Zero Dark Thirty (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)

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Zero Dark Thirty (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)

Zero Dark Thirty is a 2012 American thriller film directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal. The film dramatizes the nearly decade-long international manhunt for Osama bin Laden, leader of terrorist network Al-Qaeda, after the September 11 attacks. This search leads to the discovery of his compound in Pakistan and the military raid where bin Laden was killed on May 2, 2011.

Jessica Chastain stars as Maya, a fictional CIA intelligence analyst, with Jason Clarke, Joel Edgerton, Reda Kateb, Mark Strong, James Gandolfini, Kyle Chandler, Stephen Dillane, Chris Pratt, Édgar Ramírez, Fares Fares, Jennifer Ehle, John Barrowman, Mark Duplass, Harold Perrineau, and Frank Grillo in supporting roles. It was produced by Boal, Bigelow, and Megan Ellison, and independently financed by Ellison s Annapurna Pictures. The film premiered in Los Angeles on December 10, 2012, and had its wide release on January 11, 2013.

Zero Dark Thirty received critical acclaim for its acting, direction, screenplay and editing, and was a box office success, grossing $132 million worldwide. It appeared on 95 critics top ten lists of 2012. It was also nominated in five categories at the 85th Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Actress for Chastain, Best Original Screenplay, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound Editing, which it won in a tie with Skyfall. It earned Golden Globe Award nominations for Best Motion Picture – Drama, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama for Chastain, who won.

The film s depiction of torture (so-called enhanced interrogation techniques ) generated controversy. Some critics, in light of the interrogations being depicted as gaining reliable, useful, and accurate information, considered the scenes pro-torture propaganda. Former interim acting director of the CIA Michael Morell felt that the film created the false impression that torture was key to finding bin Laden. Others described it as an anti-torture exposure of interrogation practices.

Republican Congressman Peter T. King charged that the filmmakers were given improper access to classified materials, which they denied. An unreleased draft of a report prepared by the Inspector General and published in June 2013 by the Project On Government Oversight stated that former CIA Director Leon Panetta discussed classified information during an awards ceremony for the United States Navy SEALs team that carried out the raid on the bin Laden compound. Unbeknownst to Panetta, screenwriter Boal was among the 1,300 present during the ceremony.


Plot

Maya Harris is a CIA analyst tasked with finding the al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In 2003, she is stationed at the U.S. embassy in Pakistan. She and CIA officer Dan Fuller attend the black site interrogations of Ammar (Reda Kateb), a detainee with suspected links to several of the hijackers in the September 11 attacks and who is subjected to approved torture interrogation techniques. Ammar provides unreliable information on a suspected attack in Saudi Arabia, but reveals the name of the personal courier for bin Laden, Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti. Other detainee intelligence connects courier traffic by Abu Ahmed between Abu Faraj al-Libbi and bin Laden. In 2005, Faraj denies knowing about a courier named Abu Ahmed; Maya interprets this as an attempt by Faraj to conceal the importance of Abu Ahmed.

In 2009, Maya s fellow officer and friend Jessica travels to a US base in Afghanistan to meet a Jordanian doctor, highly placed in al-Qaeda, who has offered to become a US spy for $25 million. Instead, he turns out to be a triple agent loyal to al-Qaeda, and Jessica is killed, along with several other CIA officers, when he detonates a suicide vest in what will come to be known as the Camp Chapman attack, the worst attack on CIA personnel in 25 years.

Thomas, an analyst who linked the Abu Ahmed lead, shares with Maya an interrogation of a Jordanian detainee claiming to have buried Abu Ahmed in 2001. Maya learns what the CIA was told five years earlier: Ibrahim Sayeed traveled under the name of Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti. Realizing her lead may be alive, Maya contacts Dan, now a senior officer at the CIA headquarters. She speculates that the CIA s photograph of Ahmed is that of his brother, Habeeb, who was killed in Afghanistan. Maya says that their beards and native clothes make the brothers look alike, explaining the account of Ahmed s death in 2001.

A Kuwaiti prince trades the phone number of Sayeed s mother to Dan for a Lamborghini Gallardo Bicolore. Maya and her CIA team in Pakistan use electronic methods to eventually pinpoint a caller in a moving vehicle who exhibits behaviors that delay confirmation of his identity (which Maya calls tradecraft, thus confirming that the subject is likely a senior courier). They track the vehicle to a large urban compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. After gunmen attack Maya while she is in her vehicle, she is recalled to Washington, D.C. as her cover is believed blown.

The CIA puts the compound under surveillance, but obtains no conclusive identification of bin Laden. The President s National Security Advisor tasks the CIA with creating a plan to capture or kill bin Laden. Before briefing President Barack Obama, the CIA director holds a meeting of his senior officers, who estimate that bin Laden is 60–80% likely to be in the compound. Maya, also in the meeting, places her confidence at 100%.

On May 2, 2011, the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment flies two stealth helicopters from Afghanistan into Pakistan with members of DEVGRU and the CIA s Special Activities Division to raid the compound. The SEALs gain entry and kill a number of people in the compound, including a man whom they believe is bin Laden. At a U.S. base in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, Maya confirms the identity of the corpse.

She boards a military transport back to the U.S., the sole passenger. She is asked where she wants to go and begins to cry.


Cast

CIA

  • Jessica Chastain as Maya Harris, a CIA intelligence analyst
  • Jason Clarke as Dan Fuller, a CIA intelligence officer
  • Jennifer Ehle as Jessica Karley, a senior CIA analyst
  • Mark Strong as George Panetta, a senior CIA supervisor
  • Kyle Chandler as Joseph Bradley, Islamabad CIA Station Chief
  • James Gandolfini as CIA Director
  • Harold Perrineau as Jack Fuller, a CIA analyst
  • Mark Duplass as Steve Bradley, a CIA analyst
  • Fredric Lehne as Fred The Wolf Guerrero, a CIA section chief
  • John Barrowman as Jeremy Karley, a CIA executive
  • Jessie Collins as Debbie Stone, a CIA analyst
  • Édgar Ramírez as Larry Handley, a CIA SAD/SOG operative
  • Fares Fares as Hakim, a CIA SAD/SOG operative
  • Scott Adkins as John Simmons, a CIA SAD/SOG operative
  • Jeremy Strong as Thomas, a CIA analyst

US Navy

  • Joel Edgerton as Patrick Grayston, DEVGRU (SEAL Team 6) team leader
  • Chris Pratt as Justin Lenihan, DEVGRU operator.
  • Callan Mulvey as Saber Till, DEVGRU operator.
  • Taylor Kinney as Jared Bradley, DEVGRU operator
  • Mike Colter as Mike, DEVGRU operator
  • Frank Grillo as DEVGRU Commanding officer
  • Christopher Stanley as JSOC Commander Vice Admiral Bill McRaven

Other

  • Stephen Dillane as National Security Advisor Tom Donilon
  • Mark Valley as C-130 pilot
  • John Schwab as Deputy National Security Advisor
  • Reda Kateb as Ammar, a terrorist who is tortured for information
  • Homayoun Ershadi as Hassan Ghul
  • Yoav Levi as Abu Farraj al-Libbi
  • Ricky Sekhon as Osama bin Laden, leader and founder of Al Qaeda

Production

Titles

The film s working title was For God and Country. The title Zero Dark Thirty was officially confirmed at the end of the film s teaser trailer. Bigelow has explained that it s a military term for 30 minutes after midnight, and it refers also to the darkness and secrecy that cloaked the entire decade-long mission.

Writing

Bigelow and Boal had initially worked on and finished a screenplay centered on the December 2001 Battle of Tora Bora, and the long, unsuccessful efforts to find Osama bin Laden in the region. The two were about to begin filming when news broke that bin Laden had been killed.

They immediately shelved the film they had been working on and redirected their focus, essentially starting from scratch. But a lot of the homework I d done for the first script and a lot of the contacts I made, carried over, Boal remarked during an interview with Entertainment Weekly. He added, The years I had spent talking to military and intelligence operators involved in counter-terrorism was helpful in both projects. Some of the sourcing I had developed long, long ago continued to be helpful for this version.

Along with painstakingly recreating the historic night-vision raid on the Abbottabad compound, the script and the film stress the little-reported role of the tenacious young female CIA officer who tracked down Osama bin Laden. Screenwriter Boal said that while researching for the film, I heard through the grapevine that women played a big role in the CIA in general and in this team. I heard that a woman was there on the night of the raid as one of the CIA s liaison officers on the ground – and that was the start of it. He then turned up stories about a young case officer who was recruited out of college, who had spent her entire career chasing bin Laden. Maya s tough-minded, monomaniacal persona, Boal said, is based on a real person, but she also represents the work of a lot of other women. In December 2014 Jane Mayer of The New Yorker wrote that Maya was modeled in part after CIA officer Alfreda Frances Bikowsky.

Filming

Zero Dark Thirty producers built a real compound in Jordan, based on what they could learn from (diagrams and reporting) about the building where the CIA’s pursuit ended. The production designer—Jeremy Hindle, who had never made a feature film before—was responsible for making the building as real as possible. The cinder blocks with which the building was made, for example, were distressed so that they didn’t look new. Parts of the film were shot at PEC University of Technology in Chandigarh, India. Some parts of Chandigarh were designed to look like Lahore and Abbottabad in Pakistan, where Osama bin Laden was found and killed on May 2, 2011. Parts of the film were shot in Mani Majra. Local members of Hindu nationalist parties protested, expressing anti-bin Laden and anti-Pakistan sentiments as they objected to Pakistani locations being portrayed on Indian soil. For a lone scene shot in Poland, the city of Gdańsk was reportedly offended for depicting it as a location for the CIA s clandestine and dark operations.

National security expert Peter Bergen, who reviewed an early cut of the film as an unpaid adviser, said at the time that the film s torture scenes were overwrought . Boal said they were toned down in the final cut.

Music

Alexandre Desplat composed and conducted the film s score. The score, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, was released as a soundtrack album by Madison Gate Records on December 19, 2012.

No.TitleLength
1. Flight to Compound 5:07
2. Drive to Embassy 1:44
3. Bombings 3:46
4. Ammar 4:06
5. Monkeys 2:59
6. Northern Territories 3:46
7. Seals Take Off 2:34
8. 21 Days 2:04
9. Preparation for Attack 1:45
10. Balawi 3:15
11. Dead End 3:26
12. Maya on Plane 3:59
13. Area 51 1:42
14. Tracking Calls 3:46
15. Picket Lines 3:03
16. Towers 2:02
17. Chopper 1:48
18. Back to Base 2:41

Marketing

Electronic Arts promoted Zero Dark Thirty in its video game Medal of Honor: Warfighter by offering downloadable maps of locations depicted in the film. Additional maps for the game were made available on December 19, to coincide with the film s initial release. Electronic Arts donates $1 to nonprofit organizations that support veterans for each Zero Dark Thirty map pack sold.


Release

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 91% based on 302 reviews, with an average rating of 8.60/10. The website s critical consensus reads, Gripping, suspenseful, and brilliantly crafted, Zero Dark Thirty dramatizes the hunt for Osama bin Laden with intelligence and an eye for detail. On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 95 out of 100, based on 46 critics, indicating universal acclaim . It was the site s best-reviewed film of 2012. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A− on an A+ to F scale.

New York Times critic Manohla Dargis, who designated the film a New York Times critics pick, said that the film shows the dark side of that war. It shows the unspeakable and lets us decide if the death of Bin Laden was worth the price we paid.

Richard Corliss s review in Time magazine called it a fine movie and a police procedural on the grand scale , saying it blows Argo out of the water . Calling Zero Dark Thirty a milestone in post-Sept. 11 cinema , critic A. O. Scott of The New York Times listed the film at number six of the top 10 films of 2012.

The New Yorker film critic David Denby lauded the filmmakers for their approach. The virtue of Zero Dark Thirty, wrote Denby, is that it pays close attention to the way life does work; it combines ruthlessness and humanity in a manner that is paradoxical and disconcerting yet satisfying as art. But Denby faulted the filmmakers for getting lodged on the divide between fact and fiction.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three stars out of four. He believed the opening scenes are not great filmmaking , but Ebert thought Zero Dark Thirty eventually proved itself with the quiet determination of Chastain s performance and a gripping portrayal of the behind-the-scenes detail that led to bin Laden s death.

Top ten lists

Zero Dark Thirty was listed on many critics top ten lists. According to Metacritic the film appeared on 95 critics top ten lists of 2012, 17 of which placed the film at No. 1.

  • 1st – Richard Roeper
  • 1st – David Denby, The New Yorker (tied with Lincoln)
  • 1st – Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly
  • 1st – Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune
  • 1st – Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post
  • 1st – Scott Foundas, Village Voice
  • 1st – Mary Pols, Time
  • 1st – David Edelstein, New York
  • 1st – Peter Knegt & Nigel M. Smith, Indiewire
  • 1st – Christopher Orr, The Atlantic
  • 1st – Keith Phipps, The A.V. Club
  • 2nd – Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
  • 2nd – Eric Kohn, Indiewire
  • 2nd – Stephanie Zacharek, Film.com
  • 2nd – Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
  • 2nd – A.A. Dowd and Ben Kenigsberg, Time Out Chicago
  • 2nd – Noel Murray, The A.V. Club
  • 2nd – Gregory Ellwood, Hitfix
  • 2nd – Scott Mantz, Access Hollywood
  • 2nd – James Berardinelli, Reelviews
  • 3rd – Stephen Holden, The New York Times
  • 3rd – Ty Burr, The Boston Globe
  • 3rd – Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times
  • 3rd – Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle
  • 3rd – Elizabeth Weitzman, New York Daily News
  • 3rd – Bill Goodykoontz, The Arizona Republic
  • 3rd – Lou Lumenick, New York Post
  • 3rd – Anne Thompson & Caryn James, IndieWire
  • 3rd – Tasha Robinson, The A.V. Club
  • 4th – Andrew O Hehir, Salon.com
  • 4th – Glenn Kenny, MSN Movies
  • 4th – Marlow Stern, The Daily Beast
  • 5th – Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly
  • 5th - Christy Lemire, Associated Press
  • 5th – Drew McWeeny, HitFix
  • 5th – Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter
  • 5th – Kyle Smith, New York Post
  • 6th – Richard Corliss, Time
  • 6th – A.O. Scott, The New York Times
  • 7th – Kevin Jagernauth, IndieWire
  • 7th – Lisa Kennedy, The Denver Post
  • 7th – Alison Willmore, The A.V. Club
  • 8th – Scott Tobias, The A.V. Club
  • 9th – Keith Uhlich, Time Out New York
  • 9th – Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News
  • 10th – Steven Rea, The Philadelphia Inquirer
  • 10th – Dana Stevens, Slate
  • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) – Richard Lawson, The Atlantic
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Manohla Dargis, The New York Times
  • Top 10 (ranked alphabetically) – Calvin Wilson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal
  • Best of 2012 (listed alphabetically, not ranked) – Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times

In 2016, Zero Dark Thirty was voted the 57th greatest film to be released since 2000 in a critics poll conducted by the BBC.

Box office

The limited release of Zero Dark Thirty grossed $417,150 in the United States and Canada in only five theaters. A wide release followed on January 11.

Entertainment Weekly wrote, The controversial Oscar contender easily topped the chart in its first weekend of wide release with $24.4 million. Zero Dark Thirty grossed $95,720,716 in the U.S. and Canada, along with $37,100,000 in other countries, for a worldwide total of $132,820,716. It was the top-grossing film of its wide release premiere weekend.

Accolades

Zero Dark Thirty was nominated for five Academy Awards at the 85th Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Original Screenplay, Best Sound Editing and Best Film Editing. Paul N. J. Ottosson won the Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, tying with Skyfall. This was only the sixth tie in Academy Awards history, and the first since 1994. Zero Dark Thirty was nominated for four Golden Globe Awards at the 70th Golden Globe Awards, including Best Motion Picture – Drama, Best Director, Best Screenplay, with Chastain winning Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama.

The Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association s award for Best Director was given to Bigelow, the second time the honor has gone to a woman (the first also being Bigelow for The Hurt Locker). The film swept critics groups awards for Best Director and Best Picture including the Washington D.C., New York Film Critics Online, Chicago and Boston film critics associations.

Home media

Zero Dark Thirty was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on March 26, 2013.


Prequel

Writer Boal has stated his interest in making the original film on the 2001 Tora Bora hunt for bin Laden that he and Bigelow conceived. That finished screenplay had been set aside after bin Laden was killed in 2011 to focus on what became Zero Dark Thirty. I love reporting, so being on a big story is really exciting to me, said Boal, a former war journalist, of his scramble to write a new script after the event. But nobody likes to throw out two years of work.


Historical accuracy

Zero Dark Thirty has received criticism for historical inaccuracy. Former Assistant Secretary of Defense Graham T. Allison has opined that the film is inaccurate in three important regards: the overstatement of the positive role of torture, the understatement of the role of the Obama administration, and the portrayal of the efforts as being driven by one agent battling against the CIA system .

Steve Coll criticized the early depictions in the film that portrayed it as journalism with the use of composite characters. He took issue with the film s using the names of historical figures and details of their lives for characters, such as using details for Ammar to suggest that he was Ali Abdul Aziz Ali, whose nom de guerre was Ammar al-Baluchi. Coll said the facts about him were different from what was portrayed in the film, which suggests the detainee will never leave the black site. Al-Baluchi was transferred to Guantanamo in 2006 for a military tribunal.

It was also criticized for its stereotypical portrayal of Pakistan as well as the inaccurate portrayal of Pakistani nationals speaking Arabic instead of Urdu and other regional languages, and locals wearing obsolete headgear.


Controversies

Allegations of partisanship

Partisan political controversy related to the film arose before shooting began. Opponents of the Obama Administration charged that Zero Dark Thirty was scheduled for an October release just before the November presidential election to support his re-election. Sony denied that politics was a factor in release scheduling and said the date was the best available spot for an action-thriller in a crowded lineup. The film s screenwriter added, the president is not depicted in the movie. He s just not in the movie.

The distributor Columbia Pictures, sensitive to political perceptions, considered rescheduling the film release for as late as early 2013. It set a limited-release date for December 19, 2012, well after the election and rendering moot any alleged political conflict. The nationwide release date was pushed back to January 11, 2013, moving it out of the crowded Christmas period and closer to the Academy Awards. After the film s limited release, given the controversy related to the film s depiction of torture and its role in gaining critical information, The New York Times columnist Frank Bruni concluded that the film is a far, far cry from the rousing piece of pro-Obama propaganda that some conservatives feared it would be . Two months later, the paper s columnist Roger Cohen wrote that the film was a courageous work that is disturbing in the way that art should be . Cohen disagreed with Steve Coll s critique of the screenwriter s stated effort not to play fast and loose with history , writing that Boal has honored those words . Cohen ended with a note about a Timothy Garton Ash analysis of George Orwell mixing fact and invented stories in Down and Out in Paris and London – as further support for Boal s method.

Allegations of improper access to classified information

Several Republican sources charged the Obama Administration of improperly providing Bigelow and her team access to classified information during their research for the film. These charges, along with charges of other leaks to the media, became a prevalent election season talking point by conservatives. The Republican national convention party platform even claimed Obama has tolerated publicizing the details of the operation to kill the leader of Al Qaeda. No release of these details has been proven according to the Navy Times.

The Republican congressman Peter T. King requested that the CIA and the U.S. Defense Department investigate if classified information was inappropriately released; both departments said they would look into it. The CIA responded to Congressman King writing, the protection of national security equities – including the preservation of our ability to conduct effective counterterrorism operations – is the decisive factor in determining how the CIA engages with filmmakers and the media as a whole.

The conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch publicized CIA and U.S. Defense Department documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, and alleged that unusual access to agency information was granted to the filmmakers. An examination of the documents showed no evidence that classified information was leaked to the filmmakers. In addition, CIA records did not show any involvement by the White House in relation to the filmmakers. The filmmakers have said they were not given access to classified details about Osama bin Laden s killing. In 2012, Judicial Watch released an article stating the Obama Administration admitted that the information provided to the production team could pose an unnecessary security and counterintelligence risk if the information were to be released to the public. Judicial Watch also found emails containing information on five CIA and military operatives that were involved in the Bin Laden operations. These emails were provided to the filmmakers, as was later confirmed by the Obama Administration in a sworn declaration.

In January 2013, Reuters reported that the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence would review the contacts between the CIA and the filmmakers to find out whether Bigelow and Boal had inappropriate access to classified information. In February, Reuters reported that the inquiry had been dropped.

In June 2013, information was released in regards to an unreleased U.S. Defense Department Inspector General s office report. It stated that in June 2011, while giving a speech at a CIA Headquarters event honoring the people involved in the Osama Bin Laden raid, CIA Director Leon Panetta disclosed information classified as Secret and Top Secret regarding personnel involved in the raid on the Bin Laden compound. He identified the unit that conducted the raid as well as naming the ground commander that was in charge. Panetta also revealed DoD information during his speech that was classified as Top Secret. Unknown to him, screenwriter Mark Boal was among the around 1300 present during the ceremony.

Allegations of pro-torture stance

The film has been both criticized and praised for its handling of its subject matter, including the portrayal of the harsh enhanced interrogation techniques , commonly classified as torture. The use of these techniques was long kept secret by the Bush administration. (See Torture Memos, The Torture Report.) Glenn Greenwald, in The Guardian, stated that the film takes a pro-torture stance, describing it as pernicious propaganda and stating that it presents torture as its CIA proponents and administrators see it: as a dirty, ugly business that is necessary to protect America. Critic Frank Bruni concluded that the film appears to suggest No waterboarding, no Bin Laden . Jesse David Fox writes that the film doesn t explicitly say that torture caught bin Laden, but in portraying torture as one part of the successful search, it can be read that way. Emily Bazelon said, The filmmakers didn t set out to be Bush-Cheney apologists , but they adopted a close-to-the-ground point of view, and perhaps they re in denial about how far down the path to condoning torture this led them.

Journalist Michael Wolff slammed the film as a nasty piece of pulp and propaganda and Bigelow as a fetishist and sadist for distorting history with a pro-torture viewpoint. Wolff disputed the efficacy of torture and the claim that it contributed to the discovery of bin Laden. In an open letter, social critic and feminist Naomi Wolf criticized Bigelow for claiming the film was part documentary and speculated over the reasons for Bigelow s amoral compromising of film-making, suggesting that the more pro-military a film, the easier it is to acquire Pentagon support for scenes involving expensive, futuristic military equipment. Wolf likened Bigelow to the acclaimed director and propagandist for the Nazi regime Leni Riefenstahl, saying: Like Riefenstahl, you are a great artist. But now you will be remembered forever as torture s handmaiden. Author Karen J. Greenberg wrote that Bigelow has bought in, hook, line, and sinker, to the ethos of the Bush administration and its apologists and called the film the perfect piece of propaganda, with all the appeal that naked brutality, fear, and revenge can bring . Peter Maass of The Atlantic said the film represents a troubling new frontier of government-embedded filmmaking .

Jane Mayer of The New Yorker, who has published The Dark Side, a book about the use of torture during the Bush administration, criticized the film, saying that Bigelow was

milk the U.S. torture program for drama while sidestepping the political and ethical debate that it provoked ... excising the moral debate that raged over the interrogation program during the Bush years, the film also seems to accept almost without question that the CIA s enhanced interrogation techniques played a key role in enabling the agency to identify the courier who unwittingly led them to bin Laden.

Author Greg Mitchell wrote that the film s depiction of torture helping to get bin Laden is muddled at best – but the overall impression by the end, for most viewers, probably will be: Yes, torture played an important (if not the key) role. Filmmaker Alex Gibney called the film a stylistic masterwork but criticized the irresponsible and inaccurate depiction of torture, writing:

there is no cinematic evidence in the film that EITs led to false information – lies that were swallowed whole because of the misplaced confidence in the efficacy of torture. Most students of this subject admit that torture can lead to the truth. But what Boal/Bigelow fail to show is how often the CIA deluded itself into believing that torture was a magic bullet, with disastrous results.

Philosopher Slavoj Žižek, in an article for The Guardian, criticized what he perceived as a normalization of torture in the film, arguing that the mere neutrality on an issue many see as revolting is already a type of endorsement per se. Žižek proposed that if a similar film were made about a brutal rape or the Holocaust, such a movie would embody a deeply immoral fascination with its topic, or it would count on the obscene neutrality of its style to engender dismay and horror in spectators. Žižek further panned Bigelow s stance of coldly presenting the issue in a rational manner, instead of being dogmatically rejected as a repulsive, unethical proposition.

Journalist Steve Coll, who has written on foreign policy, national security and the bin Laden family, criticized the filmmakers for saying the film was journalistic , which implies that it is based in fact. At the same time, they claimed artistic license, which he described as an excuse for shoddy reporting about a subject as important as whether torture had a vital part in the search for bin Laden . Coll wrote that arguably, the film s degree of emphasis on torture s significance goes beyond what even the most die-hard defenders of the CIA interrogation regime ... have argued , as he said it was shown as critical at several points.

U.S. Senator John McCain, who was tortured during his time as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, said that the film left him sick – because it s wrong . In a speech in the Senate, he said, Not only did the use of enhanced interrogation techniques on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed not provide us with key leads on bin Laden s courier, Abu Ahmed, it actually produced false and misleading information. McCain and fellow senators Dianne Feinstein and Carl Levin sent a critical letter to Michael Lynton, chairman of the film s distributor, Sony Pictures Entertainment, stating, ith the release of Zero Dark Thirty, the filmmakers and your production studio are perpetuating the myth that torture is effective. You have a social and moral obligation to get the facts right.

Michael Morell, the CIA s acting director, sent a public letter on December 21, 2012, to the agency s employees, which said that Zero Dark Thirty

takes significant artistic license, while portraying itself as being historically accurate ... creates the strong impression that the enhanced interrogation techniques that were part of our former detention and interrogation program were the key to finding Bin Ladin. That impression is false. ...he truth is that multiple streams of intelligence led CIA analysts to conclude that Bin Ladin was hiding in Abbottabad. Some came from detainees subjected to enhanced techniques, but there were many other sources as well. And, importantly, whether enhanced interrogation techniques were the only timely and effective way to obtain information from those detainees, as the film suggests, is a matter of debate that cannot and never will be definitively resolved.

The Huffington Post writer G. Roger Denson countered this, saying that the filmmakers were being made scapegoats for information openly admitted by government and intelligence officials. Denson said that Leon Panetta, three days after Osama bin Laden s death, seemed to say that waterboarding was a means of extracting reliable and crucial information in the hunt for bin Laden. Denson noted Panetta speaking as the CIA chief in May 2011, saying that enhanced interrogation techniques were used to extract information that led to the mission s success . Panetta said waterboarding was among the techniques used. In a Huffington Post article written a week later, Denson cited other statements from Bush government officials saying that torture had yielded information to locate bin Laden.

National security reporter Spencer Ackerman said the film does not present torture as a silver bullet that led to bin Laden; it presents torture as the ignorant alternative to that silver bullet . Critic Glenn Kenny said that he saw a movie that subverted a lot of expectations concerning viewer identification and empathy and that rather than endorsing the barbarity, the picture makes the viewer in a sense complicit with it , which is whole other can of worms . Writer Andrew Sullivan said, the movie is not an apology for torture, as so many have said, and as I have worried about. It is an exposure of torture. It removes any doubt that war criminals ran this country for seven years . Filmmaker Michael Moore similarly said, I left the movie thinking it made an incredible statement against torture , and noted that the film showed the abject brutality of torture. Critic Andrew O Hehir said that the filmmaker s position on torture in the film is ambiguous, and creative choices were made and the film poses excellent questions for us to ask ourselves, arguably defining questions of the age, and I think the longer you look at them the thornier they get .

Screenwriter Boal described the pro-torture accusations as preposterous , stating that it s just misreading the film to say that it shows torture leading to the information about bin Laden , while director Bigelow added: Do I wish was not part of that history? Yes. But it was. In February 2013 in The Wall Street Journal, Boal responded to the Senate critics, being quoted as saying oes that mean they can use the movie as a political platform to talk about what they ve been wanting to talk about for years and years and years? Do I think that Feinstein used the movie as a publicity tool to get a conversation going about her report? I believe it, ... referring to the intelligence committee s report on enhanced interrogations. He also said the senators letter showed they were still concerned about public opinion supporting the effectiveness of torture and didn t want the movie reinforcing that. Boal said, though, I don t think that issue has really been resolved if there is a suspect with possible knowledge of imminent attack who will not talk.

In an interview with Time magazine, Bigelow said: I m proud of the movie, and I stand behind it completely. I think that it s a deeply moral movie that questions the use of force. It questions what was done in the name of finding bin Laden.

Objections over the use of recordings of 9/11 victims

An extensive clip of the phone call to headquarters from Betty Ong, a flight attendant on one of the hijacked American Airlines planes, was used in the beginning of the film without attribution. Ong s family requested that, if the film won any awards, the filmmakers apologize at the Academy Awards ceremony for using the clip without getting her heirs consent. Her family also asked that the film s U.S. distributors make a charitable donation in Ong s name, and should go on record that the Ong family does not endorse the use of torture, which is depicted in the film during the search for Osama bin Laden. Neither the filmmakers nor the U.S. distributors ever heeded any of the Ong family s requests.

Mary and Frank Fetchet, parents of Brad Fetchet, who worked on the 89th floor of the World Trade Center s south tower, criticized the filmmakers for using a recording of their son s voicemail without permission. The recording has previously been heard in broadcast TV news reports and in testimony for the 9/11 Commission.


Condition

New

Publisher

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Published Date

2014-09-23

Rating MPA

R

Recording Length

157

Recording Studio

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Format

DVD

Brand

Sony (Columbia)

Age Group

Adult

Amazon ASIN

B00AZNEW5G

UPC / EAN

043396416987

Year

2012

ReleaseDate

2013-01-11

RuntimeMins

157

RuntimeStr

2h 37min

Awards

Won 1 Oscar, 85 wins & 174 nominations total

Directors

Kathryn Bigelow

Writers

Mark Boal

Stars

Jessica Chastain, Joel Edgerton, Chris Pratt

Produced by

Kathryn Bigelow, Mark Boal, Matthew Budman, Megan Ellison, Jonathan Leven, Tabrez Noorani, Pravesh Sahni, Ted Schipper, Greg Shapiro, David Ticotin, Colin Wilson

Music by

Alexandre Desplat

Cinematography by

Greig Fraser

Film Editing by

William Goldenberg, Dylan Tichenor

Casting By

Mark Bennett, Richard Hicks, Gail Stevens

Production Design by

Jeremy Hindle, Kulwant Maan

Art Direction by

Ben Collins, Rod McLean

Set Decoration by

Lisa Chugg, Ibraheemkhorma

Costume Design by

George L. Little

Makeup Department

Nada Alagha, Renata Gilbert, Yelka Gutierrez, Virginia Holmes, Mahmoud Karajoglhy, Natasha Nikolic-Dunlop, Daniel Parker, Lesley Smith, Corinne Bossu, Charlie Hounslow, Matthew Smith

Production Management

Gabbah Naw Afleh, Mukesh Gidderbaha, Kaushik Guha, Rajeev Mehra, Philie Naughten, Angela Quiles, Charlie Simpson, Colin Wilson, James Masi, Vincent G. Scotti, Chanpreet Singh, Jennifer Teves

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Tarik Afifi, Udayan Baijal, Anoop Grover, Sarah Hood, Yanal Kassay, Ben Lanning, John Mahaffie, Ananya Rane, Scott Robertson, Jonas Spaccarotelli, David Ticotin, Kamal El Mallakh, Alexander H. Gayner, Raghuvir Joshi, Sandra Kawar, Arindam Mukherjee, Kirti Nandakumar, Krishan Rathee, Shyamalee Sharma, Krishan Pratap Singh

Art Department

Elena Albanese, Maudie Andrews, Samudrika Arora, Matthew Broderick, Roy Chapman, Sunil Chhabra, Louis Joseph Comeau IV, David Conway, Dean Dunham, Colin Ellis, Muffin Green, Priyanka Grover, Rhys Ifan, Samy Keilani, Karim Kheir, Chris Kitisakkul, Yogendra Kumar, Abdul Qader Miqdadi, Dilip More, Brian Morris, Mitch Niclas, Maye Nufal, Samer Raie, Malcolm Roberts, Gurubaksh Singh, Neeraj Kumar Singh, Michael Standish, Warren Stickley, Amanda Ward, Samir Zaidan, Nasser Zoubi, Emad Azmi, Anas Balawi, Nicola Barnes, Alex Boswell, Christopher Brändström, Christopher Carlson, Todd Cherniawsky, Ryan Church, Andres Cubillan, James Enright, Martin J. Gibbons, Barry Gibbs, Wayne Hammond, Michael A. Heath, Jason Hopperton, Onkar Khot, Thierry Labbe, Peter Lee, Qais Masadeh, Edward Nua, Mitch Polley, Jamie Rama, Lee Ross, Adee Serrao, Mark Smith, Gary Damian Thomas, Carl Wilson

Sound Department

Francisco Abarquero Fernandez, Ray Beckett, Gary Dodkin, Lee Gilmore, Detlef Halaski, Jamie Hardt, Ryan Juggler, Peter Murphy, Paul N.J. Ottosson, Mark Pappas, Fred Peck III, John Sanacore, Donnie Saylor, James Simcik, Andy Stallabrass, Robert Troy, Alex Ullrich, Lawrence L. Commans, Mark DeSimone, Kashif Ejaz, James Hyde, Joe Miuccio, Jordan O Neill, Brian Reed, Ric Schnupp, Brian Smith, Rob Speight

Special Effects by

David Brighton, Malcolm Crash Corbould, Neil Corbould, Blair Foord, Ernst Gschwind, Stuart Heath, Ernst Lanninger, Dave Poole, Kieran Reed, Wolf Steiling, Timothy Stracey, Richard Stutsman, Colin Umpelby, Paul Vigil, John A. Canavan, Mark Grew, Toby Hawkes, Llyr Tobias Johansen, Anna Krawczyk, Luke Marcel, William Overstall, Michael Rifkin, J.D. Schwalm, Karol Stachowicz, David Watkins

Visual Effects by

Lee Alexander, Geoff Anderson, Reuben Barkataki, Jamie Baxter, Trinh Baxter, Denny Bigras, Jeremy Burns, Brian Burritt, Stephen Chan, Chun-Ping Chao, Nicolas Chombart, Craig Crawford, Moriba Duncan, Paul Faulkes, Andy Feery, Sigurjón F. Gardarsson, Steve Garrad, Jason Gross, Sam Hancock, Chris Harvey, Jeremy Hattingh, Jean-Francois Houde, Marco Iozzi, Sam Johnston, Mathias Lautour, Jesus Lavin, Muhammad Marri, Andy Martinez Calzadilla, Kent Matheson, Tomoka Matsumura, Jackie Mills, Hailey Moore, Victoria Mowlam, Thijs Noij, Jim Parsons, Ian Plumb, Eric Ponton, Barry Poon, Ricardo Quintero, Peter Rabel, Vicki Silva, Michael Steward, Mike Uguccioni, Jayme Vandusen, Sebastian Weber, Matt Yeoman, Harry Yoon, Gwen Zhang, Donald Altamirano, Michael Billette, Fred Chapman, Mei Chu, Johnson Chuang, Miodrag Colombo, Natalia Diaz, Hugo Gauvreau, Alec Geldart, Gillian George, Victoria Grey, Alex Guri, David Hall, Anita Ho, Justin Holt, Ivan Imanishi, Will Kosman, Melissa Krystofiak, Nicha Kumkeaw, Matthias Lowry, Chris Lucas, Greg Massie, Sean Mattini, Jack McAllan, Zuzana Mikus, Henrique Moser, Nikhil P. Patil, Aymeric Perceval, Prashant Raj, Steve Ross, Nicole Smith, Jeff Tetzlaff, Shivas Thilak Anthikkat, Kazuma Tonegawa, Ruslan Vasylev, Chia-Ping Wang, Noel Wright

Stunts

Joseph Beddelem, Gaëlle Cohen, Geo Corvera, Roza Dimitrova, Nash Edgerton, Othman Ilyassa, Marina Jordanova, Todor Lazarov, Jason Oettle, Radka Petkova, Svetoslav Rangelov, Elitsa Razheva, Lauren Shaw, Stuart Thorp, Emil Tonev, Mustapha Touki, Marina Yordanova, Robert Young, Matt Berberi, David Anthony Buglione, George Cottle, Aron Eastwood, Marie Fink, Dennis Fitzgerald, Anthony Genova, Michael Hilow, Terry Jackson, Jess King, Rick Miller, Damien Moreno, Panuvat Anthony Nanakornpanom, Omid Zader

Camera and Electrical Department

Mohammad Abu Shawish, Chris Bain, Hosni Al Baqa, Sebastian Barraclough, Jeff Bettis, David Bird, Ryley Brown, Bidhan Chanda, Mark Clark, Adam Coles, Adam Dale, Firas Dehous, Eduardo Eguia, Beisan Elias, Mark Rocky Evans, Perry Evans, Simon Finney, David Francis, Paul Garratt, Ian Hanna, Mohammad Isam, Richard Jakes, Dylan Jones, Kurt Kornemann, Henry Landgrebe, Chris Linaker, Iain Lowe, Brian Malone, Tanya Marar, Jake Marcuson, Gary Martinez, John Marzano, David McAnulty, Jamie Mills, Raymond Mills, Duraid Munajim, David B. Nowell, Jonathan Olley, Ricky Pattenden, Ramesh Sadrani, Ron Shane, David Sinfield, Paul Snell, Simon Tindall, John Watters, Justin Webber, Tom Wilkinson, Ben Wilson, Ziad Choucha, Britt Cyrus, Bennet De Brabandere, Glenn Derry, Peter Graf, Mahmoud Hourani, Hussen Ibraheem, Vishal Jain, David Littlejohns, Becky Pescod, Sacha Riviere, Bela Trutz

Casting Department

Lara Atalla, Rebecca Farhall, Colin Jones, Seher Latif, Charley Medigovich, Adel Akkad, Ranjit Batra, Chris Bustard, Joe Cappelletti, Nick Cotton, Alaadin Khasawneh, Betsy Royall

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Fikreyeh Abu Kheit, Charl Boettger, Hélène Bélanger, Valérie Bélègou, Setareh Samavi Ewazi, Darion Hing, Nabil Khoury, Daniel J. Lester, Riyaz Ali Merchant, Tracey Millar, Mohammad Moustafa, Abdo Rayyan, Mélanie Turcotte, Roberta Bilé, Richard Gartrell, Abed Jarekji, Tricia Cruikshank McCumby, Timothy Shanahan, Kate Williams

Editorial Department

Brian G. Addie, Anup Kumar Biswas, Paul Carlin, Peter Dudgeon, Banner Gwin, Annie Johnson, Joe Ken, Lara Khachooni, Piers Leighton, Rob May, Stephen Nakamura, Chris Patterson, Brett M. Reed, Patrick J. Smith, Gilbert Carreras, Stephen Ceci, James Eggleton, Brian Scott Olds, Vivek Pratap, Laura Redpath, Jennifer Sparkman, Ian Sullivan

Location Management

Jamal Al Adwan, David Campbell-Bell, Rajeesh Dham, Nick Fulton, Colleen Gibbons, Barrie Rice, Sabyasachi Ghosh, David Israel, Jan Jaszczynski

Music Department

Romain Allender, Angela Barnes, Jean-Pascal Beintus, Stephen Bell, John Bissell, Dudley Bright, Nicolas Charron, Anthony Chidell, Peter Clarke, Phil Cobb, Robert Collinson, Andrew Connington, Simon Cowen, Alexandre Desplat, Jonathan Durrant, Kudsi Ergüner, Alex Firla, Xavier Forcioli, Richard Ford, David Gordon-Shute, Patrick Harrild, Robert Holliday, Oliver Hug, Dan Jenkins, Tim Jones, Jason Koczur, Sasha Koushk-Jalali, Dominique Lemonnier, Jonathan Lipton, London Symphony Orchestra, Dan Marocco, James Maynard, Gerard McCann, David McQueen, Amos Miller, Paul Milner, Lévon Minassian, Sylvain Morizet, Sam Okell, Christopher Parkes, Claude Romano, Vincent Segal, Cole Keller Undercofler, Norbert Vergonjeanne, Richard Watkins, Katy Woolley, Gordon Davidson, Frederick Lloyd, Taylor Long, Jack Sugden, Ludovick Tartavel, Ronald J. Webb

Script and Continuity Department

Luca Kouimelis, Alia Hatough

Transportation Department

Ali Mahmoud Al-Khlaelah, Steve Bridgen, Steven Brigden, Kevin LaRosa, Trilok Nowlakha, Bhawani Singh, Fadi Sweiss, Garo Youmjian, Fawaz Zoubi, Jamie Barham, David R. Blakely, Bruce Comtois, Robert E Dingle, Danny Mitchell, Pete Newman, Vishal Thakur

Additional Crew

Marwan Abadi, Mohammad Al-Ahmad, Pradeep Arora, Shereen Baddour, Steev Beeson, Ganesh Singh Bist, Jerome Butler, Carlos Castillo, David Fencl, Andrea Giannetti, Mitchell Hall, K.K. Hareb, Rajeev Kampani, Ruba Kharuf, Kevin LaRosa, Brenda McClellan, Brooke Nasser, Stephen North, Irwin M. Rappaport, Dee Schuka, Harry Serjeant, Rakesh Singh, Rahul Soni, Derek Souders, Adam M. Stone, Cat Stone, Susan r Wall, John Weber, Tim Abell, Diala Al Raie, Dave Booys, Wendy Cohen, Anna Livia Cullinan, James Currie, Shruti Desai, Jodie Marie Dewberry, Johnny Dunn, Richard Enriquez, Peter Eszenyi, Lucia Foster Found, Rhonda Ann Gibson, Adam Goodall, Mustafa Haidari, Samantha Hatch, Daniel Hillary, Richard Hooper, Tala Husry, Jack Ivins, Deepak Jaitely, Kamran R. Khan, Mela Lee, Brock Lohrey, Juliet Lopez, Sharon Lopez, A.J. Marbory, Barry May-Leybourne, Tushaar Mehra, Mark Moseley, Richard Neale, Raul Perez, Gyanendra Pratap, Daniel Rbibo, Charles K. Redlinger, Alexander Roos, Christopher Salamat, Louis Sallerson, David Sheldon-Hicks, Andy Stephens, Sarah Townsend, Chris Warren, Nicholas Wede, Ziad Sunna

Thanks

Wendy Abney, Spencer Coursen, Warren Dern, Bill Duchene, Darin Friedman, Kevin Huvane, Brian Kend, Bryan Lourd, Brian Siberell, Roeg Sutherland, Alan Wertheimer, Sally Willcox, Daniel Winkler

Genres

Drama, History, Thriller

Companies

Columbia Pictures, Annapurna Pictures, First Light Production

Countries

USA

Languages

English, Arabic, Urdu, Pashtu, French

ContentRating

R

ImDbRating

7.4

ImDb Rating Votes

299498

Metacritic Rating

95

Short Description

Zero Dark Thirty is a 2012 American thriller film directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal. The film dramatizes the nearly decade-long international manhunt for Osama bin Laden, leader of terrorist network Al-Qaeda, after the September 11 attacks. This search leads to the discovery of his compound in Pakistan and the military raid where bin Laden was killed on May 2, 2011.

Jessica Chastain stars as Maya, a fictional CIA intelligence analyst, with Jason Clarke, Joel Edgerton, Reda Kateb, Mark Strong, James Gandolfini, Kyle Chandler, Stephen Dillane, Chris Pratt, Édgar Ramírez, Fares Fares, Jennifer Ehle, John Barrowman, Mark Duplass, Harold Perrineau, and Frank Grillo in supporting roles. It was produced by Boal, Bigelow, and Megan Ellison, and independently financed by Ellison s Annapurna Pictures. The film premiered in Los Angeles on December 10, 2012, and had its wide release on January 11, 2013.

Zero Dark Thirty received critical acclaim for its acting, direction, screenplay and editing, and was a box office success, grossing $132 million worldwide. It appeared on 95 critics top ten lists of 2012. It was also nominated in five categories at the 85th Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Actress for Chastain, Best Original Screenplay, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound Editing, which it won in a tie with Skyfall. It earned Golden Globe Award nominations for Best Motion Picture – Drama, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama for Chastain, who won.

The film s depiction of torture (so-called enhanced interrogation techniques ) generated controversy. Some critics, in light of the interrogations being depicted as gaining reliable, useful, and accurate information, considered the scenes pro-torture propaganda. Former interim acting director of the CIA Michael Morell felt that the film created the false impression that torture was key to finding bin Laden. Others described it as an anti-torture exposure of interrogation practices.

Republican Congressman Peter T. King charged that the filmmakers were given improper access to classified materials, which they denied. An unreleased draft of a report prepared by the Inspector General and published in June 2013 by the Project On Government Oversight stated that former CIA Director Leon Panetta discussed classified information during an awards ceremony for the United States Navy SEALs team that carried out the raid on the bin Laden compound. Unbeknownst to Panetta, screenwriter Boal was among the 1,300 present during the ceremony.

Box Office Budget

$40,000,000 (estimated)

Box Office Opening Weekend USA

$417,150

Box Office Gross USA

$95,720,716

Box Office Cumulative Worldwide Gross

$132,820,716

Keywords

Al qaeda,terrorist,special forces,death of osama bin laden,commando raid