A Mighty Heart
audience Reviews
, 70% Audience Score- Rating: 3 out of 5 starsAnjelina is a mighty fine actress. This is a well directed film. I didn't know the story of this kidnapping so it was a little rough to have the outcome revealed on the dvd special introduction. My advice: if you don't know the story , just go straight into the film.
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsOver 15 years old, I remember watching it years ago for the first time Directed by Michael Winterbottom and based on the true story of Mariane and her husband Daniel Pearl's kidnapping Mariane and Daniel who’s a journalist for the Wall Street Journal head to Pakistan but unfortunately he’s captured by terrorists She does all she can to get support from other journalists and get the help of local authorities The attention of the world weighs in while also trying to combat the underground politics involved as well as the red tape Omar Sheikh was the leader of this whole ordeal and Mariane fought tooth and nail to get her husband back safely No one deserves to be separated from their loved ones in a hostile, politically corrupt nation but Angelina Jolie gives a firehouse of a performance It’s so gutwrenching that you might be in tears by the end This shows how far one person is willing to go to ask as many people as possible while also combating the bureaucratic individuals It also makes sense too given that the US doesn't fully understand the Middle East and their views on the status of the world It’s a bit long and the ending is a downer but it speaks to us that we all have to connect through our words, our reasoning, and our compassion Responding with threats, violence, and terror are not the way Jolie's performance is golden
- Rating: 2.5 out of 5 starsSurprisingly dull for such an important and heartbreaking story.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 starsSurf whatever channel you wish to, the day you see this film you are going to hear only one news. A Mighty Heart Winterbottom has a daunting task, to make an unfathomable true case into a compelling drama. And the primary reason why it doesn't speak to the larger audience, is that it focuses on the aspects of the world that people often tend to ignore. Addition to that, as an excuse for drama, it is obliged to and does focuses on the reminiscing emotions along with guilt, unknown terror and lack of opportunity. And packed hastily with these horrifying elements the adapted screenplay of John Orloff from a book by Mariane Pearl, threads this sobering journey with formal paperwork and vital social rigmarole that it has cornered itself to go through. The director Michael Winterbottom against these many odds is still delivering a gritty political drama that befriends the humanitarian nature in the workplace. And that very brief period, that comes late in the film remains my favorite part and the gist of the film. Despite being dipped in a series of pathos information revealed subsequently, the troops in the middle of this cold war manages to find some quality time to share and endear. A film of such rigid posture and it feels good to see it dance absentminded; a slow dance but I'll take anything. And supporting cast is a major boost in this film. There are plenty of guest appearances in here and each of them casts quite an impression on us and Angelina Jolie in lead. Her part, to be fair, is difficult to portray. Consistently and entirely covering the film with a reserved depressed emotional ride, Jolie gets very few moments to fully exaggerate and express her emotions. A Mighty Heart has a big upbeating and surprisingly even optimistic heart, but all of that remains to be the aftermath that is to and does come after the storm leaves the sea.
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsThe thrill slowly picks up in the factual search and rescue mission through the oversea trouble's lost translation, displaying how much in the process it's affecting the predicted widow whose authentic figure enables Jolie's stunning performance as the main highlight. (B) (Full review TBD)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsDaniel Pearl was a journalist who was kidnapped and executed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. This film is a recreation of those events. Despite its curiously stoic tone, A Mighty Heart retains its capacity to fascinate and intrigue. The film provides a lot of behind-the-scenes information about the investigation. It's also circumspect when it comes to representing Daniel's death. We see the reactions of others watching the video but Winterbottom does not feel the need to recreate the journalist's gruesome end. He uses words, not images, to clarify Daniel's fate, and Mariane's unwillingness to view her husband's murder becomes a major point late in the film. This restraint is emblematic of the entire picture. While A Mighty Heart may not be the most complete film that could be made about the story, its insider point-of-view gives it a vantage that a more comprehensive movie might not have. (Fascinating look at a tragedy).
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsThe kidnap and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan in 2002 is compassionately told and respectfully chronicled in Michael Winterbottom's drama that is based on the memoirs by the surviving wife Mariane Pearl who is played with conviction by Angelina Jolie.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 starsAbsolutely unnecessary movie. Everyone knows what happened. There was no new details or revelations. Just 2 hours of Angelina Jolie’s contrived accent. Not worthy of my time.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsbased on the heartbreaking true story of Danny Pearle and his wife Marianne after 9/11 they were married and expecting a child; Danny worked as a journalist and his wife was working with French contacts they go to Pakistan to uncover the truth about the current state of tensions escalating between them and the US but Danny is missing and his wife figures out he has been kidnapped and held hostage by terrorists she sets out to find him non-stop no one deserves to be separated from their loved ones in a hostile, politically corrupt nation but Angelina Jolie gives a firehouse of a performance it's so gutwrenching that you might be in tears by the end this is how far one person is willing to go to ask as many people as possible while also combating the bureaucratic individuals it makes sense too given that the US doesn't fully understand the Middle East and their views on the status of the world it's a bit long and the ending is a downer but it speaks to us that we all have to connect through our words, our reasoning, and our compassion responding with threats, violence, and terror are not the way Jolie's performance is golden
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsA compelling political drama displaying with strong performance from Angelina Jolie.