKULTRA experiments done by the CIA on soldiers and civilians alike, where psychotropic drugs were added to water without the subjects' knowledge and their reactions were recorded.

I never found myself laughing during this film, a few grins here and there, but was never really impressed with anything I saw. The film seems to not know what it wants to be: a satire of the army, a satire of the new age movement, a commentary on the absurdity of this current and all war. Because of this lack of a "thesis statement" the film seems to wander aimlessly with no point at the end. Coupled with very amateurish voice over (a big no-no unless you know how to do it right) and an original score that felt cheap, its a film that could easily be missed without regret.

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