Monday 4 November 2013

Have you hijacked us, Captain Phillips?


Oh, Captain Phillips, we have a problem.   And so it seems does Paul Greengrass, Director of the movie adapted from your memoir. “A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea”  co-authored by Stephan Talty, concerning the Somalian Pirate attack on the ship you captained in 2009.    It seems that some of the crucial aspects of this story have been challenged by your own crew, including important aspects of you character, professional integrity and ‘heroics’.  

Let us try to separate the film and the story it is ‘based on’.  
Paul Greengrass is the British director who has brought the immediacy and fluidity of documentary film making into mainstream movies.   He electrified the Bourne series, and what he did there raised the bar for the Bond movies.   Captain Phillips  has some of the same kinetic excitement. 

Greengrass’s  United 93  used documented evidence to recreate the fate of those involved in the fourth plane on 9/11, which the passengers prevented from  reaching its target – and died doing so as it crashed into a Pennsylvanian field.     United 93 achieved the remarkable feat of portraying the hijackers and victims in morally equal terms.    The hijackers were not black-hat villains, but brave and frightened men who were willing to give their lives for their religious and political ideals.   We were left to make our judgments.

The pirates in Captain Phillips are not painted as villains either.  When first see Somalian crew they are being recruited for ‘work’ by the local overlords.   The work is storming merchant container ships and holding them to ransom.   But the huge ransoms demanded do not enrich the actual pirates,  who receive  a tiny fraction of the millions given up by the Insurance companies.
I was reminded of the dockland scenes in ‘On The Waterfront’, where the men with power, in this case the Union bosses who were virtually gangsters, hand out work to the desperate men looking for work.    One of the conditions of this work was that blind–eyes were turned on the rampant criminality. 
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So Greengrass does what he so often does; he brings powerful political and economic realities home to us by showing their effect on ordinary people.   In this case Muse and his team, the ones chosen to go hunting in their small out-board motored skiffs.     The gang are played by non-professional actors.  Muse is played by Barkhad Abdi, who was spotted working as a chauffeur after immigrating to the USA from the  Yemen when he was 14.  
The  casting of Abdi is clever.  He looks like a man who has known starvation.   His seemingly frail body houses a powerful spirit – and it shines through his eyes, sometimes challenging, sometimes, arrogant, sometimes thoughtful.   Abdi’s performance is crucial, because we have to see this man as a human being,  equal to us in every way, save that of the economic and political situation that shape his ends.     Muse is  intelligent, and often wise.   He is clear about the moral justification for his action.  He does not want to hurt anyone, and sees no reason why anyone should get hurt.  This ransom exchange is, as he sees it, simply a tax collected by the poor from the unbelievably rich shipping lines that use his people’s waters to make themselves even richer.    Muse is also politically very naïve.   
Captain Phillips is played by Tom Hanks,  and so he is bound to be heroic.  Not in the action-man heroic mould, or course, but in that of an ordinary man reacting to extra-ordinary event with integrity and quiet courage.  Courage does not mean being unafraid.  It often means being very afraid, but not letting fear stop you from doing what must be done.   In this film Hank’s character does what has to be done with an understated heroism, and deep humanity.    Well, we are set up to believe in him.  We have seen Hanks in Philadelphia,  Apollo 13, and  Saving Private Ryan, in Castaway and of course as Woody In the Toy Story trilogy.  Hanks' Democratic politics and support for environmental and gay rights issues are well known so, even if we have seen Charlie Wilson’s War,  we know what to expect when we see Hanks in a film role.   He is the Gary Cooper of our times.      So simply casting Tom Hanks makes Richard Phillips heroic.  
And there we have the problem.  Eleven members of Phillip’s  crew are currently suing his shipping line for $50 million for the  "willful, wanton and conscious disregard for their safety" shown  by Phillips. The crew say Phillips received many warning  e-mails about the increasing threat of piracy near Somalia, but ignored them and kept them from his crew.   "The crew had begged Captain Phillips not to go so close to the Somali coast," said Deborah Waters, the crew members attorney.   They dispute the characterization of Captain Phillips as portrayed in his book and in this film.   They also dispute some events that are crucial to the film’s plot, but no spoilers here. 
So; here we have a well made, humane,  and politically challenging   film, with an exciting dénouement, outstanding acting by the two leads,  terrific direction,  camera work and score; but.   It purports to be a true account of true events, and while many of these are undoubtedly true,   serious  questions have been raised about the central character and his conduct.  This film is called Captain Phillips,  and he is the  hero.   His ordinariness and decency are skillfully and economically painted.    His sympathy for his hijackers is powerfully shown.    What a hero!
Do we try to keep this portrait separate in our minds from the questions raised about it from his actual crew?     Do we criticize Paul Greengrass for not doing enough research – or even for doing the research and ignoring what it told him? 

I encourage you to see this film, to think about it, and to question it.