A Hijacking (4/5)
It’s an odd coincidence that two films about Somali pirates
were released last year. While all the public
attention and critical praise has flowed towards the Tom Hanks vehicle, Captain Phillips, the Danish film, A Hijacking, is arguably much more of an
artistic triumph. If you were to watch these films back to back,
it would be easy to see why Phillips
has garnered so much attention: it is flashier, has bigger stars, and
celebrates the triumph of American military force. By contrast, A Hijacking is a much more subdued, but no less suspenseful,
affair. Where Captain Phillips is about ordinary people thrust into extraordinary
circumstances, A Hijacking is about
extraordinary circumstances fitted into ordinary business practices.
The narrative of A
Hijacking is split between the men on the boat and the men from the
boardroom. On the boat we mostly follow the ship’s cook who we are introduced
to in the first scene as he tells his wife that he will be out to sea longer
than expected and will miss his daughter’s birthday. Although his name is listed as Mikkel, most
people, even those trying to negotiate his release, mostly just refer to him as
the cook. While the cook and the crew
strategize about how they might survive this ordeal, there aren’t any last
minute heroics. At best, the cook and a
colleague attempt to befriend a particularly unstable pirate with the hopes
that this will make it less likely he will execute them; at worst, the cook’s
desperation to get home to his family is used as a bargaining tool by the Somali
negotiator, Omar.
But the film is just as interested in how the Danish company
who owns the boat handles the hijacking.
While the hijacking isn’t an everyday occurrence, events like this are
apparently common enough for the company to call in an expert in negotiating
with Somali pirates. The negotiation
expert recommends that the company brings in one of his men to engage directly
with the pirates, but the suit in charge, Peter, decides that he wants to
handle the negotiations himself. Early
on we see Peter play hardball with several Japanese businessmen, so we know he
is competent, and he is coached through the process by the negotiation expert,
but the audience knows that Peter’s decision is part hubris. In a sense, he’s like a much more competent,
much less coked up version of Ellis from Die
Hard.
As explained early on, these negotiations can stretch on
nearly interminably. And the film does a
good job of illustrating how time wears down all of those involved. In this instance, the hostage negotiation
lasts for months. And while early on Peter expertly deals with the pirates in
the manner he has been coached, eventually the day in, day out pressure of the
situation begins to erode his cool, Danish exterior. It was also interesting to see the
negotiation expert explain certain tactics.
For instance, Peter cannot immediately give in to the Somali’s initial
demands, not necessarily because it will be too costly, but because once the
pirates know the company is willing to shell out some big bucks, they will find
a way to draw out the negotiation longer and ask for more.
As the article “A” in the title suggests, this particular
hijacking is often treated as the cost of doing business. It’s unusual, but not unexpected. One of the more interesting characters in the
film is Omar, who speaks English and negotiates on behalf of the Somali
pirates, although he takes umbrage when Peter suggests that Omar is himself a
pirate. Throughout the negotiating
process, both Omar and Peter attempt to maintain a cordial relationship,
although it naturally breaks down over time.
It’s easy to view this film as the clashing of two cultures within a
global marketplace. They’re making a
business deal, but it just so happens that one party has brought weapons to the
negotiating table.
A Hijacking makes
a fascinating comparison to the style of Paul Greengrass, the director of Captain Phillips. Both films take on a cinema verite,
documentary aesthetic. But where
Greengrass prefers to haphazardly throw his cameras about to mimic the
intensity of the situation, A Hijacking
director, Tobias Lindholm, uses his cameras in a manner similar to an actual
documentary. In other words, he uses
handhelds, but he does not purposefully engage in frenetic jostling. Greengrass uses the veneer of a documentary
in order to reveal the subjective state of the characters in the film, but
Lindholm seems interested in maintaining a calm distance from the procedures. Arguably, this less frantic take provides the
film with a more grounded feeling.
Beyond the individual narrative of Captain Philips, stories
of Somali pirates are fascinating because they’re examples of desperate people
from a failed state using what seems like anachronistic tactics to force their
way into streams of global capital.
Perhaps better than the Hollywood
blockbuster version of this story, A
Hijacking illustrates ways in which men are trapped within a world and
economy they have no real control over.
It’s eerie to hear Peter negotiate over numbers when men’s lives are on
the line. It’s an unsettling reminder that
within this system the value of our lives can be reduced to a number written on
a marker board in a conference room.
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