The
Terrorist Movie Review:
The
Terrorist is a film from India which explores the apparently
outrageous notion of a trained assassin who also happens
to be a fairly young woman, not even in her twenties. In
the course of this film, she kills at least three people,
and is in training to commit a suicide attack on an unnamed
political opponent. True, she is a pretty scary chick, and
very determined, but I think that the only thing outrageous
is the fact that she is part of an underground terrorist/political
organization. The teenagers over here who kill their classmates
every second day or so just shoot people at random, for
petty and selfish reasons; at least this girl has somewhat
meaningful targets!
Okay,
now that I've gotten that sick excuse for humour out of
the way, I can concentrate on the actual movie at hand;
a very impressive piece of work, a good examination of the
life of a teenage terrorist, and of the chaos which surrounds
a country where such an individual as her can actually stay
in employment. The movie is a little difficult to get into
at first, mainly because of the unique setting, but mostly
because of the crappy subtitling, unreadable when merged
with the bright hues on the screen. But after awhile the
story gets very interesting, as we follow the days in the
life of this terrorist, and are provoked into identifying
with her.
Surely,
we don't feel for Malli just yet; the very first shot consists
of her shooting a supposed traitor in the head with a pistol,
and then, only a few minutes later, killing an enemy at
close range with a machine gun. (Later on, she completely
butchers a guy with a huge machete, and thank god this film
was obviously made on the cheap, or else we`d actually see
all that gore which apparently would result after all this
violence.) It's hard to really feel for somebody who commits
these horrible acts, especially since she obviously feels
no remorse whatsoever. But then the film plays a funny trick
on us: it actually makes her human, and therefore, understandable,
if not necessarily sympathetic. For one thing, she is not
a leader, but a follower; merely one of many energetic subscribers
to the cause, whatever that is (the film never makes it
too clear who they are fighting against). Therefore, it
is easy to say that she has been brainwashed, or at least
convinced all too much that there is something worthwhile
to this rebel group and their goals. In Malli's case, her
brother died in a suicide attack, and there is a flashback
to the funeral, in which members of the group tell her that
he died honourably.
The
real story involves what will be her last act: she will
do her duty for the cause and become a suicide bomber herself,
volunteering to assassinate an establishment journalist.
Obviously, she's going to die, but that does not seem to
deter her: she is going to be a martyr for her cause, and
that is what's important. While she rehearses for the assassination,
she stays in the home of an old man under the guise of a
university-bound cousin of one of the men whom is also a
member of the rebel gang. The old man has no idea about
who she really is, and accepts her into his home, where
his ill wife also lives, forever lying in a comatose state.
Malli stays in the room of a photojournalist son who was
killed a number of years ago. It is during this stay that
she undergoes a crisis of faith, when she discovers that
she is pregnant from a rendez-vous, revealed in flashback,
with a man wounded by the "enemy" forces. What shall she
do? Kill herself for a cause, only to kill her unborn child,
and therefore, the possibility of a wholly different sort
of life, along with her?
I
said earlier that this movie practically goads us into identifying
with this cold, ruthless killer. Certainly there is something
tragic about a young person robbed of her childhood, thrown
into a life of war and blood; this is similar to Killer
Kid, a quite obscure French film in which a young pre-teen
is trained as an assassin. That film emphasized his lack
of choice in the matter; with Malli, her placement in this
rebel group seems more possible through persuasion rather
than force, and she is now old enough to have made concrete
decisions about her politics. At first, The Terrorist almost
seems like propaganda, as it practically glorifies her as
a hero. Time and again, characters point out how she is
like her brother, and that she will do the family, and the
cause, proud by sacrificing her life. And there is a very
curious moment before she departs on a ferry taking her
to the town of the assassination, when she says good bye
to the young guide. She tells him that she will not return,
because she is out to fight for the freedom of her people,
etc, etc. Then we get the heroic send-off, as she dashes
off in slow motion, while the young boy observes, accompanied
by glorious score music. That is until the next shot, in
which that very same boy is killed by the very "enemy" Malli
is fighting against. Everything about this scene seems to
imply that there is a strong reason for Malli to do what
she does; she is fighting against all those nasty people
who killed her brother, innocent children, and so on. But
then again, perhaps this is not really propaganda so much
as the truth. She obviously has to be strongly convinced
of her duty if she is to do the acts she does. And after
a while, you start to feel that there is something fishy
about the fact that these leaders, who supposedly are firm
believers, make children and teenagers do the dirty work
for them. I suppose the leaders do this because teenagers
are impressionable, and in such a bloody and violent environment,
teenagers ideas of importance tend toward the violent, which
is why there are many of these teenage terrorists. And as
long as there are young people willing to fight, there will
always be a cause.
The
Terrorist is filled with many strong images. A scene of
Malli in the shower, thinking ruthless thoughts and coldly
looking toward the camera. The shot of the comatose wife,
seemingly staring at Malli's aping of her potential suicide
attack through a hole in the wall. The actual rehearsals
themselves, which for some odd reason are about as nerve-racking
to watch as the real thing would be. The reaction of the
child upon witnessing the machete attack. Propaganda or
not, this is a great movie, because it tells us an interesting
story, gives us an original character, it's action-packed
without being visually gruesome, and gives us a lot to think
about.
David
Macdonald
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