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The film tells about a squad marine names Chris Kyle, a sniper has killed many enemies who was recorded in the history of the US Army. Chris has participated four times in Iraq with a single mission: to protect his team. His accurate shot saved many American soldiers on the battlefield. The fame for talent of his sniper made many enemies in awe, and they decided to hang bonus for whoever killed Kyle. The adventure of him also start from that.
It speaks emotionally to audiences who sense that we lost something in Iraq, yet still want to honor the heroism of those who risked their lives for the cause, whether or not it was ultimately a great one.
Kyle killed two men, as a civilian, with his massive Colt .44 Magnum. That's a 'Dirty Harry' gun. Who directed 'American Sniper'? Dirty Harry did. That's terribly ironic.
Although Cooper succeeds in resembling and sounding like the real Kyle, this isn't some cheap impersonation trick. Cooper gives maybe the best performance of his career.
May 29, 2015
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It is too spare to be elegiac, but has just about enough ambiguity to fit in with Eastwood's life-long study of the American male and his place in a world that demands more than he can give.
American Sniper has a perspective that's recognizable from the classic Westerns Eastwood has long been associated with, both as an actor and a director. It's an existential critique of violent machismo that doubles as a celebration of violence.