Review: Battle in Seattle
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Theatrical Reviews

Watching Battle in Seattle is like being jabbed in the belly with a police baton, and not in a good way. Written and directed rather ambitiously by the actor Stuart Townsend, who has never written or directed anything before, it uses fictional characters to tell a true story but gives us no reason to care about the people, their lives, or their political causes. The riots that occurred at the World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle in 1999 may well have been historically significant -- but you wouldn't know it from watching Battle in Seattle, which insists on telling us how important the issues are rather than showing us.
Townsend gives a cursory explanation of what the WTO is and tells us that many oppose it for its lax policies on human rights and labor standards. The details aren't important to him, though. He seems to take it as a given that we already dislike the WTO, even though most viewers' response to WTO is "WTF?" It's a massive, complicated international organization that deals with stodgy, unsexy issues like trade and commerce, and I guarantee the vast majority of the audience isn't nearly as interested in it as Townsend is. And if the point is that we should be interested in it, he fails to explain why.
Our heroes are the protesters, led by the devoted Jay (Martin Henderson), who lost a brother to the cause and is now single-mindedly dedicated to avenging his death. He is at the head of a huge, highly organized, somewhat mischievous group that aims to disrupt the three-day WTO meeting in downtown Seattle without using violence. He is assisted by the hard-nosed Lou (Michelle Rodriguez) and the easy-going Django (Andre Benjamin), the latter fulfilling the requirement that all movies shall have a Comical Sidekick.
The protests go down smoothly until they are marred by two things. First, the labor unions march against the WTO, too, and they have their own agenda separate from that of Jay's group. Second, some anti-WTO anarchists join the movement and ignore Jay's pleas that they behave civilly, choosing to smash windows instead. That gives the cops all the incentive they needed to start busting heads.
Oh, yeah. The cops. We're supposed to care about them, too. The good cop is Dale (Woody Harrelson), whose wife Ella (Charlize Theron) is pregnant, which is screenwriting shorthand for "please sympathize with this character and her husband." He is eager to follow his commanding officer's orders, while young cop Johnson (Channing Tatum) wants to unleash hell on the dirty hippies who are clogging up the streets.
The inevitable fracas occurs, and Townsend deserves credit for executing some very large, logistically complicated riot scenes (though they are shot and edited so chaotically that it's hard to tell who's doing what to whom). But his tin ear for dialogue almost sinks the film single-handedly. Poor Ray Liotta, playing the city's fretful mayor, is stuck in an office shouting trite lines like "The press would have a field day!" and "You're gonna turn downtown into a war zone!" Then there's Jay telling Lou, "You know nothing about me!," to which she responds, as if reading from the script of a Lifetime movie, "I've been around men like you all my life." And perhaps the most howlingly bad line in the entire film comes when Ella's co-worker tells her, in reference to her impending motherhood, "You want adventure? You just signed up for the greatest adventure of all!"
Seriously, don't you want to crack all these people in the skull with a nightstick?
Townsend's fatal, fundamental flaw is that for all the yelling and fighting and posturing and debating, he never tells us why the WTO is so bad. He barely even explains what the WTO is. Late in the film, after the riots have stopped the conference and gotten worldwide news coverage, Django makes a joke about it: "Three days ago, nobody even knew what the WTO was. Now they still don't know what it is, but at least they know it's bad." Hardy-har, funny joke, but guess what? You just summarized why the film is a failure. We're supposed to be on your side and hate the WTO, but you never explain why. This is an "issue movie" that neglects to tell us what the issues are, which is sort of like making a comedy that doesn't have any jokes. That's a pretty serious mistake, don't you think?










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-18-2008 @ 1:18PM
Joseph J. Finn said...
"Our heroes are the protesters, led by the devoted Jay (Martin Henderson), who lost a brother to the cause and is now single-mindedly dedicated to avenging his death."
Huh? What, his brother was killed by the World Trade Organization or something? That plot-point makes little or no sense.
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9-18-2008 @ 4:45PM
Django Block said...
The point of the movie is to show how everything is connected. The actions of the WTO are the cause of Jay's brother dying. It'll make sense when you see the film.
There is an awesome new clip they released yesterday at www.battleinseattlemovie.com/join.
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9-18-2008 @ 11:07PM
Claudia Lomelí said...
The trailer gives the impression of being actually a good film, but I don't know, and this is one problem that many movies that touches issues like that have: They don't know how to explain the issue, at least not in a resumed yet coherent and correct way for the audience to understand it and take a stance. And then they polarize the whole thing, another huge mistake.
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9-19-2008 @ 10:17AM
Andy said...
I live in Seattle and I remember this quite vividly.
Everyone I knew who went didn't even know why they were going or what they were doing. Most didn't even know what "WTO" stands for. They were just a bunch of out-of-work hippies with nothing better to do with their time.
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9-20-2008 @ 1:08PM
Melina said...
It is a Movie preview (God I hope that was a rough draft or it's a bomb) about the WTO 99 in Seattle. They made up a bunch of stuff and well, the real stuff was actually better. The movie is not worth the time, unless they take out the not related movie stuff (Woody as a cop and his wife who lost a baby being hit by a cop, not real, badly done and not needed) and put in the real stuff.
It had some live footage and the place went silent remembering, but most of it was fluff. Everyone said that more of the live footage of us would have been better.
They left out most of the really good, this ain't real, shit that happened. Only time in my life I have been gassed. Leaving out the topless dykes that changed the path of the march and all, Shit, Hollywood Can not beat that, it was brilliant. Moments before we took off, all in our groups, teamsters with teamsters, in there gear, carpenters with Carpenters, with there gear, etc, etc, all in order, behind our leaders.. .. Out of no-where came a yell, topless women.......???? Topless Dykes with things like "Eat pussy, not Cows" and electrical tape for pasties appeared, that was the end of that orderly march. 10 Thousand guy's all went to see what was going on........And so when we were to follow the route, we followed the parade (protesters dressed as dung beetles, turtles and of course the topless dykes, in clear rain gear at this point as it was raining), as our few leaders who knew where we were to be going got left on the corner arguing.
They left out the hero that drove the bus and got hundreds out as the gas came down to the water front and we were all trapped. They told him to park his bus and he said to hell with them and ran back and forth picking up trapped groups that kept moving further down the hill as the gas floated down the hills of Seattle. Bless that fella that swore continuously at the stupidity the whole ride.
The Monorail shut down, (we started at the Seattle Center and a chunk of us were going to take the monorail back to parking or the Bus tunnel) that wasn't mentioned.
The taxis on strike, during a labor Rally, the marchers were more likely to flip off the few running taxi's that were there earlier in the day than to use them, and then there were none.
The bus's shut down (What kind of Moron tries to get Thousands of people out of a city and shuts down the bus tunnel and bus service), the gas rolling down the hills of Seattle, splitting us into trapped groups, Confused hiding cops (they couldn't get the station on the phone to get directions, (for Hours), and were freaked and hiding in doorways and alcoves with the rest of us.
The cops getting gas from every prison in the state, the ensuing what the hell for? And then grabbing the riot gear from every prison. Every swat team and chunk of riot gear the city owned being dug out and the cops over excited, the rubber bullets they used, on people that were just trying to get the hell out, and a moron on the TV (every bar and restaurant still open had the news on so we could see it all over) telling everyone to "get out", when there was no way out.
I called my husband to come get me. He said I am watching the news, no one can get in to get you, Down Town Seattle is shut down, and you will have to walk out to where I can get you. The air cam just showed the city, keep going to the water and then go south. Great. Funny boy.
The news clip of the woman asking directions to get out and the cop reaching in her car and peppers praying her that was showed all over hell. The flooding of 911 as calls came in that gas was being sucked into the air systems of the residential high-rises where people were living.
They made the protesters look bad, there were less than 4 Anarchist's and I remember less than 4 broken windows. And they made a big deal out of it. Hollywood style.
They showed the cops getting out of hand and it was bad, but not that bad, and they missed why it was so "WTF".
They were not thousands of out of hand protesters, they were average Joe's that got told that the WTO was stomping on workers rights and human rights and our planet, so they showed up, with church groups, environmental groups, human rights groups, in a peaceful march, after being told, if there were enough of us, we could help make a difference....... and we were treated like violent rioters in a 3rd world dictatorship.
Labor and the Protestors for human rights and those that were there to save the planet, shut down the WTO, there were enough of us and it is a small city....... and our Gov Fucked up, City, state and federal, so bad it didn't just make news, it made history.
That was a story; it's not the one the movie told
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9-23-2008 @ 12:55AM
Andy said...
Stuart Townsend is a B-class joke, I live and lived in Seattle during this bullshit, IT WAS A RIOT, not a non-violent protest for worker's rights that they say on their little bullshit website. He tries to disguise this as an 'indie flick', it is not, it is not a documentary, it is not what really happened. This movie was made with the same money and capitalist approach that Townsend is supposedly sooo against, and Ray Liotta, and Woody, and Charlize Theron, puke puke puke. Go to adbusters.org and read his interview. He tries to compare the WTO to the recent financial crisis, "cuz it's like the same thing they were fighting, like, you know, like a whirlwind, you know, cuz I like just found out about this on the internet." What a piece of shit, this is almost worse than people making B-class movies re-enacting 9/11.
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9-30-2008 @ 11:19AM
burningrabit said...
I think I'll stop downloading the movie after reading the review and these comments. I'm just glad to hear Woody doesn't pose as an anarchist. Maybe the mainstream will learn something from this flick. Signed, burningrabbit, painfully-employed hippie.
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