666 reviews
The interesting novel by Robert Baer seems to tell it all about "Syriana". It is a tale that is driven by the ambition of a few unscrupulous people who will stop at nothing to achieve their goal. In a way, Mr. Baer's novel as well as the film seems to be reaffirming Niccolo Machiavelli's "The ends justify the means"
Stephen Gaghan's first major directorial job presents the story in multiple settings running at the same time, which, for a great majority of the public will prove disorienting. Mr. Gaghan has adapted for the screen material like the one in "Syriana" before, so he wasn't a stranger working in that format.
What "Syriana" presents is a sort of rat race for the control of the oil in the Persian Golf, by whatever means necessary. Ultimately, the ones in control of that commodity will dominate the world. We are given about five different narratives in the film that interplay one another in the most unexpected ways. In fact, all these different subplots have a lot more in common than really meets the eye. One could almost recommend the viewing of the film a couple of times in order for all the different parts to come together in our minds and by doing so, the viewer will see the inner mechanisms of this intricate tale of corruption, greed and power.
The cast is enormous. There are a lot of different acting styles in the film. An almost unrecognizable George Clooney plays Bob Barnes, the CIA operative fallen from grace who is instrumental in set the story in motion and who reappears at the end at the climax of the action. Jeffrey Wright does a tremendous job as the lawyer who discovers the hidden mystery in a performance that is completely different from whatever he has done before in the screen. Matt Damon plays the ambitious young man who is at the top of his profession and can help Prince Nasir with his revolutionary views about changes in his country and the Arab world. Ultimately, Wasim, the poor Pakistani guest worker makes the case for the displaced youth of that world that is willing to go ahead and commit the ultimate sacrifice.
There are also good appearances by some seasoned actors that only appear shortly. Tim Blake Nelson, Chris Cooper, Jayne Atkinson, Akbar Kurtha, William Hurt, Christopher Plummer, Robert Foxworth and the rest are seen briefly.
Robert Elswit photographed the film in the different locations and makes it look better. The music score by Alexandre Desplat is heard in the background without interrupting the action. The editing by Tim Squires works well with the action. Stephen Gaghan shows he can do well working with Mr. Baer's material and made an interesting film that while it will irritate some viewers, on the whole he had the right idea in the way to tell this story.
Stephen Gaghan's first major directorial job presents the story in multiple settings running at the same time, which, for a great majority of the public will prove disorienting. Mr. Gaghan has adapted for the screen material like the one in "Syriana" before, so he wasn't a stranger working in that format.
What "Syriana" presents is a sort of rat race for the control of the oil in the Persian Golf, by whatever means necessary. Ultimately, the ones in control of that commodity will dominate the world. We are given about five different narratives in the film that interplay one another in the most unexpected ways. In fact, all these different subplots have a lot more in common than really meets the eye. One could almost recommend the viewing of the film a couple of times in order for all the different parts to come together in our minds and by doing so, the viewer will see the inner mechanisms of this intricate tale of corruption, greed and power.
The cast is enormous. There are a lot of different acting styles in the film. An almost unrecognizable George Clooney plays Bob Barnes, the CIA operative fallen from grace who is instrumental in set the story in motion and who reappears at the end at the climax of the action. Jeffrey Wright does a tremendous job as the lawyer who discovers the hidden mystery in a performance that is completely different from whatever he has done before in the screen. Matt Damon plays the ambitious young man who is at the top of his profession and can help Prince Nasir with his revolutionary views about changes in his country and the Arab world. Ultimately, Wasim, the poor Pakistani guest worker makes the case for the displaced youth of that world that is willing to go ahead and commit the ultimate sacrifice.
There are also good appearances by some seasoned actors that only appear shortly. Tim Blake Nelson, Chris Cooper, Jayne Atkinson, Akbar Kurtha, William Hurt, Christopher Plummer, Robert Foxworth and the rest are seen briefly.
Robert Elswit photographed the film in the different locations and makes it look better. The music score by Alexandre Desplat is heard in the background without interrupting the action. The editing by Tim Squires works well with the action. Stephen Gaghan shows he can do well working with Mr. Baer's material and made an interesting film that while it will irritate some viewers, on the whole he had the right idea in the way to tell this story.
In "Syriana," writer/director Stephen Gaghan uses the busy style of "Crash" and "Amores Perros" to illustrate the complex geopolitics behind oil. Each sector--regulators, "intelligence", lobbyists, grease-the-wheel-ers and cogs-in-the-wheel-ers, in the network of greed, idealism, self-interest, sophistication and naiveté, is represented by a different character followed through the movie to bring them together, directly or indirectly, into the climax.
This technique to coordinate a huge ensemble of captivating character actors woven tightly together in a complex story is helped enormously by Robert Elswit's ever-moving camera shots as visually and sound edited by Tim Squyres, who had some experience with overlapping dialog and movement in a more literal upstairs/downstairs on Robert Altman's "Gosford Park." Alexandre Desplat's music adds to the tense mood.
The variegation that Gaghan presents is almost staggering, even more ethically complicated than a Graham Greene Cold War noir. This is the first film I've seen that illustrates the diversity of clashing Islamic cultures and interests, despite that I couldn't keep their interests or motives all quite straight. Though the English subtitles (which are commendably outlined in black for unusual legibility) wipe out some of the distinctions, we can infer that Iranians are speaking Farsi, Pakistanis' Urdu and others speaking Arabic, all with varying fluency and mutual cultural comprehension, let alone manipulators who can speak anything besides their native tongues. We've seen immigrants and guest workers in films critical of Western countries, but not the resentment-brewing conditions of badly treated non-citizens in the oil-rich Persian Gulf states, like the fictional one here which looks a lot like Dubai or Brunei, where clusters of modern skyscrapers contrast with Bedouin goat herders. It does help for background on the fascinating side plot of the radicalized young Arabs to see "Paradise Now" about Palestinian terrorists to explain particular details of their training.
While each character is specifically set within a believable home and family setting, some are painted with too easy and broad strokes. While Alexander Siddig seems to have the monopoly on naively idealistic Arabs, as his similar character in "Kingdom of Heaven" against another Crusades, history is littered with the interim, modernizing liberal tragically caught between powerful forces. (Though the proliferation of Western-educated Arab intellectuals in movies is beginning to sound like all those Japanese generals in World War II movies who went to USC or whatever; at least he went to Oxford and not Harvard.)
Matt Damon's un-Bourne-like energy analyst just sounds simplistic even when he's truth-telling, but we also see that he's already slid down the slippery slope of ethics in the crossing of his personal and professional lives. That so many of the oil and gas executives have Texas accents (superb Chris Cooper, Tim Blake Nelson, Robert Foxworth) does seem to say that the decades of business and political corruption there, as documented in Robert Caro's biography of LBJ, have simply been extended to a global scale.
The film is also unusual in focusing on the role of lawyers negotiating the deals between companies and governments. While Christopher Plummer's Ivy League senior partner type has been seen as a shadowy force in countless paranoid thrillers, Jeffrey Wright is completely unpredictable and tightly wound, though the point of his relationship with his cynical alcoholic father isn't exactly clear except maybe as his conscience. We see before our eyes he goes from, as his mentor says, "a sheep into a lion."
Most films have prosecutors like David Clennon's U.S. attorney as a hero against corruption, instead of being chillingly dismissed as "trust fund lawyers." But the script is so full of such epigrams, like "In this town, you're only innocent until you're investigated," that one character calls another on issuing them too brightly.
While from the beginning I couldn't quite follow all the machinations around George Clooney's character, he is wonderful at transforming from his usual Cary Grant suave to harried, dedicated, mid-level bureaucrat who literally won't toe the Company line in a dangerous hierarchy that's shown to be a bit more competent than in real life, that reminded me both in the gut and guts of Russell Crowe's Wigand in the tobacco wars in "The Insider." It recalls how benign corrupt spooks looked in their personal lives, as there's much conversation here about houses, cars and college tuition. Indirectly, the film implicitly shows the dangers to Valerie Plame from her outing as a CIA operative, as families and personal connections are constantly used as threats and bargaining chips.
Significantly, there is not a single mention amidst all these Mideast chicaneries, plots and plans of the Zionist entity, proving that pro or anti-Israel policies are smoke screens around the main draw -- oil.
Movie-wise, these characters seem a lot like the gangsters and their conseglieres in "The Godfather" carving up Cuba and drug rights, let alone Gordon Gekko extolling "Greed is good" as the ultimate ideology, and fits right in with this year's other geo-political thrillers "The Constant Gardener" and "Lord of War," and those weren't even about natural resources. It works better than the re-make of "The Manchurian Candidate" because even though the focal point is a fictional country the issues are real, not science fiction.
So does this make you ready to get out of your car and onto the train? Because until then, we'll still need lots of that oil from the Middle East.
This technique to coordinate a huge ensemble of captivating character actors woven tightly together in a complex story is helped enormously by Robert Elswit's ever-moving camera shots as visually and sound edited by Tim Squyres, who had some experience with overlapping dialog and movement in a more literal upstairs/downstairs on Robert Altman's "Gosford Park." Alexandre Desplat's music adds to the tense mood.
The variegation that Gaghan presents is almost staggering, even more ethically complicated than a Graham Greene Cold War noir. This is the first film I've seen that illustrates the diversity of clashing Islamic cultures and interests, despite that I couldn't keep their interests or motives all quite straight. Though the English subtitles (which are commendably outlined in black for unusual legibility) wipe out some of the distinctions, we can infer that Iranians are speaking Farsi, Pakistanis' Urdu and others speaking Arabic, all with varying fluency and mutual cultural comprehension, let alone manipulators who can speak anything besides their native tongues. We've seen immigrants and guest workers in films critical of Western countries, but not the resentment-brewing conditions of badly treated non-citizens in the oil-rich Persian Gulf states, like the fictional one here which looks a lot like Dubai or Brunei, where clusters of modern skyscrapers contrast with Bedouin goat herders. It does help for background on the fascinating side plot of the radicalized young Arabs to see "Paradise Now" about Palestinian terrorists to explain particular details of their training.
While each character is specifically set within a believable home and family setting, some are painted with too easy and broad strokes. While Alexander Siddig seems to have the monopoly on naively idealistic Arabs, as his similar character in "Kingdom of Heaven" against another Crusades, history is littered with the interim, modernizing liberal tragically caught between powerful forces. (Though the proliferation of Western-educated Arab intellectuals in movies is beginning to sound like all those Japanese generals in World War II movies who went to USC or whatever; at least he went to Oxford and not Harvard.)
Matt Damon's un-Bourne-like energy analyst just sounds simplistic even when he's truth-telling, but we also see that he's already slid down the slippery slope of ethics in the crossing of his personal and professional lives. That so many of the oil and gas executives have Texas accents (superb Chris Cooper, Tim Blake Nelson, Robert Foxworth) does seem to say that the decades of business and political corruption there, as documented in Robert Caro's biography of LBJ, have simply been extended to a global scale.
The film is also unusual in focusing on the role of lawyers negotiating the deals between companies and governments. While Christopher Plummer's Ivy League senior partner type has been seen as a shadowy force in countless paranoid thrillers, Jeffrey Wright is completely unpredictable and tightly wound, though the point of his relationship with his cynical alcoholic father isn't exactly clear except maybe as his conscience. We see before our eyes he goes from, as his mentor says, "a sheep into a lion."
Most films have prosecutors like David Clennon's U.S. attorney as a hero against corruption, instead of being chillingly dismissed as "trust fund lawyers." But the script is so full of such epigrams, like "In this town, you're only innocent until you're investigated," that one character calls another on issuing them too brightly.
While from the beginning I couldn't quite follow all the machinations around George Clooney's character, he is wonderful at transforming from his usual Cary Grant suave to harried, dedicated, mid-level bureaucrat who literally won't toe the Company line in a dangerous hierarchy that's shown to be a bit more competent than in real life, that reminded me both in the gut and guts of Russell Crowe's Wigand in the tobacco wars in "The Insider." It recalls how benign corrupt spooks looked in their personal lives, as there's much conversation here about houses, cars and college tuition. Indirectly, the film implicitly shows the dangers to Valerie Plame from her outing as a CIA operative, as families and personal connections are constantly used as threats and bargaining chips.
Significantly, there is not a single mention amidst all these Mideast chicaneries, plots and plans of the Zionist entity, proving that pro or anti-Israel policies are smoke screens around the main draw -- oil.
Movie-wise, these characters seem a lot like the gangsters and their conseglieres in "The Godfather" carving up Cuba and drug rights, let alone Gordon Gekko extolling "Greed is good" as the ultimate ideology, and fits right in with this year's other geo-political thrillers "The Constant Gardener" and "Lord of War," and those weren't even about natural resources. It works better than the re-make of "The Manchurian Candidate" because even though the focal point is a fictional country the issues are real, not science fiction.
So does this make you ready to get out of your car and onto the train? Because until then, we'll still need lots of that oil from the Middle East.
Syriana is a confused, ambitious and complex thriller of corruption and power related to the oil industry that tells four parallel stories: the CIA agent Bob Barnes (George Clooney) with great experience in Middle East that falls in disgrace after an unsuccessful mission dealing missiles in Lebanese Republic; the investigation of the attorney Bennett Holiday (Jeffrey Wright) related to the merge of two American oil companies, Connex and Killen; the traumatic association of the energy analyst Bryan Woodman (Matt Damon) with the son of a powerful emir of Iran; and the social drama of the Pakistani immigrant worker Wasim Khan (Mazhar Munir) that is fired by the oil company.
The greatest problem with this movie is that it is too complex for only 126 minutes running time, due to the number of plots, subplots and characters; therefore its edition is tremendously confused with the use of many ellipsis. It would be more appropriated a mini-series, or a longer film. Even the title of this movie is very ambiguous, with many non-official explanations. The movie's website states that "'Syriana' is a very real term used by Washington think-tanks to describe a hypothetical reshaping of the Middle East." (http://syrianamovie.warnerbros.com/about.html). In the end, I truly found this movie a pretentious and sophisticated collection of clichés sold in a beautiful "package". My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "Syriana A Indústria do Petróleo" ("Syriana The Oil Industry")
The greatest problem with this movie is that it is too complex for only 126 minutes running time, due to the number of plots, subplots and characters; therefore its edition is tremendously confused with the use of many ellipsis. It would be more appropriated a mini-series, or a longer film. Even the title of this movie is very ambiguous, with many non-official explanations. The movie's website states that "'Syriana' is a very real term used by Washington think-tanks to describe a hypothetical reshaping of the Middle East." (http://syrianamovie.warnerbros.com/about.html). In the end, I truly found this movie a pretentious and sophisticated collection of clichés sold in a beautiful "package". My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "Syriana A Indústria do Petróleo" ("Syriana The Oil Industry")
- claudio_carvalho
- Sep 30, 2006
- Permalink
This is a great, complex movie. Its only faults are in the clarity of character motivations. This is not a liberal or conservative film. It is an exploration into the existing system that evolved over many years.
At no point in the movie does it take any pot-shots at Bush, Republicans, or Democracts. In fact, non of those words are ever spoken. It is not a left/right - red/blue debate. At no point in time does it ever mention the political parties of those in charge.
The fact is, be it a Republican or Democrat, this world depends on oil. Our country while split on how to obtain it, will do anything to make sure the flow is not cut off.
This movie finds faults with the global economy. Faults with the US system that has been tweaked by both sides over the span of decades. Faults with the Middle East for squandering its earnings. Faults with emerging China and its impact on consumption.
Anyone claiming this movie is politically motivated is a troll looking for attention and should be ignored.
At no point in the movie does it take any pot-shots at Bush, Republicans, or Democracts. In fact, non of those words are ever spoken. It is not a left/right - red/blue debate. At no point in time does it ever mention the political parties of those in charge.
The fact is, be it a Republican or Democrat, this world depends on oil. Our country while split on how to obtain it, will do anything to make sure the flow is not cut off.
This movie finds faults with the global economy. Faults with the US system that has been tweaked by both sides over the span of decades. Faults with the Middle East for squandering its earnings. Faults with emerging China and its impact on consumption.
Anyone claiming this movie is politically motivated is a troll looking for attention and should be ignored.
- eichelbergersports
- Nov 16, 2005
- Permalink
"Syriana" is a blistering, powerful film about the degree to which governments and corporate conglomerates place the ambition to control the world's oil supply above the well being of their citizens and employees. In this game, there are only bad guys, and what separates the villains from the protagonists is not a question of who's good and who's bad, but rather how bad each is willing to be.
So maybe "Syriana" doesn't tell us anything new. But that doesn't mean its points aren't worth making again and again. And though it is complicated, and I'm not going to pretend I followed every detail of its intricate plot, it's not *that* hard to follow. Stephen Gaghan is a good writer, and he provides a nice summary of the film's action in its final moments.
What emerges from this tangled puzzle is a web of corruption and self-interest, all fueled by the need for oil. In one plot thread, the men behind two soon-to-merge oil companies will stop at nothing to make the merger go through, since the new company will be one of the most powerful in the world. In another thread, the law firm representing the company proves that it's eager to cash in on the company's new economic success. Meanwhile, a power struggle between the two sons of an aging king in an unspecified Middle Eastern country (though Saudi Arabia is obviously suggested) has attracted the attention of the American government, operating through the CIA. America (read American business) has a vested interest in which of the king's sons succeeds him to the throne: It doesn't want the reform-minded eldest son, whose priorities will be building a country to benefit his own people; it wants instead the younger son, who will continue to relegate his country to a cosy spot in America's hip pocket and take its orders directly from the president of the USA. And in the film's most chilling plot strand, we see how the struggle for oil feeds the radical Islam movement in the Middle East, providing young men with a feeling of brotherhood and righteousness in the face of a region they feel has turned its back on them in favor of big business and Western corruption.
"Syriana" is tense, fast and furious. Following it can admittedly be somewhat exhausting, but if you pay very close attention to the first hour or so, as each story is introduced and the relationships between characters become clear, the second half of the movie is easier to digest.
I disagree with other comments here that the characters aren't developed or that the acting is unimpressive. On the contrary, I think all of the actors create extremely nuanced, compelling characters, a challenging task given the fact that none of them are allowed more than a minute or so at a time to feed us information about themselves. A movie like this could easily fall prey to filling itself with a bunch of stock villains, all cocked eyebrows and facial mannerisms rather than full-bodied characterizations, and the fact that it avoids this is a tribute to both Gaghan and the cast. And hats off to the editor on this movie, who had perhaps the most daunting task of the year.
2005 has been full of terse, important films, fresh in their immediacy. There have been a small number of sensational, tough, thought-provoking films instead of a larger batch of more mediocre ones, as has been the case recently. "Syriana" is one of the best movies of the year: it's angry, yet it's not hopeless. I hope Americans see this movie. At this time of year, when people are trampling each other in malls in order to be first in line for Christmas sales, I hope they remember that the vast wealth of America frequently comes at the sake of people all over the world who will never have a fraction of the comfort those in our country take for granted.
Grade: A
So maybe "Syriana" doesn't tell us anything new. But that doesn't mean its points aren't worth making again and again. And though it is complicated, and I'm not going to pretend I followed every detail of its intricate plot, it's not *that* hard to follow. Stephen Gaghan is a good writer, and he provides a nice summary of the film's action in its final moments.
What emerges from this tangled puzzle is a web of corruption and self-interest, all fueled by the need for oil. In one plot thread, the men behind two soon-to-merge oil companies will stop at nothing to make the merger go through, since the new company will be one of the most powerful in the world. In another thread, the law firm representing the company proves that it's eager to cash in on the company's new economic success. Meanwhile, a power struggle between the two sons of an aging king in an unspecified Middle Eastern country (though Saudi Arabia is obviously suggested) has attracted the attention of the American government, operating through the CIA. America (read American business) has a vested interest in which of the king's sons succeeds him to the throne: It doesn't want the reform-minded eldest son, whose priorities will be building a country to benefit his own people; it wants instead the younger son, who will continue to relegate his country to a cosy spot in America's hip pocket and take its orders directly from the president of the USA. And in the film's most chilling plot strand, we see how the struggle for oil feeds the radical Islam movement in the Middle East, providing young men with a feeling of brotherhood and righteousness in the face of a region they feel has turned its back on them in favor of big business and Western corruption.
"Syriana" is tense, fast and furious. Following it can admittedly be somewhat exhausting, but if you pay very close attention to the first hour or so, as each story is introduced and the relationships between characters become clear, the second half of the movie is easier to digest.
I disagree with other comments here that the characters aren't developed or that the acting is unimpressive. On the contrary, I think all of the actors create extremely nuanced, compelling characters, a challenging task given the fact that none of them are allowed more than a minute or so at a time to feed us information about themselves. A movie like this could easily fall prey to filling itself with a bunch of stock villains, all cocked eyebrows and facial mannerisms rather than full-bodied characterizations, and the fact that it avoids this is a tribute to both Gaghan and the cast. And hats off to the editor on this movie, who had perhaps the most daunting task of the year.
2005 has been full of terse, important films, fresh in their immediacy. There have been a small number of sensational, tough, thought-provoking films instead of a larger batch of more mediocre ones, as has been the case recently. "Syriana" is one of the best movies of the year: it's angry, yet it's not hopeless. I hope Americans see this movie. At this time of year, when people are trampling each other in malls in order to be first in line for Christmas sales, I hope they remember that the vast wealth of America frequently comes at the sake of people all over the world who will never have a fraction of the comfort those in our country take for granted.
Grade: A
- evanston_dad
- Dec 11, 2005
- Permalink
Do you like puzzles? I do. I work crosswords, encryptions and sudoku. I think that's one reason I liked Syriana. But this movie left me puzzled.
Do you like movies with convincing acting, and character development. I do. I think that's another reason I liked Syriana. But who all of the characters were, and what characters were not revealed in the movie left me puzzled.
Do you like movies with mysteries, and with a credible backdrop of events relevant to today's world? I do. That's another good reason to like Syriana.
I think you get the idea. Syriana is a very good movie, but with so many characters and inter-related plots that it is difficult to assemble all of the pieces. You definitely get the main idea though: oil is all-important, and whomever controls oil gets very rich and powerful.
George Clooney, Matt Damon, Christopher Carter, et al., are a terrific ensemble cast that portray their characters very convincingly. Their stories are told separately and coalesce at the end of the movie, much like in "Traffic" and many other contemporary movies. Who are the "good guys" in this movie one may ask. That's difficult to discern. Maybe there aren't any (and maybe there aren't any bad guys either; or, maybe they're all bad guys.) If you decide to attend this movie, pay attention right from the beginning of the movie. And, if you like mysteries and puzzles, try to solve the question of who has the ultimate power among the characters in this movie. As for me, I think I'll have to see the movie again.
Do you like movies with convincing acting, and character development. I do. I think that's another reason I liked Syriana. But who all of the characters were, and what characters were not revealed in the movie left me puzzled.
Do you like movies with mysteries, and with a credible backdrop of events relevant to today's world? I do. That's another good reason to like Syriana.
I think you get the idea. Syriana is a very good movie, but with so many characters and inter-related plots that it is difficult to assemble all of the pieces. You definitely get the main idea though: oil is all-important, and whomever controls oil gets very rich and powerful.
George Clooney, Matt Damon, Christopher Carter, et al., are a terrific ensemble cast that portray their characters very convincingly. Their stories are told separately and coalesce at the end of the movie, much like in "Traffic" and many other contemporary movies. Who are the "good guys" in this movie one may ask. That's difficult to discern. Maybe there aren't any (and maybe there aren't any bad guys either; or, maybe they're all bad guys.) If you decide to attend this movie, pay attention right from the beginning of the movie. And, if you like mysteries and puzzles, try to solve the question of who has the ultimate power among the characters in this movie. As for me, I think I'll have to see the movie again.
I gave "Syriana" a 7 only because I thought it could have been a little easier to follow. And I love complicated plots. Other than that, this is an excellent movie about how absolute power corrupts absolutely, and what people will do to control the oil situation and profit by it. In the film, which is based on a book by an ex-CIA agent (the Clooney character), we are shown many different stories that eventually come together - a CIA agent who infiltrates the other side, an executive and his family, two brothers struggling for a country's power, a young man who is seduced into a fundamentalist cell, and fat cats who want two huge oil companies want to merger and will do just about anything to get the merger approved. Probably the most sobering thing in the film for me was the fact that the emir had two sons ready to take over the country, and the U.S. wanted to make sure that the son in power was the one more in tune with them than the other son, who wanted to do things for his country and his people.
The point made by George Clooney on one of the DVD features is that there are no good guys and no bad guys - the oil people, despite despicable actions, feel completely justified doing what they do because we need oil. As a result, other countries hate us, we're at war now, and with so many Iraquis killed, terrorists have been able to raise money for their cause. I told you the most sobering part. The saddest was a young man, before a suicide mission, approaching his father and asking for money for the bus. The father is playing baseball and stops and gives him the money. The boy impulsively hugs him and holds him tight. It was heartbreaking and frustrating - they believe in their cause and are willing to die for it, and I can't understand how that can be. But it is.
The performances are all excellent with many stars, such as William Hurt, in cameos. Chris Cooper, Christopher Plummer, Jeffrey Wright, Robert Foxworth, Matt Damon, and Amanda Peet are all wonderful as part of this intricate story. Clooney is great - his eyes are haunted, he's scruffy, flabby, and conveys terror and his sense of isolation beautifully.
You see "Syriana," and you think, wow, that was pretty complicated, I'm not even sure I knew half of what was going on - and then you can't forget about it. "Syriana" and its thought-provoking messages will haunt you and make you wonder what on earth is going to happen to all of us.
The point made by George Clooney on one of the DVD features is that there are no good guys and no bad guys - the oil people, despite despicable actions, feel completely justified doing what they do because we need oil. As a result, other countries hate us, we're at war now, and with so many Iraquis killed, terrorists have been able to raise money for their cause. I told you the most sobering part. The saddest was a young man, before a suicide mission, approaching his father and asking for money for the bus. The father is playing baseball and stops and gives him the money. The boy impulsively hugs him and holds him tight. It was heartbreaking and frustrating - they believe in their cause and are willing to die for it, and I can't understand how that can be. But it is.
The performances are all excellent with many stars, such as William Hurt, in cameos. Chris Cooper, Christopher Plummer, Jeffrey Wright, Robert Foxworth, Matt Damon, and Amanda Peet are all wonderful as part of this intricate story. Clooney is great - his eyes are haunted, he's scruffy, flabby, and conveys terror and his sense of isolation beautifully.
You see "Syriana," and you think, wow, that was pretty complicated, I'm not even sure I knew half of what was going on - and then you can't forget about it. "Syriana" and its thought-provoking messages will haunt you and make you wonder what on earth is going to happen to all of us.
- Robert_duder
- Sep 1, 2006
- Permalink
Connex loses its access in Kazahkstan by its Emir which is then given to the Chinese. Connex is merging with the smaller Killen to get back into the region. Bryan Woodman (Matt Damon) is an energy analyst in Geneva. He attends the Emir's party where his son is accidentally killed. Reformer Prince Nasir (Alexander Siddig) offers him reparation and eventually takes him on as his adviser. Meanwhile, there is a secret missile sale in Iran that ends explosively. Bob Barnes (George Clooney) is a hard-nosed CIA operative trying to stop the arms smuggling. He clashes with his superiors and then assigned to assassinate Nasir.
It's an ambitious movie that would confuse the most fanatical of conspiracy theorists. It's a complicated interconnected series of stories. It's tough to keep it all straight. In this case, the confusion adds to the appeal of the movie. It highlights the murky nature of dealings within that region.
It's an ambitious movie that would confuse the most fanatical of conspiracy theorists. It's a complicated interconnected series of stories. It's tough to keep it all straight. In this case, the confusion adds to the appeal of the movie. It highlights the murky nature of dealings within that region.
- SnoopyStyle
- Dec 4, 2015
- Permalink
- Paul-Brugman
- Mar 21, 2006
- Permalink
Moving espionage thriller from Stephen Gaghan with suspense , thrills , intriguing events and great performance . Nail-biting and exciting movie dealing with a spy Bob Barnes (George Clooney) who falls in distress when some weapons are missing , he's on the verge of retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency but is eventually assigned by Division Chief (Jayne Atkinson) to a dangerous mission , then things go wrong when he's taken prisoner by Hezbollah . While the heir to an Emirate Prince Nasir Al-Subaai (Alexander Siddig) gives an oil contract to China, cutting out a US company that promptly fires its immigrant workers and merges with a small firm that has landed a Kazakhstani oil contract . But then the oil company's law firm finds a scapegoat resulting in fateful consquences . Meanwhile, executive Bryan Woodman (Matt Damon) , an energy analyst, after a family tragic becomes associated with the Emir , largely due to his essential business skills . Meantime , the super-powerful CIA uses relentlessly technological-gizmo-surveillance satellites and modern surveillance systems for people spying and hound terrorists , and getting nasty purports . It's not how you play the game ... It's how the Game Plays you. It's not how you play the game. It's how the game plays you.
Story's core is thought-provoking and script is dense with information and drama in which everything is connected . A politically charged epic about the state of the oil industry in the hands of those personally involved in and affected by it and in which unfortunate people become simple pawns in the goings-on among international powers that play a complex chess game . The ultra-brisk editing , various twisted stories hard to follow and rapid scenes movement leave little time to consider some inadequacies . Regarding peculiar relationships between top-of-the-range spies and other international forces that control the world energy . This is an espionage thriller from writer/director Stephan Gaghan and George Clooney as producer , and both of them giving awesome efforts in the important results . Including a known , notorious cast with eight Oscar winners : Chris Cooper, George Clooney, William Hurt', Viola Davis, Will McCormack, Christopher Plummer, Matt Damon and Tom McCarthy . Engaging and thoughtful thriller concerning the spy-world on Middle East and other countries , unemployment youngsters who join islamic fundamentalist cells and anything else . Interesting and brooding story by director Stephan Gaghan himself based on the book "See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism" by Robert Baer. Main and support cast are frankly good. George Clooney and Matt Damon sustain interest enough in this tale of world power , corruption , betrayal , sacrifice and terrorism . Adding the use of geopolitical messages to add weight to a subplot . George Clooney is good as tough , out of favor operative and displaying an enjoyable performance as the elderly and regretted CIA agent, his role is based on the real life exploits of career CIA operative Bob Baer. Along with a large support cast , such as : Jeffrey Wright, Christopher Plummer, Chris Cooper, Jayne Atkinson, Tom McCarthy, William Hurt , Jamey Sheridan , Amanda Peet , Tim Blake Lelson , David Clennon , Viola Davis , Max Minghella , among others .
The film packs adequate , evocative cinematography by Robert Elswit and rousing musical score by Alexandre Desplat . The motion picture was well realized by Stephen Gaghan. He has written two screenplays where Harrison Ford was offered a role : Robert Wakefield in Traffic (2000) (which went to Michael Douglas) and Bob Barnes in Syriana (2005) (which George Clooney won the Oscar). He's a prestigious writer , such as : Chaos, The Alamo , Rules of Engagement , Dolittle , Traffic , who has directed a few films , such as : Abandon , Gold , White city , Dolittle and Syriana. Rating : 7/10 . Better than average.
Story's core is thought-provoking and script is dense with information and drama in which everything is connected . A politically charged epic about the state of the oil industry in the hands of those personally involved in and affected by it and in which unfortunate people become simple pawns in the goings-on among international powers that play a complex chess game . The ultra-brisk editing , various twisted stories hard to follow and rapid scenes movement leave little time to consider some inadequacies . Regarding peculiar relationships between top-of-the-range spies and other international forces that control the world energy . This is an espionage thriller from writer/director Stephan Gaghan and George Clooney as producer , and both of them giving awesome efforts in the important results . Including a known , notorious cast with eight Oscar winners : Chris Cooper, George Clooney, William Hurt', Viola Davis, Will McCormack, Christopher Plummer, Matt Damon and Tom McCarthy . Engaging and thoughtful thriller concerning the spy-world on Middle East and other countries , unemployment youngsters who join islamic fundamentalist cells and anything else . Interesting and brooding story by director Stephan Gaghan himself based on the book "See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism" by Robert Baer. Main and support cast are frankly good. George Clooney and Matt Damon sustain interest enough in this tale of world power , corruption , betrayal , sacrifice and terrorism . Adding the use of geopolitical messages to add weight to a subplot . George Clooney is good as tough , out of favor operative and displaying an enjoyable performance as the elderly and regretted CIA agent, his role is based on the real life exploits of career CIA operative Bob Baer. Along with a large support cast , such as : Jeffrey Wright, Christopher Plummer, Chris Cooper, Jayne Atkinson, Tom McCarthy, William Hurt , Jamey Sheridan , Amanda Peet , Tim Blake Lelson , David Clennon , Viola Davis , Max Minghella , among others .
The film packs adequate , evocative cinematography by Robert Elswit and rousing musical score by Alexandre Desplat . The motion picture was well realized by Stephen Gaghan. He has written two screenplays where Harrison Ford was offered a role : Robert Wakefield in Traffic (2000) (which went to Michael Douglas) and Bob Barnes in Syriana (2005) (which George Clooney won the Oscar). He's a prestigious writer , such as : Chaos, The Alamo , Rules of Engagement , Dolittle , Traffic , who has directed a few films , such as : Abandon , Gold , White city , Dolittle and Syriana. Rating : 7/10 . Better than average.
As with most reviewers here, I came out of the movie theater after seeing Syriana muttering under my breath, "What was that about?" After much thought, it occurred to me that the filmmakers must either be incredibly naive to think that their audience would be able to make sense of this movie, or they fully intended for the audience to be confused. I may be giving them the benefit of the doubt here, but with veterans like George Clooney, Christopher Plummer and William Hurt in the cast, I'm inclined to think the filmmakers knew what they were doing. Which begs the question, Why? I don't claim to know the answer, but it may be that what the filmmakers were trying to get across to us is the reality that there is no sense to be made of the oil mess. When greed, power, fear, blind nationalism and money guide men's actions, logic and morality are left out in the cold. And the webs of entanglement that have been spun between nations, corporations, intelligence agencies, and the wealthy in pursuit of oil are such that it is probably impossible to sort out the relationships. The good guys turn into bad guys, the bad guys turn into good guys (momentarily at least), and everyone is left with an oily residue.
This is not a movie for those who like their morality plays cut and dried with an obvious message. This is a movie intended to leave its viewers with bad tastes in their mouths, with the realization that we are all players in this game. With any luck, some of those viewers will buy Toyota Priuses instead of SUVs the next time they purchase a vehicle.
This is not a movie for those who like their morality plays cut and dried with an obvious message. This is a movie intended to leave its viewers with bad tastes in their mouths, with the realization that we are all players in this game. With any luck, some of those viewers will buy Toyota Priuses instead of SUVs the next time they purchase a vehicle.
I walked out of this movie feeling pretty depressed. As a historian, I always knew there have been forces at work in our society that act against the best interest of the average citizen. This film does an excellent job of illustrating just how politics and big business conspire to preserve the status quo which also protects their power and profits. The global interaction depicted in this film shows how all actions have consequences. The thirst our nation has for oil drives the kind of political and business policies that cause anger and hatred towards our nation. This oil addiction has led to an unjust war that was started on lies and disinformation. The result has been the deaths of over 2000 US servicemen and women, thousands more injured and tens of thousands Iraqi dead and wounded. This act has been the best tool Islamic terrorist groups have ever had in attracting followers and money to their cause. Those that attack this film obviously buy into the fantasy that America is involved in Iraq and the Middle East due to our sincere desire to spread "democracy." Anyone who is willing to have an open mind will find this film to be chilling for the implications of the storyline. This film is a must see for those who care about how the behavior of our government and big business impacts us in our everyday lives and how it will contribute to further terrorist attacks for decades to come. A well researched story with excellent actors for the numerous roles. I will buy this as soon as it comes out on DVD.
- nolarobert
- Dec 13, 2005
- Permalink
'Syriana' takes on one of the most important issues of our time: the conflict between American oil interests and the powers of the Middle East. The task proves too much and we are left with a film that buckles under the weight of its own intricacies.
I enjoy films that offer complicated plots. The problem with 'Syriana' is that its level of complexity exceeds its capacity for coherence. There are long stretches of unintelligibility, where it is nigh impossible to determine exactly what is going on or how it relates to the movie as a whole.
Another of 'Syriana's' shortcomings lies in its ensemble cast. The difficulty is not the ensemble cast itself, however; this is a story that demands the use of multiple characters. Rather, the problem is the size of the ensemble. We are presented with numerous parallel stories whose relations between one another do not become clear until the very end. With this bevy of narratives comes the sacrifice of character depth. The film attempts to add dimension to its characters by providing unnecessary conflicts. The fact that Bennett Holiday's father is an alcoholic is utterly irrelevant to the plot; it is included for the sole purpose of adding depth to an otherwise boring character. Bob Barnes' son exists for no reason other than to illustrate the tension in Barnes' family. The death of Bryan Woodman's son serves a similar purpose: to provide conflict between Woodman, his wife, and the royal family.
'Syriana' is not without its positives, however. The acting is first- rate across the board, and the parts that do make sense are quite captivating. It is also unsettling when one realizes that the basic premise is not at all far-fetched. But on the whole, 'Syriana' is a disappointment.
I enjoy films that offer complicated plots. The problem with 'Syriana' is that its level of complexity exceeds its capacity for coherence. There are long stretches of unintelligibility, where it is nigh impossible to determine exactly what is going on or how it relates to the movie as a whole.
Another of 'Syriana's' shortcomings lies in its ensemble cast. The difficulty is not the ensemble cast itself, however; this is a story that demands the use of multiple characters. Rather, the problem is the size of the ensemble. We are presented with numerous parallel stories whose relations between one another do not become clear until the very end. With this bevy of narratives comes the sacrifice of character depth. The film attempts to add dimension to its characters by providing unnecessary conflicts. The fact that Bennett Holiday's father is an alcoholic is utterly irrelevant to the plot; it is included for the sole purpose of adding depth to an otherwise boring character. Bob Barnes' son exists for no reason other than to illustrate the tension in Barnes' family. The death of Bryan Woodman's son serves a similar purpose: to provide conflict between Woodman, his wife, and the royal family.
'Syriana' is not without its positives, however. The acting is first- rate across the board, and the parts that do make sense are quite captivating. It is also unsettling when one realizes that the basic premise is not at all far-fetched. But on the whole, 'Syriana' is a disappointment.
Maddening and infuriating but also fascinating like most things we don't understand when we're told we should. I kept hearing people around me whispering - Who's that? - What are they talking about? - William Hurt!? I haven't shoosh people in a movie theater in years but I did throughout "Syriana". The most compelling aspect is that I felt let into something and hear things I shouldn't. They're all baddies one way or another but then, what else is new. Stephen Gaghan, the writer director, devices a devilish web for us to get lost into. I was mesmerized by his self assuredness and although I didn't have any kind of emotional connection with "Syriana" whoever she or it is, I couldn't dismiss the experience so, well done, cinema comes in all shapes and flavors.
- leonardofilmgroup
- Dec 11, 2005
- Permalink
2005 has been a great year for politically charged films, ranging from old-fashioned highly fictionalized throw-back thrillers like "The Interpreter", to searing, romantic and artistically astute literary adaptations like "The Constant Gardner" to quiet and classy period pieces with timely morals like "Good Night, and Good Luck." "Syriana" arrives late on the scene like gangbusters purporting to be the gritty no-holds-bar thriller that will shine light on the shady underside of our current energy crisis.
Though ultimately a bit of a disappointment, "Syriana" is still far better than the Stephen Gaghan penned "Traffic"-the overrated, over-long multi-layered intertwining episode about the "War on Drugs." Here Gaghan serves as both writer and director, and given the current state of geopolitics, the subject matter here of terrorism, corruption, and oil trafficking is far more compelling and timely than his previous Oscar-winning effort.
Though extremely well acted and marginally well made, "Syriana" suffers because it presents scenarios liberal-minded Americans already know too well thanks to movies like "Farhenheit 9/11" and the continued follies of the current Bush administration. Here we have greedy American oil companies and corrupt politicians putting in place a puppet regime in the Middle East to protect their interests and prevent the Chinese from gaining access to the energy source their burgeoning economy so badly needs. We also have the tale of a grizzled CIA operative (the excellent George Clooney) getting outed, a slick energy analyst (an equally good Matt Damon) looking to cash in on "the winning horse" in a fraternal power struggle for the Saudi crown, and a legal investigator (the underwhelming Jeffrey Wright) pegged to bring down some devious insiders as a PR sideshow designed to give the illusion of due diligence and deter people from seeing the true corruption behind all these overt mergers and acquisitions and covert assassinations.
There are some white-knuckle moments, but the film relies on cheap manipulations (failed father-son relationships, a strained marriage, and the accidental death of child) to play on the audience's emotions. Ultimately none of these characters are very sympathetic because of these lame ploys, although there is an interesting side story about some suicide bombers that could've been more developed and should've provided the emotional core the film so badly wanted to create. Ultimately, the film depicts things we all know too well and offers no solutions to the problems. For all its supposed revelations it left me with a feeling of "so what?" because it never tried to make a statement about what we should do to curtail all this evil-doing.
Side Note: Amanda Peet, the most underrated and misused actress of her generation, is excellent as Matt Damon's wife. Her brief screen time displays her natural charms and her ability to carry heavy drama. Here's hoping her agent convinces her to do more stuff like this instead of the inane comedies she normally finds herself headlining.
Though ultimately a bit of a disappointment, "Syriana" is still far better than the Stephen Gaghan penned "Traffic"-the overrated, over-long multi-layered intertwining episode about the "War on Drugs." Here Gaghan serves as both writer and director, and given the current state of geopolitics, the subject matter here of terrorism, corruption, and oil trafficking is far more compelling and timely than his previous Oscar-winning effort.
Though extremely well acted and marginally well made, "Syriana" suffers because it presents scenarios liberal-minded Americans already know too well thanks to movies like "Farhenheit 9/11" and the continued follies of the current Bush administration. Here we have greedy American oil companies and corrupt politicians putting in place a puppet regime in the Middle East to protect their interests and prevent the Chinese from gaining access to the energy source their burgeoning economy so badly needs. We also have the tale of a grizzled CIA operative (the excellent George Clooney) getting outed, a slick energy analyst (an equally good Matt Damon) looking to cash in on "the winning horse" in a fraternal power struggle for the Saudi crown, and a legal investigator (the underwhelming Jeffrey Wright) pegged to bring down some devious insiders as a PR sideshow designed to give the illusion of due diligence and deter people from seeing the true corruption behind all these overt mergers and acquisitions and covert assassinations.
There are some white-knuckle moments, but the film relies on cheap manipulations (failed father-son relationships, a strained marriage, and the accidental death of child) to play on the audience's emotions. Ultimately none of these characters are very sympathetic because of these lame ploys, although there is an interesting side story about some suicide bombers that could've been more developed and should've provided the emotional core the film so badly wanted to create. Ultimately, the film depicts things we all know too well and offers no solutions to the problems. For all its supposed revelations it left me with a feeling of "so what?" because it never tried to make a statement about what we should do to curtail all this evil-doing.
Side Note: Amanda Peet, the most underrated and misused actress of her generation, is excellent as Matt Damon's wife. Her brief screen time displays her natural charms and her ability to carry heavy drama. Here's hoping her agent convinces her to do more stuff like this instead of the inane comedies she normally finds herself headlining.
- WriterDave
- Dec 11, 2005
- Permalink
Living in the Middle East (in Israel), I was excited when I bought my ticket for Syriana. Having seen the trailer, and being a thriller-lover, I expected to see first of all a fast moving, breath catching movie, which wisely dips in global policy-making and the relation between oil, power and corruption, from a fresh angle. Well, I almost left the movie in the middle. The pace was painfully slow, almost all characters were stereotyped, the intertwined editing made understanding the logic very difficult, but, as Steve Rhodes wrote in his review, in the end you don't care. Save your money, save your time, choose another movie.
Robi Chernitsky
Robi Chernitsky
I torture-tested Syriana - watched it twice over the course of two days. Why? Because I had read that it was a complex film and that it might require two viewings to really get it. After my second viewing, all that I can say is that this film does not live up to its reputation in terms of complexity, and does not treat its subject matter with the reputed depth people seem so willing to ascribe to it. Seems to me that the film introduces the complexity of Middle East/U.S. relations, but doesn't really indicate how deep the rabbit hole goes. I did not learn much from it, but unlike most Hollywood political films, I did not disagree with it either. Despite these comments - which were not meant to be critical - Syriana is a very serious and very good film. In my opinion it is less a thriller and more of a political drama.
Clooney plays Bob Barnes, a CIA field operative who is beginning to develop a conscience. Damon plays a financial analyst who, after the death of his eldest son, becomes adviser and friend to a smart reformist prince (Siddig). Jeffrey Wright gives an outstanding performance as a smart, aggressive attorney preparing for a merger between two oil companies by investigating their dealings in the region very critically. A young man (Amr Waked) and his father are deported from Iran because of a change in ownership at the refinery they worked in, and the young man begins to be drawn toward Islamic fundamentalism. These, and other stories, intertwine and eventually merge explosively.
Although Syriana is not a happy go-lucky walk in the park Disney show, I found it just as interesting and compelling the second time around. This speaks very highly for the films artistry and the performances of the entire cast. Clooney and Daman are always good, but both shine especially nicely in the less mainstream roles they brought to life in Syriana. This film (or the mediocre Kingdom of Heaven) should be a long overdue breakthrough for the great Alex Siddig (Siddig Al Fadil). The cast is a long list of some of Hollywood's brightest (if not most well paid) stars. Each member of the ensemble plays their part very well, and with obvious conviction.
The soundtrack is great! Gaghan's script is excellent, and the cinematography and directing are both good, though perhaps a little derivative of Traffic. Gahgan is establishing himself as one of more objective and well-informed script writers of films with political points, and I am glad to see that he is handling this difficult role with the passion, artistry and intellect it requires.
Clooney plays Bob Barnes, a CIA field operative who is beginning to develop a conscience. Damon plays a financial analyst who, after the death of his eldest son, becomes adviser and friend to a smart reformist prince (Siddig). Jeffrey Wright gives an outstanding performance as a smart, aggressive attorney preparing for a merger between two oil companies by investigating their dealings in the region very critically. A young man (Amr Waked) and his father are deported from Iran because of a change in ownership at the refinery they worked in, and the young man begins to be drawn toward Islamic fundamentalism. These, and other stories, intertwine and eventually merge explosively.
Although Syriana is not a happy go-lucky walk in the park Disney show, I found it just as interesting and compelling the second time around. This speaks very highly for the films artistry and the performances of the entire cast. Clooney and Daman are always good, but both shine especially nicely in the less mainstream roles they brought to life in Syriana. This film (or the mediocre Kingdom of Heaven) should be a long overdue breakthrough for the great Alex Siddig (Siddig Al Fadil). The cast is a long list of some of Hollywood's brightest (if not most well paid) stars. Each member of the ensemble plays their part very well, and with obvious conviction.
The soundtrack is great! Gaghan's script is excellent, and the cinematography and directing are both good, though perhaps a little derivative of Traffic. Gahgan is establishing himself as one of more objective and well-informed script writers of films with political points, and I am glad to see that he is handling this difficult role with the passion, artistry and intellect it requires.
I only gave this film a 6/10 after reading a dense diagram summarising every character in the film and how they are related to the main plot. Ideally, I should not have to consult something like this. The film was very fast and involved a lot of characters working for different organisations, all with their own secrets, and it was very hard to follow. Eventually as viewers we get the overall gist by the end. The oil corporations make losers of us all - whether in America or overseas, and the whole world's cheap fossil fuel supply relies on a network of corruption, assassination, alienation and misery. It's a deep insight into how this whole system works but perhaps presented in a convoluted and overwhelming way.
- briancham1994
- Oct 18, 2020
- Permalink
It is a rare event indeed for me to leave a movie before the end - its only happened maybe 4 or 5 times in over 30 years. Syriana was one of those times, and I left after about 70 minutes, just after a very unpleasant torture scene. The film started out somewhat confusing, but that is not uncommon in the action/thriller genre. I stuck with it thinking the plot would gradually develop, and all the threads would come together; well I waited and waited and it just got more and more confusing, so after an hour or so, I was still not really sure what it was all about.
As far as being an Oscar nomination for best screenplay - thats amazing - the screenplay is the foundation of a movie, on which everything else is built, so its hard to see how this could have been viewed as being in the top 4 or 5 scripts of 2005. Given that George Clooney has the script as a given to work with, his performance was adequate, but hardly exceptional, or particularly worthy of an award. More to the point, Clooney won his Oscar in the category of Best Supporting Actor - though as far I could work out his was the leading role, with Matt Damon in the supporting role. All in all, this was the worst Hollywood movies I have seen in the last couple of years.
As far as being an Oscar nomination for best screenplay - thats amazing - the screenplay is the foundation of a movie, on which everything else is built, so its hard to see how this could have been viewed as being in the top 4 or 5 scripts of 2005. Given that George Clooney has the script as a given to work with, his performance was adequate, but hardly exceptional, or particularly worthy of an award. More to the point, Clooney won his Oscar in the category of Best Supporting Actor - though as far I could work out his was the leading role, with Matt Damon in the supporting role. All in all, this was the worst Hollywood movies I have seen in the last couple of years.
- skimberley
- Mar 23, 2006
- Permalink
I want my... (how long was it?) ... 127 minutes back, and my $6 rental fee too.
The plot elements were pure fiction, so why are there so many comments on this board whose authors seem to think this was a documentary, or a news item. This movie does not in any way resemble the world we live in, so we can gain no useful information about the world by watching it.
Given that it's fiction, where exactly was the story? There was no story, just a bunch of stuff that happened -- oops, a bunch of stuff that never happened.
The character development was very poor. No character appears to have more than one dimension - a single motivation - a single track to their brain. Nobody works anything significant out, nobody appears to have any degree of happiness or fulfillment to their lives for more than a couple of lines in the film, and nothing worthwhile is ultimately achieved. Human individuals are represented as helpless disposable pawns with no valid contribution or destiny that they can choose to any benefit.
True art is meant to enhance us in some way. We are supposed walk away from the art seeing the world as a benevolent place for good and able people, and carry with us the feeling that we as individuals can create something good and worthwhile with our lives.
Syriana leaves me in despair that such a poorly intended and executed film won an award. It's nothing but totally wrong on every level:
It's the metaphysical equivalent of conning a a widowed grandmother out or her home, the epistemological equivalent of a lobotomy, the political equivalent of pornography, the ethical equivalent of a snuff film, and the artistic equivalent of Dada.
I want to erase it from my memory.
The plot elements were pure fiction, so why are there so many comments on this board whose authors seem to think this was a documentary, or a news item. This movie does not in any way resemble the world we live in, so we can gain no useful information about the world by watching it.
Given that it's fiction, where exactly was the story? There was no story, just a bunch of stuff that happened -- oops, a bunch of stuff that never happened.
The character development was very poor. No character appears to have more than one dimension - a single motivation - a single track to their brain. Nobody works anything significant out, nobody appears to have any degree of happiness or fulfillment to their lives for more than a couple of lines in the film, and nothing worthwhile is ultimately achieved. Human individuals are represented as helpless disposable pawns with no valid contribution or destiny that they can choose to any benefit.
True art is meant to enhance us in some way. We are supposed walk away from the art seeing the world as a benevolent place for good and able people, and carry with us the feeling that we as individuals can create something good and worthwhile with our lives.
Syriana leaves me in despair that such a poorly intended and executed film won an award. It's nothing but totally wrong on every level:
It's the metaphysical equivalent of conning a a widowed grandmother out or her home, the epistemological equivalent of a lobotomy, the political equivalent of pornography, the ethical equivalent of a snuff film, and the artistic equivalent of Dada.
I want to erase it from my memory.
- RicardoTheWonk
- Aug 6, 2006
- Permalink