Oct 31, 2014
We can’t say that we haven’t been warned. It’s been nearly 40 years since “Network” burned up movie screens on its way to winning Best Picture, over 32 years since Don Henley unleashed his dark-as-coal masterpiece“Dirty Laundry” onto the world’s radio stations, and 12 years since Michael Moore showed us all how dangerous local TV news was becoming to our psyches in“Bowling for Columbine.”
Now comes the new movie “Nightcrawler,” an almost indescribably great movie that mixes sinister satire, harrowing suspense, crackerjack car chases, and utterly unique performances to create a modern classic that exists purely on its own terms. Barreling into theaters this weekend amid an inspired run of films that have been uncommonly good in the last few weeks, it is an absolute must-see on an artistic level, though it has some problematic elements faithful viewers should be aware of.
Starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a desperate Los Angeles fringe dweller named Lou Bloom who stumbles into becoming the hottest freelance cameraman (aka“nightcrawler”) in tabloid-style local news, “Nightcrawler” pokes fun at the ridiculous lows that our newscasters and their handlers have sunk to and serves as a telephoto lens pinpointing the madness that we all embrace too easilyevery time we watch a live car chase down the freeway.
The movie opens with Bloom being caught by a guard for cutting a chain-link fence and stealing it in order to sell the metal. He gets the upper hand on the guard and steals his watch, before heading to a shady scrap yard and trying not only to fast-talk his way into better payments but also into a job with the boss. The answer: “I’m not gonna hire a thief.”