Captain Phillips shouldnât be as good as it is. Itâs a big studio picture, based on an inspirational true story, starring one of the worldâs hugest movie stars, directed by a guy most famous for his Bourne movies: Broken into pieces, Captain Phillips should be mass-market sap. But itâs the opposite of that: Lean and smart and intense, itâs a film thatâs happy to kick you in the stomach to make a point.
The broad strokes: Tom Hanks plays Richard Phillips, who captained the shipping vessel Maersk Alabama in 2009 on what was supposed to be a routine trip around the Horn of Africa. It wasnât routine: Somali pirates took the ship, then took Phillips as a hostage. And in Captain Phillips, itâs in the details where things get interesting and blurry. Not satisfied with telling the story from Phillipsâs white, American perspective, Greengrass also follows the life and the motives of Muse (Barkhad Abdi, excellent), who hijacks the Alabama with a tiny crew and desperate determination.
Considering Captain Phillips is based on Phillipsâs memoir, itâs hardly surprising he comes off well hereâoverwhelmed and outgunned, heâs still clever and determined to do whatever he can to save his crew. Itâs to Hanksâs credit, though, that Phillips also comes across as vulnerable and scared: Heâs a man handling a terrifying situation as best he can, and whoâs also aware that his best wonât be good enough. Both Phillips and Muse are strong men, and ones standing in stark opposition to each otherâbut both are also subject to the guns pointed at them, to the brutally unpredictable effects of globalization and racism, to the twitchy reflexes of their lizard brains.
On the surface, Greengrassâs film tracks, with jarring intensity, the hijacking of the Alabama and the capture of Phillips. But more than anything, itâs about consequences. The hijacking is a consequence. Every action of Phillips and Muse has consequences. And when the time comes, Greengrass doesnât cut away when Hollywood usually does: Captain Phillips doesnât end until weâve seen the consequences.