Review: Buried - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 16, 2024, 12:53 AM | Calgary | -0.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Review: Buried

Ryan Reynolds shines in this claustrophobic thriller.

Ryan Reynolds shines in this claustrophobic thriller

Ryan Reynolds stars in the claustrophobic thriller Buried. (Maple Pictures)

Alfred Hitchcock, famed for imposing formal constraints on his filmmaking, would have appreciated the technical bravado of Rodrigo Cortes, the Spanish director of Buried. Hitchcock confined one film to an apartment (Rope), another to one room (Rear Window) and a third to a cramped lifeboat (Lifeboat). But he never went so far as to set an entire movie inside a wooden coffin buried underground.

Ryan Reynolds,an actorbest known for comedies, gets a real dramatic workout here. He has to start at a high level of panic and build from there.

Buried opens with a nightmare scenario straight out of Edgar Allan Poe: A man (Ryan Reynolds) wakes up in the dark, only to realize hes in a casket under six feet of earth. There is, however, a sliver of hope. With his Zippo lighter, he discovers a cellphone lying near him and begins making frantic calls.

We learn that hes Paul Conroy, a U.S. civilian truck driver working on contract in Iraq. The last thing he remembers was being in a convoy that was attacked. He finds out, after various calls, that he has been kidnapped by the attackers and is being held for ransom. Theyve planted the cell in his box so he can make videos to plead for his release.

The phone is his lifeline, but its a frayed one. The text is in Arabic and the battery is dying. When he manages to make calls, he has to contend with voicemail, unhelpful 411 operators and, once he connects with the authorities, a lot of buck passing. Frustrating enough for anyone, but imagine dealing with it when youre inside a coffin in the Iraq desert and your air supply is running out.

Cortes makes Pauls confinement all the more palpable by keeping us in that box with him. The camera never ventures outside its walls, and there are no flashbacks or split screens to show us the people hes speaking to. The other characters exist only as voices with the exception of one, seen in a video on the cellphone. The films light sources are limited to the Zippo, the cells illuminated screen and, later, a finicky flashlight. At times, Cortes plunges us in darkness, at which point we could just as well be listening to a radio play.

Like Hitchcock, however, Cortes and his cinematographer, Eduard Grau, have devised ways of allowing the camera to move within the coffins cramped confines. The director and screenwriter Chris Sparling throw in some additional elements to make Pauls ordeal even more horrifying and intense but I wont spoil things by saying what they are.

Reynolds, the mild-mannered Vancouver-born actor best known for comedies, gets a real dramatic workout here. He has to start at a high level of panic and build from there, running the gamut from terror to rage to despair. (Needless to say, he also has to do a lot of thinking inside the box.) Again, you think of Hitchcock, who used likable, ordinary-guy actors such as Jimmy Stewart as his hero-victims.

Hitch aside, Cortess Buried will inevitably be compared to Danny Boyles 127 Hours, this falls other, more prominent film about a lone mans excruciating ordeal. But Buried is much darker and includes a cruel twist that marks it as an independent feature made outside the Hollywood mainstream. And, while at first it seems to be a gimmick thriller in the mode of, say, Phone Booth, it ends up having more resonance than we expect.

As Paul gets the runaround from the U.S. authorities including a brutally callous call from his employers HR manager, seeking to waive his rights to insurance and hangs on the dubious assurances of a hostage negotiator (Robert Paterson), it becomes clear that Buried is almost as much an anti-Iraq War statement as it is a horror movie.

Then there are Pauls repeated attempts to reach his wife (Samantha Mathis), as well as his poignant conversation with his senile mother (Tess Harper). Listening to them, you cant help but be reminded of those last, heartbreaking cellphone calls made by the victims of 9/11 to their loved ones.

Cortes has made only one previous feature, 2007s The Contestant, and his work to date has been largely unknown in North America. Buried should change that. Hes clearly a daring talent.

Buried opens Oct. 1.

Martin Morrow writes about the arts for CBC News.