Stop Loss
Starring: Ryan Phillippe,
Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Channing Tatum
Directed by: Kimberly Peirce (“Boys Don’t
Cry”)
Written by: Kimberly Peirce (“Boys Don’t
Cry”), Mark Richard (debut)
By Kiko
Martinez
It’s
a financial risk this day and age to produce a film on
the war in Iraq. Look at recent movies like “In the
Valley of Elah,” “Lions for Lambs,” and “The Kingdom,”
all of which scraped in some change but for the most
part were forgotten with the exception of Tommy Lee
Jones’ Oscar nod for the former. What mainstream
moviegoer would really spend his or her time and money
on something they could see on CNN for free?
Things might
have been different for “Stop Loss,” the first film of
Kimberly Peirce’s career since she lead Hilary Swank to
her first Oscar in “Boys Don’t Cry” nine years ago. Like
any negative war story you would find buried inside any
of Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers, the term “stop-loss” is
one few people have come across in the five consecutive
years the U.S. has been in the Middle East.
That is why
“Stop Loss” is such an interesting story, although it’s
touted in a most uninteresting way. For those of you who
are still wondering, stop-loss is a term used to
describe a military policy where the government can
retain a soldier for longer than the contract he or she
signed. Some critics call it a “back-door draft.”
In “Stop
Loss,” soldier Brandon King (Ryan Phillippe) has just
finished serving his term in the Army and is ready to
get back to his small Texas town to be with his family.
During his last mission, Brandon experienced a lot of
casualties when his troop was ambushed by insurgents.
Wounded himself, he returns home to a war hero’s ovation
alongside his friend Steve Shriver (Channing Tatum), who
has also come to the end of his military service and is
ready to settle down and marry his fiancée.
But
apparently earning a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart
isn’t enough to allow Brandon to bow out gracefully.
Short of good soldiers in Iraq, Brandon’s commanding
officer, Lieutenant Col. Boot Miller (Timothy Olyphant)
decides that he will send Brandon back out to Iraq once
his leave is over. Rather than return to a war he no
longer wants to fight, Brandon opts to go AWOL just long
enough to figure out how he can beat the system.
Attempting
to put a face on the soldiers isn’t enough in “Stop
Loss” as Peirce and first-time screenwriter Mark Richard
forgot to include souls within the men. Instead, Peirce
relies on cliché Texas characterizations (everyone in
the Lone Star State wears a cowboy hat, knows how to
two-step, and shoots guns for fun) and a
skim-across-the-surface take on the real controversy
behind this military loophole.
The
authenticity of these stories is in the minds of the men
who experience them, not in a sluggish foot chase mended
together by Hollywood. “Stop-Loss” would have been so
much more compelling and convincing if it had been an
insightful documentary on these little-known events.
It’s a shame to see the topic wasted on such a
pop-culture-friendly message geared toward
twenty-somethings, who will be the first to walk out of
the theater voicing their hatred for the Bush
administration and loaded with another talking point.
Grade: C