Green Zone
Movie Title: Green Zone
Description: Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller is a rogue U.S. Army officer who must hunt through covert and faulty intelligence hidden on foreign soil before war escalates in an unstable region.
Watched: 1748
Rated: 3.5 Avg. with 4 votes
Add Your Rating:
Staff Reviews
Green Zone: Trying to Exhume the Unnoticed Social Issues
Green zone is one of the movies, which will soon hit the scene in 2010. It stars Matt Damon. The movie is written by Brian Helgeland and it is directed by Paul Greengrass and is produced by Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Loyd Levin and Paul Greengrass. The film is distributed by Universal Studio. The cast of the movie includes Matt Damon, Brendan, Amy Ryan and Greg Kinnear. The production was initiated way back in January of the year 2008 and the scheduled date of release is 12th March, 2010.
The film is based on the novel Imperial Life in the Emerald City, written by Rajiv Chanrasekaran, who is a journalist. The shoot started in Spain and was then later continued in Morocco. The backdrop of the movie is the green zone in Baghdad. Hence, the movie is rightly named Green Zone. It would be seen that the scenario in Iraq was very different before the surge by United States.
The protagonist of the movie is Matt Damon, who plays the role of a character known as Roy Miller, is a warrant officer. In the movie, he assists a senior CIA officer. Together, they search for weapons, which will be used for mass destruction. The next level of the story takes you to a ride through the various facts that later come to light. This movie, with its intense plot, comes under the category of a thriller. Amy Ryan stars opposite Matt Damon as Lawrie Dyane, who is a foreign correspondent. She works for The Wall Street Journal that is investigating US government’s claims that weapons of mass destruction exist.
The music score of Green Zone has been done by John Powell and the editing is done by Christopher Rouse, whereas the credit for the cinematography goes to Barry Ackroyd. Green Zone is based on a realistic plot and is a real treat for those, who prefer intense and realistic genre of cinema. This movie, through it own approach, tries to exhume the social issues, which otherwise remain unnoticed.
Green zone is one of the movies, which will soon hit the scene in 2010. It stars Matt Damon. The movie is written by Brian Helgeland and it is directed by Paul Greengrass and is produced by Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Loyd Levin and Paul Greengrass. The film is distributed by Universal Studio. The cast of the movie includes Matt Damon, Brendan, Amy Ryan and Greg Kinnear. The production was initiated way back in January of the year 2008 and the scheduled date of release is 12th March, 2010.
The film is based on the novel Imperial Life in the Emerald City, written by Rajiv Chanrasekaran, who is a journalist. The shoot started in Spain and was then later continued in Morocco. The backdrop of the movie is the green zone in Baghdad. Hence, the movie is rightly named Green Zone. It would be seen that the scenario in Iraq was very different before the surge by United States.
The protagonist of the movie is Matt Damon, who plays the role of a character known as Roy Miller, is a warrant officer. In the movie, he assists a senior CIA officer. Together, they search for weapons, which will be used for mass destruction. The next level of the story takes you to a ride through the various facts that later come to light. This movie, with its intense plot, comes under the category of a thriller. Amy Ryan stars opposite Matt Damon as Lawrie Dyane, who is a foreign correspondent. She works for The Wall Street Journal that is investigating US government’s claims that weapons of mass destruction exist.
The music score of Green Zone has been done by John Powell and the editing is done by Christopher Rouse, whereas the credit for the cinematography goes to Barry Ackroyd. Green Zone is based on a realistic plot and is a real treat for those, who prefer intense and realistic genre of cinema. This movie, through it own approach, tries to exhume the social issues, which otherwise remain unnoticed.
Review by Army

