Hanna (****)
Directed by: Joe Wright
Starring: Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana, Cate Blanchett, Jessica Barden,
Tom Hollander, Olivia Williams, Jason Flemyng
Seen: May 30th 2011
**** Out of ****
Hanna (Ronan) and her father Erik (Bana) live alone near the Arctic,
where he intensely trains her as an assassin. The movie starts with her hunting
a deer with bow and arrow, and while busy with the deer, her dad creeps up on
her, telling her that she’s dead, he’s killed her. She will do better next time
she replies. At night they sit by the hearth and Erik reads Hanna portions of encyclopaedias,
trying to prepare her for the world. One evening he shows Hanna a switch which,
if she flips it, will tell Marissa Wiegler (Blanchett) where they are. The movie
cuts to a CIA building, where an agent tells Wiegler that they’ve picked up
this signal and that they believe it to be Erik Heller, but when Marissa sends
a team to apprehend them they find only Hanna, and take her into custody.
Hanna wreaks havoc at the CIA installation where she’s kept and escapes
into the desert, where she meets a travelling family on holiday. Sebastian
(Flemyng) and Rachel (Williams) are very open-minded parents to Sophie (Barden)
and her little brother. Hanna stows away on their van as she travels across Morocco
on her way to Germany, to meet up with her father again. In the meantime Wiegler
goes after Erik, but not before sending her hounds after Hanna, asking her main
henchman Isaacs (Hollander) to do things her agency will not allow her to do.
Erik and Hanna both race to reach Berlin and to keep abreast of the threat
posed by Wiegler and her cronies.
Hanna starts in a stark visual landscape with no music to accompany
it. Just as this silence starts to become apparent, Hanna asks Erik about
music, and his response is to read the encyclopaedia entry. From here the music
starts seeping into the movie as Hanna passes through the Moroccan city of
Rabat, where she experiences women singing while doing laundry, and people
singing while partying at night – a whole new experience opening up to her. The
soundtrack by The Chemical Brothers really makes the adrenaline pump in the
beautifully realised and stunningly choreographed action sequences as Hanna and
Erik in separate locations take on a plethora of Wiegler’s henchmen. Every scene
is interestingly done, with a Wiegler home invasion by Erik especially
impressive. Saoirse Ronan is incredible as Hanna, the confused, innocent, and
lethal young girl who becomes the centre of Wiegler’s world. Cate Blanchett is
just as good as the obsessive and corrupt CIA agent Wiegler and Erik Bana can
almost never put a foot wrong – here as Hanna’s father and protector with an
undertone of violence kept in check only by a need to sufficiently care for
Hanna.
Hanna is a brilliant movie, and I hope more people get to see it than
its limited release in South Africa promises. Our cinema houses will do
themselves a favour to push a wider release. There is art in this action movie
that is rarely seen in art movies nowadays, as every frame is beautifully shot
and draws the viewer into an immersive cinema experience. Hanna is the first
movie I’ve enjoyed this much in a very long time.
Comments
Visually one of the best movies I have seen in a long time!
I have actually noticed the absence of music at the start of the movie but did not make the connection... well spotted.