Feb 15, 2010
Strange Days

Director Kathryn Bigelow has become Hollywood’s center of attention recently for her work on the Oscar-nominated The Hurt Locker, but she’s been a leading light of typically underrated genre classics for years. Along with the vampire western Near Dark, her high watermark is 1995’s Strange Days, a scifi thriller set in a 1999 Los Angeles where the riots never ended and junkies get high off “playback,” a form of virtual reality in which users are able to directly experience the recorded lives of other people. The plot is organized around the unsolved murder of a rap icon and Lenny Nero’s (Ray Fiennes) obsession with ex-girlfriend Faith (Juliette Lewis), but the real draws are Bigelow’s command of tone and the film’s vision of a city in which poor (and especially black) citizens are relentlessly beaten down by a police force concerned with maintaining its image. Strange Days doesn’t get everything right — it’s very, very ’90s in its depiction of rap and technology — but Bigelow’s flair for action sequences and the film’s strong vision of a compromised society dependent on technology for escape makes it one of the best scifi movies of its decade. The best compliment I can give it is that its ending strikes a note of hope even as the greater social framework changes very little. – Eric Freeman