Pubdate: Wed, 22 Oct 2003 Source: Concordian, The (CN QU Edu) Contact: http://www.theconcordian.com/main.cfm?include=submit Website: http://www.theconcordian.com/ Forum: http://www.theconcordian.com/main.cfm?include=forums Copyright: 2003 The Concordian, All rights reserved Author: Ali Saba HEROIC JOURNALIST DESERVES A BETTER FILM In the mid-90's, there was at least 15,000 heroin users in Dublin, Ireland. Most of them were underage and lived in the inner city. No one really paid attention to the epidemic until Veronica Guerin, an Irish journalist, started writing about it in her columns for the Sunday Independent. Her work raised public awareness and shed light on organized crime. The movie Veronica Guerin, which is based on the last years of her life, is a tribute to her courage for confronting drug lords and paying the ultimate price for revealing the truth. Unfortunately, the project fell into the wrong hands and her heroic story is reduced to Hollywood cliches. This is understandable, considering Veronica Guerin was produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, the man responsible for some of the worst films in recent memory including Armageddon, Bad Boy II, and Pearl Harbor. Joel Schumacher, who directed Guerin and previously Phone Booth and 8mm, pays more attention to his camera tricks than character development. The movie is sensationalized with stereotypes of good and evil characters, Guerin's family and the drug lords of Dublin. Cate Blanchett, who plays the journalist, doesn't have a thorough script to work with but manages to deliver a strong performance anyway. The biggest weakness of the movie is that the script doesn't explore Guerin's true motivation for going as far as risking her life to expose these criminals. There's only one scene where she says: "I have a great life, a great family but I feel like I should be making a difference." There's a conflict throughout the movie between Hollywood idealism and the rawness of the Dublin ghetto. Gritty scenes of children playing with used syringes in an inner city park and romanticized moments of Guerin with her picture-perfect family don't seem to belong to the same movie. Other tasteless Hollywood touches include a traditional Irish music soundtrack used to create over-the-top drama and a cameo appearance by Colin Farrell. He plays a grungy Dubliner smoking and drinking in the street. His performance is quite funny because it isn't much of a stretch from his true personality in television interviews. But the cameo is purely for entertainment purposes and detracts from the gravity of the movie's subject matter. The true story of a journalist who was murdered by a drug lord for investigating Dublin's gang wars didn't deserve to be dumbed down, but the fact that her story will begin to get the exposure it deserves almost makes up for this. All the tripe in the world can't dilute the film's powerful message that investigative journalists are on the frontlines, defending the right to free speech and that Guerin should be regarded as a hero because she died defending her city from crime and drugs. Maybe one day her story will get the film it deserves. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek