NOTE: This is an edited reprint of my review from the Sundance Film Festival.
Camp X-ray opens October 17th.
It's easy to forget after years of watching her waste away in the
Twilight
franchise, but Kristen Stewart has always been a sure talent who walked to the
beat of her own drum. More often than her detractors care to admit, Stewart has
shown a maturity well beyond her years, and a ferocity that has made her
perfect for playing strong, independent women with a bit of a an edge. That
innate toughness makes her the perfect choice to play a defiant Guantanamo Bay
prison guard in Peter Sattler's
Camp X-Ray, a simplistic look at the
military's inhumane treatment of detainees.
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The film begins ominously enough with video of 9/11 and the smoldering World
Trade Center, establishing that the old ways of American security will never be
the same again. A Muslim man carrying a bag full of cell phones stops to pray
in his run-down apartment and is greeted with a bag over his head, whisked away
through quick montages to the infamous prison. Fast-forward eight years and
we're thrust into Gitmo and introduced to Amy (Stewart), a newbie guard with a
quiet demeanor and furious temper that draws unwanted attention from detainees
and colleagues alike. On her first day she gets into a scrap with an inmate
and, catching an elbow to the face, smiles at the physical altercation. Is this
going to be a lean, mean, unsparing look at the people who have made Guantanamo
such a black mark on American foreign policy?
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Unfortunately no; as the dark tone takes a different shape when Amy is assigned
to hand out books to detainees. It's then that she meets Ali (Peyman Moaadi), a
chatty, probing detainee who begins to pester her over the books she has to
offer. He's read six of the Harry Potter books and has been waiting impatiently
for the seventh so he can find out of Snape is truly good or evil. The
conversation is odd, playful but also with an undertone of danger. Like Snape,
we don't know if Ali has the best of intentions or if he's plotting something
sinister. Amy tries to keep him at arm's length, trying to heed the advice of
her brash superior: "Don't let them get inside your head".
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Capturing the boring repetition and minutiae of military life, so accurately
depicted in
Jarhead some years ago, Sattler shows that Gitmo is a prison
that has ensnared far more than the detainees. At first Amy tries to fit in,
swallowing her objections against the casual mistreatment of Ali and others.
Despite being targeted for a disgusting "shit cocktail" hurled by Ali
himself, Amy lets her guard down around him and finds they have far more in
common than not. Conversely, she's punished and ostracized from the other soldiers
after rejecting her superior's romantic advances, and faces further discipline
after reporting him for a rules violation.
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Exploring the tenuous position of females in the male-dominated military
hierarchy could have taken the film to promising new areas, but Sattler instead
focuses on the unlikely friendship between Amy and Ali. Yet still the lengthy
conversations they have about all manner of topics amounts to absolutely
nothing, and never come close to examining Ali's potential guilt. While there's
an inherent loneliness that drives them together initially, Ali is never
defined well enough to convincingly explain her deepening interest. This
becomes especially problematic during an undercooked final exchange where their
rival philosophies on justice are laid on the table. "What have you
learned?" Ali repeatedly asks her, in an attempt to discover what it is
that has drawn her to him. No answer is forthcoming, and Sattler seems unsure
what truly binds these characters other than proximity and pity.
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At the same time, Sattler has constructed a competently made film about people
and empathy rather than Gitmo's real-life scandals. While terribly
under-developed, flashes of poignancy occasionally illuminate Ali and Amy's
growing friendship, aided by strong performances by the two leads. Dressed down
in a way we've never seen her before, Stewart's riveting, tough and vulnerable
performance may be the finest of her career. Moaadi, who some may recall from
Oscar-winning foreign film
A Separation, is a whirlwind of rage, humor,
and despair as the possibly-innocent Ali, who is faced with an uncertain
future.
While flawed in execution,
Camp X-Ray tells us traditional notions of
good and evil no longer apply in a misguided place like Gitmo, and all who find
themselves there are trapped behind walls of concrete and steel.
Rating: 3 out of 5