New Jersey Stage January 2015 | Page 55

Eastwood chooses to show us Kyle’s kills as the sniper himself viewed them - through his rifle scope. It has a strange, contradictory effect of both placing us in Kyle’s position and simultaneously distancing us from the act of violence. There is one kill that crucially isn’t presented in this way, as Kyle himself moves his eye away from the scope after the form of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, but there’s no final confrontation, instead the focus is on one of his foot soldiers, a Syrian sniper who carries an Olympic medal for marksmanship. Eastwood presents us with some despicable acts, played out in brutal fashion, but the audience is never given the vengeance it desires. firing. It’s a killing that Kyle has a personal investment in, and so wants to witness it without the protection of the glass of a scope. American Sniper is a frustrating watch, as it should be, reflective as it is of a highly frustrating situation. The movie has a villain in Despite having a wife and kids back home, Kyle is most comfortable when in Iraq, and so is the film itself. The Stateside scenes are a collection of relationship clichés, with Miller’s put upon spouse espousing hackneyed lines like “When you’re here, you’re not really here.” The “American Sniper is a frustrating watch, as it should be, reflective as it is of a highly frustrating situation” Read each issue at www.NJArtsMag.com pg 55