By Richard Roeper

Movie Review
The Wall
Directed by Doug Liman

Mystery of unseen sniper heightens thriller鈥檚 tension

THIS IS a monster movie disguised as a war movie.

Set in the middle of Nowhere, Iraq, in late 2007, with the war officially over but blood still flowing, The Wall is a psychological stalker-and-prey thriller pitting a wounded American soldier against an unseen Iraqi sniper. Through a convenient plot contrivance, the soldier and the sniper are able to communicate on a local frequency, giving rise to a verbal chess game occasionally punctuated by manic action sequences involving piercing bullets, gushing wounds, and guttural screams of anguish and despair.

We meet Sgt. Allen 鈥淚ze鈥 Isaac (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Staff Sgt. Shane Matthews (John Cena) as they鈥檙e in full camouflage on a hillside, 20 hours deep into surveillance of the scene of a massacre of eight Americans 鈥 contractors and security detail 鈥 on a small construction site.

Ize speculates this could be the handiwork of a 鈥減ro,鈥 maybe even the legendary (and some say mythical) sniper known as Juba. Could Juba be lurking behind the crumbling remains of a makeshift stone wall down there?

Mystery of unseen sniper heightens thriller鈥檚 tension

Matthews, exhausted and exasperated and impatient to the point of overconfidence, announces he鈥檚 going down to the scene to see what鈥檚 what.

Moments later, a shot rings through the dusty desert air, and it鈥檚 on.

In one of the film鈥檚 many white-knuckle bursts of action, Ize makes a mad dash down the hill while Juba鈥檚 bullets rain down all around him. Wounded and in a state of near-hysteria, he finds cover behind the wall, just a few yards from where his partner lies facedown in the desert, suffering from multiple wounds and on the brink of death.

Ize frantically calls for help, but the voice on the other end of the line turns out to be the sniper. (It鈥檚 no coincidence, that nickname 鈥淚ze.鈥 This soldier uses a malfunctioning visual scope because of its connection to a fallen comrade. And Ize never actually lays eyes on the sniper hidden somewhere out there, taunting him on multiple levels.)

Mystery of unseen sniper heightens thriller鈥檚 tension

The back-and-forth between Ize and the sniper sometimes reminded me of the give-and-take between John McClane and Hans Gruber in the first Die Hard, or the conversations between Colin Farrell and his unseen tormenter in Phone Booth. Ize relies on background audio cues, e.g., the flapping of loose sheet metal, to help him figure out just where the sniper is hiding. In the meantime, the sniper pries so deep into Ize鈥檚 psyche and seems to know so much about him, there was a moment when I wondered if these radio calls were a figment of Ize鈥檚 fevered imagination.

Given the universal nature of the conflict, director Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, Edge of Tomorrow) might well have set this in an unnamed foreign territory during an unspecified time. The Wall is hardly political commentary, although there are a few not particularly subtle touches, as when we learn that crumbling wall was once part of a school. (Really? Because there doesn鈥檛 seem to be another structure, or even the skeleton of a structure, for as far as one can see in any direction.)

Cena鈥檚 hulking, wisecracking Sgt. Matthews spends much of the film unconscious or out of frame, essentially making The Wall a two-character thriller in which we see only one of the main characters. Aaron Taylor-Johnson delivers a strong performance as the likable but flawed Ize; he could be the former homecoming king/football star turned soldier from any of a thousand American towns.

Laith Nakli meets the challenge of creating the character of Juba purely via a voice heard through an earpiece. It鈥檚 a wickedly effective performance.

Mystery of unseen sniper heightens thriller鈥檚 tension

It鈥檚 a wise choice to never show the sniper. Like the killer in Phone Booth and the entity in Lights Out and so many villains of all forms through the decades, the longer we go without seeing the tormenter, the more terrifying he becomes. 鈥 Chicago Sun-Times/Andrews McMeel Syndication

Rating: 鈽呪槄鈽
MTRCB Rating: R-16