A Private War is the story Marie Colvin (Rosamund Pike), the
long time Sunday Times war correspondent of whom I was an occasional avid
reader (now there's a contradiction).
Colvin, as with most war correspondents, risked her life to
report from the front line but she often went where others feared to tread.
Over the years she became a legendary figure who lost an eye to shrapnel in Sri
Lanka in 2001 but, once she’d recovered, went back to reporting wearing an
eyepatch like a badge of honour.
The film covers Colvin’s career up to her death in Homs in
2012 where she was in a building that the Syrian government shelled. At the
time she was in Syria to prove that, despite what Assad had said, the government
were targeting civilians. She proved it conclusively with her death and still
got a live report in to CNN.
The film goes back a decade or more before Homs and keeps us
informed of where we are with rather unnecessary nagging on-screen countdowns
e.g. London, England, 10 years before Homs.
Having teamed up with photographer Paul Conroy (Jamie
Dornan) she travels to Fallujah where they uncover mass graves containing victims
of Saddam Hussein’s regime. Then as Colvin continues to be drawn to danger zones,
we see her in Afghanistan and then interviewing Muammar Gaddafi in Libya.
Her editor Sean Ryan (Tom Hollander) constantly fears for
her safety and sanity but ultimately he needs her to sell newspapers and,
luckily for him, her DNA constantly drove her back to the front line.
Although we do see Colvin in civilian life it is fleeting. She
struggles in her relationships (Greg Wise/Stanley Tucci), suffers nightmares,
drinks a lot of alcohol, is rarely without a cigarette but she does occasionally
pop home to pick up an award. The implication being that her job took a great
toll on her but it's not clear if this was the extent of her personal life and
it would have been nice to have known more.
Rosamund Pike throws herself into the role and does a good
job. The film may be more action movie than I would have liked but I still liked
the film a lot. It is pro-journalist at a time when many journalists are
rightly being criticised and news itself is under suspicion. Marie Colvin was
one who believed in actual facts and real news.
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