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Film: Day Zero
Studio: First Look International; Indalo
Productions
Director: Bryan Gunnar Cole
Principal
Actors: Elijah Wood, Jon Bernthal, Chris
Klein
Release: 2007; On DVD released February 26, 2008
Film
length: 92 minutes
Rating:
R for language, sexual content, violence, some drug use
4 Stars
Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner
Day Zero uses a hypothetical reinstatement
of the military draft in the United States to present a
character-driven story of friendship, inner demons and tough
decision-making. The result is a film
that will keep viewers talking and thinking for some time.
Three
friends in New York all receive draft notices at the
same time, with orders to report in 30 days.
Aaron Feller (Elijah Wood), is a sensitive, naive writer who has just
published a first novel and is working on a second. James Dixon is a tough-talking cab
driver. George Rifkin is a lawyer who
has just made partner in his firm. It
requires a bit of a suspension of disbelief to accept the three close friends
would all receive their notices on the same day. There is also some question as to how these three
very different men have become such close friends. George and Dixon go back to high school,
but it isn't clear how and when Aaron came to make this a trio. But once overcoming those two small points,
the story takes off quickly.
Aaron's
reaction is one of fear, actually many fears, which he discusses with his
long-time therapist (while she is working a crossword puzzle-one of the most
brutally insensitive portrayals of a therapist ever seen). He's never actually been in a fight. What if the others don't like him? Isn't it true the people no one likes are the
first ones killed in a battle? Dixon is ready to go,
accepting that after 9/11 and Los Angeles (a reference to a
fictional disaster that killed some 1500 people), it is time to fight for
freedom. George tells his wife Molly
(Ginnifer Goodwin) "I had a very specific plan for us." He immediately begins to look for
loopholes: Perhaps he could convince the
draft board he is gay; or, maybe his father could wield influence in Washington and find a way out.
Things
come to a head at a party hosted by George and Molly to celebrate Molly's fifth
year as a cancer survivor. Here, all the
arguments for and against the war in Iraq are voiced, credibly and
without apology. "Killing is wrong, no
matter who does it," one of Molly's women friends says. Dixon challenges her, saying
"You've never had to fight for anything."
He reminds her of 9/11 and Los Angeles, then adds, "but you
were probably busy getting a pedicure at the time." A fight erupts as George asks Dixon to leave, but it is a
scene that isn't going to end a long-time friendship.
Aaron's
therapist advises him to "wrap up your affairs" before the reporting date, and
suggests he might make a top ten list of things he wants to do. Some comic relief is supplied by the
resulting list and Aaron's activities in fulfilling it, but there is also an
air of pathos in seeing the things that are important to him. At the same time, Dixon falls in love with a
woman he met the day he received the draft notice. Seeing his developing relationship and the
strains on the established relationship between George and Molly in light of
the looming draft date make for interesting comparison and contrast.
This
is a compelling film, and one's viewpoint on the war in Iraq will not affect the
perception of the film. This is a story
of people. The three fine performances
of Wood, Klein, and especially Bernthal and the ways in which their characters
react and interact to their situation left me saying "Wow."
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