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| Index | 612 reviews in total |
581 out of 737 people found the following review useful:
The Price We Pay, 12 December 2005
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Author:
brocksilvey from United States
"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
587 out of 858 people found the following review useful:
This Movie is Not Political Propaganda, 26 November 2005
Author:
Rmdnjoe from United States
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.
516 out of 738 people found the following review useful:
A political slap in the face reality check, 14 December 2005
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Author:
nolarobert from United States
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.
288 out of 388 people found the following review useful:
A thesis on the culture of corruption, 29 December 2005
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Author:
DanB-4 from Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
Stephen Gaghan penned Traffic, which was the best film of 2000. Now
with Syriana, he has developed a companion piece, with the oil industry
as the backdrop rather than the drug trade. The irony of this is that
the films show that both industries are corrupt to the core, but only
one is legal.
In fact, by the evidence of these two films, one could argue that the
drug trade is the less sleazy of the two because it does not exist with
the facade of legitimacy that surrounds the oil industry. If I was to
make a list of the 10 best films of the decade so far, these would both
be there.
It is tough, if not impossible and perhaps even foolish to try and
apply one thesis to this film, but for me, it is that what we as
civilians call corruption is simply the culture of the oil business,
one supported and nurtured by government, business, traders and
lawyers. No-one knows why it exists, but it does, and if you cannot
wade in it, you are out of the game.
Syriana does not have a plot or a storyline, but it throws character
and story and information at you by the bucketful. There is no warm up
time. Gaghan goes out of his way to show that the people involved in
this business are surrounded by a normal world with normal hopes and
dreams. This is evident from the opening shot. A title card tells us we
are in Tehran, but not a some stereotypical open market selling figs.
It is a hip hop club.
The main story of the film involves a possibly corrupt merger of two
major American oil firms. From there, everything else fans out. THe
story of Jeffrey Wright, the government official investigating the
merger, George Clooney, the CIA operative with missions with no
apparent goal, the Arab Emir from an unnamed oil producing country, and
his two sons each wanting to take over his reign, the industry analyst
(Matt Damon) who will use any situation to advance his firm, and the
young, broke angry Arab youth who look for meaning in life and find it
in the most dangerous way.
Syriana is not a left wing movie, it is surprising a-political. It is
not anti-American, but it most certainly lays blame on the US and the
west for putting oil ahead of all other priorities. It is not
sympathetic to terror, but its most compelling plot line tell us how a
terrorist can be made from a bad combination of hopelessness,
unemployment, anger and poverty.
If you are looking for a neat and tidy ending, you will be frustrated.
The film ends like a truck running into a brick wall, with all but one
or two plots left hanging. It does not answer any questions because I
believe that Gaghan is trying to show that no-one is really in charge
and that no-one really knows what is going on.
The acting is near perfect from everyone in the cast, including a
small, two scene brilliant cameo by William Hurt and Oscar worthy work
from Clooney and Alexander Siddig as the frustrated Arab prince.
This is an important film and it is not to be missed. **** out of ****.
261 out of 438 people found the following review useful:
A Powerful Political Film, 20 November 2005
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Author:
jasonllester from United States
I had the pleasure to view Syriana at an Academy screening and I must say that it is not for everyone. It is however a great film with an important message. Syriana is a thinker's political thriller and it will make you think. I'm glad to see someone like George Clooney trying to make important films again and Syriana is a very worthy effort. The performances are as good as it gets in any film and Chris Cooper is especially noteworthy with a powerhouse perf that will be hard to beat come Oscar time. Also worth mentioning is the great screenplay and direction by Stephen Gaghan. Syriana is not a film for those that want car chases, sex scenes, and huge explosions, but if you want a film that treats its audience as intelligent human beings, Syriana is for you.
151 out of 254 people found the following review useful:
Foreign and domestic intrigue, 29 November 2005
Author:
Tony43 from Los Angeles
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This is a complex film that tries to get the audience to connect the
dots --to see that control of the Middle Eastern oil fields is the goal
that is at the heart of so much of the political process, both in the
Middle East and in the West, and that it is also the catalyst for much
of what we call terrorism.
To accomplish its goal, the film introduces a number of characters and
a number of seemingly separate story lines in the beginning, then tries
to weave them all together by the end. That makes for a challenging
first hour or so, in which the film jumps back and forth from one
storyline to another. It can be confusing, but not too confusing if you
pay close attention.
And it does weave them together in the last half hour, so the pay off
is there. But the conclusion it reaches is not a happy one for many
Americans, for what the movie seems to say is American oil companies
use any means necessary, including double crosses and outright murder,
to protect their access to Middle Eastern oil.
Well enough, for the political message. But does it work as a movie?
The answer, in my view, is yes, but its a qualified yes.
The plot centers around the merger of two American oil companies, one a
industry giant, which has just lost a big contract in Saudi Arabia to
the Chinese, the other a small, independent Texas outfit, that has just
won a lucrative contract in a smaller Mideast nation and is now going
to be very cash rich. But there's a hitch. Did the Texas outfit bribe
foreign officials, violating the US Corrupt Practices act. Fearing a
Justice Department investigation that could block the merger, it hires
a high priced Washington law firm to conduct its own investigation, to
see what Justice might dig up against it.
At the same time, the Emir of a Persian Gulf oil kingdom is about to
retire to Europe and has to pick between two sons to succeed him. One
is a pool shooting playboy, the other a serious, reform minded
idealist. Problem is, the idealist might not be so anxious to allow US
troops to continue to garrison on his soil, while his fun loving
brother wants nothing more than to have the Americans there to protect
his privileged lifestyle from Islamic radicals. And as all this
unfolds, a young Palestinian refugee, thrown out of work by a shift in
control of the oil fields, is recruited by al-Qaida or something like
it, and becomes involved in a terrorist bombing plot, using a weapon
originally delivered by a CIA covert op to the Middle East.
But where the movie falls down is that it fails in someways to weave a
human story into this and human stories, after all, are what the movies
are all about. George Clooney does a fine job as a sort of world weary
CIA agent caught up in the skullduggery. Although not particularly
introspective, he does on occasion give you the impression that he's
trying to figure out if he works for the US government or the Houston
Petroleum Club. Matt Damen plays an oil industry analyst who is an
adviser to the idealist candidate for emir and he is given the task of
adding the human element to the story, after his young son drowns in a
swimming pool. Unfortunately, Damon falls completely flat, registering
almost zero emotion in his role as an exasperated advocate of democracy
and reform or even as grieving dad. The talented Amande Peet ties her
best as his wife, but gets little screen time and also delivers a weak
performance.
And these only partially successful performances and outright failures
are where "Syriana" fails --as a film. What "Syriana" lacks is a clear
cut central character whose fate is linked to the complex story lines.
Clooney's character is as close as we get, and he does not get enough
screen time to really get us involved with him and the moral questions
he faces. He at one point is directly involved in an assassination
plot, then tries to stop it. The lead up to that is the most
suspenseful of the film, but Clooney's out of nowhere insertion in the
payoff scene is the movie's weakest moment, as if the filmmakers had to
recast his character as a born again good guy, despite the silliness of
his actions.
In the end, movies rise and fall, not by their political message, but
by how their central characters grab us. "The Grapes of Wrath," one of
Hollywood's greatest political films, works in the end because the
complex, multi-character story is really the story of Tom Joad and
Henry Fonda's portrayal of this character will forever haunt us.
That simply doesn't happen in "Syriana." While we might feel for George
Clooney's character, he is not one who we can fall in love with.
Clooney's C-I-A agent comes off as a tool, discarded by his handlers
when he is no longer useful. But the fact that he did not see until the
end that he was working, not for his country, but for big oil, makes
him a kind of sad dupe and that does not a movie hero make. Actually,
had he gotten more screen time, he might well have been a more
sympathetic character. But that would have given us less time to ponder
the role of the oil companies in all this.
164 out of 284 people found the following review useful:
Beware, Genius At Work, 12 December 2005
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Author:
leonardofilmgroup from Italy
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.
74 out of 111 people found the following review useful:
See no evil, 6 January 2006
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
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.
161 out of 289 people found the following review useful:
Syriana: the smart scripts that speaks, 16 December 2005
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Author:
froglegcutlet from United States
Syriana, starring Matt Damon and George Clooney, reveals a possible
honesty in foreign political corruption. The movie starts out a bit
discombobulating, but the ending unleashes a truism in our society.
Directed and written by Stephen Gaghan (Screenplay for Traffic 2000),
the script for Syriana shows not only a smart liberal-approached
storyline, but also how much the American and Arabian lives becomes
juxtaposed by oil politics. Based on the non-fiction book "See No Evil"
by Robert Baer, Syriana takes its viewer step by step through the birth
and processes of terrorism; and tears at the roots from where all
violence and corruption derives.
The movie starts with the introduction of a character, Bob (George
Clooney), an American CIA agent who works in the Middle East for years
witnessing the destruction of social injustice. The movie then turns
light to the American governmental affairs and its due process to make
oil business proposals and governmental decisions to promote oil driven
businesses in the Middle East. Bryan (Matt Damon) struggling to survive
in America's capitalistic society thrives to introduce business
opportunities in the Middle East; but before completing any deals with
reformer and leader, Prince Nasir, all the characters, including a
young Arabic man suffering from American politics and social
injustices, end up experiencing sacrifices beyond comprehensible.
The movie leaves its audience stunned with a raw realism that the world
we live is not a pretty picture, and all the beliefs you trust can be
questionable. Although the movie definitely wouldn't exactly be a "feel
good movie", its thought provoking and enlightening, and I don't think
it was ever meant to be a "feel good movie." The movie shows a
perspective worth learning, considering and understanding. And although
the movie takes the viewer through a roller-coaster of different lives
and people objectives at the beginning of the film, the movie ties in
brilliantly to connect not only the characters lives, but the lives of
the audience and everyone's lives who have capitalistic motives.
122 out of 212 people found the following review useful:
Go See It, 17 December 2005
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Author:
pegd-1 from Connecticut
Initially I wanted to compare it with Traffic, same style and
interwoven story lines, but the film itself stopped me from doing so.
Thank you. Comparing films can so difficult, you know, the old apples
v. oranges thing. This film stands on its own without the comparison or
the similarities to Traffic.
Just before I went to the movie theatre, I saw an interview with Steve
Gaghan the director on the Charlie Rose Show, and probably this helped
me to fit most of the pieces together. The scene where Bob (Clooney) is
taken to visit Hezbollah leaders, is based on the exact experience the
director had when researching the story. He said that most of the film
was based on his or Bob's actual experiences.
So what do we have....Oil, big oil, oil executives, oil analysts, oil
geography, oil politics, big time oil power brokers, CIA, Islamic
terrorists, Middle East culture....It's all there. And Steve Gaghan
does a very good job in bringing it all together. His directorial
debut. Very good acting all round, maybe the oldest boy and his mother
Amanda Peet stand out.
I walked out of the theatre in an emotional daze, if that's possible. I
will see this film again.
My coda.... What a rotten, ugly barrel of oil.
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