Charlie Wilson's War Movie Review
Charlie Wilson's War Review
"Charlie Wilson's War" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Mike NicholsProducer : Gary Goetzman,Tom Hanks
Screenwiter : Aaron Sorkin
Starring : Tom Hanks,Julia Roberts,Philip Seymour Hoffman,Amy Adams,Emily Blunt,Rachel Nichols,Shiri Appleby,Ned Beatty,Om Puri,Jud Tylor,Mary Page Keller,Faran Tahir
Director Mike Nichols and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin made two exceedingly smart
choices in adapting George Crile's book Charlie Wilson's War. First, they
consented to a brisk 95-minute running time, rather than fall prey to the
"prestige" mentality that can saddle such projects, and that bloats them out to
beyond two hours. The other choice was leavening their material with a snappy,
devil-may-care attitude -- a sure-fire strategy to skim over their story's
weakest areas of story and character development.
Charlie Wilson's War is entertaining, and that's about the extent of it.
Nichols and Sorkin's end result is decidedly a gloss on Crile's account of how
the eponymous Texas congressman managed to supply military support to the
Afghan Mujahideen fighting the Soviet occupation in the 1980s. While their
movie mostly avoids the Hollywood trappings of political correctness and
underdog sentimentality, it also doesn't have the chutzpah of its own conniving
characters to offer much in the way of an incisive interpretation of those
events.
It's during a Vegas hot-tub party when the womanizing hedonist Wilson learns of
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan on a TV broadcast. Wilson's partying that
night alongside strippers and lines of coke comes back to haunt him throughout
the story ahead as his opponents attempt to use it to ruin him. Sorkin neatly
cross-braids Wilson's attempts to dodge the bullets of scandal with the main
attraction: His lobbying on Capitol Hill to allocate funds providing covert
military hardware support to the Mujahideen. But America can't seem as if it's
waging a direct war with the Soviets, so Wilson must make arrangements to
funnel Soviet weaponry confiscated by the Israelis via Pakistan and into
Afghanistan. Perhaps more vehement than Wilson is Joanne Herring (Julia
Roberts), a right-wing Texas socialite and Wilson's casual lover, who never met
a Communist she didn't hate. And rounding out their team is CIA operative Gust
Avrakotos (Philip Seymour Hoffman), whose first name aptly describes his
personality. Wilson, Herring, and Avrakotos make a saucy, fast-talking trio of
wheeler-dealers, each using their individual métiers to shore up what amounts
to a muscular, billion-dollar arsenal with which to arm the anti-Soviet
resistance.
As Congressman Wilson, Tom Hanks delivers a reliable seriocomic performance. He
offsets Wilson's good-old-boy persona with shades of compassion and shrewdness.
But why exactly does Charlie Wilson, a Congressman deeply entrenched in
district-minded politics, care so readily for the Afghan cause? It's a question
that Nichols and Sorkin don't bother to ask or address; they elide the matter
of what it was that pricked Wilson's conscience (and sense of political will),
and replace it with an intent directive to tell a giddy and outrageous tale.
With Wilson's right hand man, Avrakotos, the question of motive is less
nettlesome since the CIA operative acts throughout in the line of duty. That
aside, Hoffman's performance is also the juiciest, and pure fun to watch as it
verges into broad farce. Avrakotos may be an ingenious, no-nonsense
professional, but the sight of him swaggering about, wearing large spectacles,
and tucked into a suit a size too small recalls Chris Farley's blowhard
motivational speaker who lived in a van "down by the river," from SNL. In her
bouffant and pearls, Roberts offers no surprises as Herring; her performance is
just a variation on all the Southern belles she's played before, by turns
acerbic, warm-hearted, and appealing.
On the plus side, Sorkin's script and Nichols' approach to the material is
oriented towards charm and laughs, and, as such, it never becomes tedious with
self-importance. While Charlie Wilson's War never risks the stonier byways into
enriching Wilson's characterization and deepening character relationships, and
takes easy jabs at historical ironies and sexing up its subject matter, it does
so with a sense of mischief and mirth. Sometimes, you appreciate a movie that
opts for the modest road, and whose mechanics are as well-oiled as this one's.
It's a war on dry skin!
Reviewer: Jay Antani





