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Day Zero
 
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Day Zero (2008)

Starring: Elijah Wood, Jon Bernthal Director: Bryan Gunnar Cole Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: Elijah Wood, Jon Bernthal, Chris Klein, Ginnifer Goodwin
  • Directors: Bryan Gunnar Cole
  • Format: Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: Spanish
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: First Look Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: February 26, 2008
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000XJ5UEE
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #53,338 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

DAY ZERO stars Elijah Wood, Jon Bernthal, Chris Klein, and Ginnifer Goodwin. DAY ZERO is a timely political and personal story of three young men as the military draft is reinstated. Three best friends, George (Chris Klein) a successful lawyer, Dixon (Jon Bernthal) a tough-as-nails cab driver, and Feller (Elijah Wood) a writer with a host of insecurities, are drafted and given 30 days to report for duty. In that time they're forced to confront everything they believe about courage, duty, love, friendship and honor.

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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Day zero approaches, March 2, 2008
What if the draft were reinstated, and the young men of the United States suddenly forced to join the army, fight, and perhaps die -- without any free choice?

Thankfully, that hasn't happened just yet, and hopefully it won't anytime soon. But "Day Zero" takes a hard, sometimes frightening look at three young men who face that very ordeal. Instead of pompous politics or big war stories, it's an intimate, visceral experience that seems more interested in the "ordinary guys" than in the war itself.

In the near future, terrorists have struck again, this time attacking the West Coast -- and in response, the United States has reactivated the draft. All males between eighteen and thirty-five have to sign up for army duty in one month. This includes three friends: street smart cabbie Dixon (Jon Bernthal), wealthy young lawyer George (Chris Klein), and fragile writer Aaron (Elijah Wood).

In the month that follows, all three are struggling -- George wants to stay with his newly cancer-free wife (Ginnifer Goodwin) rather than fight in a war he despises, and tries to arrange an excuse to stay behind. Dixon's new girlfriend leaves him wondering what he'll lose if he leaves. And Aaron is just terrified. He makes a "ten things to do in the next month" list, but his fragile psyche starts to crumble under his fear of army life and death.

As Day Zero approaches, all three men must find the pressure building to new heights, and must decide where their choices -- and futures -- lie.

"Day Zero" is not a cheerful movie -- despite a lack of boot camps, battlefields and pompous political preaching, this movie is pretty dark fare. It's more interested in the hearts of drafted young men, and how they react -- how they react to the news, and how their potential loss affects their loved ones. And of course, the question of whether having a loved one gives you something to stay for.

And first-time director Bryan Gunnar Cole does a pretty serviceable job. He slowly builds the tensions to a snapping point -- there are lots of raw emotional outbursts, and the entire movie has a cloud of dark inevitability hanging over it like a nasty ghost. Thee are a few flaws -- some patches of dud dialogue, and the embarrassing gay-bar screamfest -- are simply embarrassing to watch.

Despite the dark tone, Cole does manage to weave in some comic moments, mostly from Aaron, his Bowflex, and his hilariously insensitive shrink. But these humorous moments have a tragic twist, even as they make the darker moments go down more easily.

Klein gives the weakest performance of the bunch, especially since George is such a blatantly unsympathetic character -- not to mention that Klein's performance is wooden, lackluster, and rather boring. While Dixon's background is rather cliched, Bernthal does a more solid job as a hothead who actually gets something to love -- and lose -- and has to grow up a bit.

Goodwin gives a solid, intense performance as a woman who has just regained her future, and she easily overshadows Klein. And Wood has the most challenging role: a man too fragile and sensitive to cope with his own fears, let alone the army. His downward spiral might have seemed silly in another actor's hands, but here it's just painfully stunning and pitiable. Few actors have the skill to pull off that breakdown.

It's worth noting that despite its flaws, "Day Zero's" goal is not to change your mind or your war stance, but simply to give you something to think about, and in that, it succeeds. Definitely worth seeing, and worth mulling over once it's over.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Elijah Wood Performance to Date, November 6, 2007
By Edward C. Patterson (Allentown, PA) - See all my reviews
  
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It's 30 days before DAY ZERO, when three friends are to be drafted into the army during the raging war in Iraq. They react to the news and somehow come to terms with reality. On this simple (even thin) premise, Bryan Cole crafts a well balanced 90 minutes, which manages to cloud a specific or biased point-of-view. Sure, there's anti-war clambering and patriotic posturing. There's plenty of flag waving and flag burning, but this film is not about the draft or serving one's country. As a reviewer who has already been drafted to face a war (in Viet-nam) and had to grapple with decisions that would ultimately shape the remainder of my life, I know this film is about "the inner self"--the draft being the catalyst and the reactions mere symptoms to the rumbling of the human spirit or the lack there of.

The three stars carry the film a long way and beyond. Chris Klein as George Rifkin represents the majority view, that the draft is a life interrupter. One never gets the impression that George is a coward. He just wants to continue his law practice, enjoy his family and wife; and ultimately, his anti-draft stance festers from resentment to anger. Jon Bernthal as James Dixon represents the patriotic view, that "it had to happen sooner or later," and everyone should stand up and fight terrorism. He is a violent and disturbed man, short fused and drives a taxi for a living, quite a contrast from George. He imprints his views on his friends without hesitation, but when he meets a girl, his views are somewhat tempered. Elijah Wood, in his best performance on screen to date (yes, even better than Mr. Baggins), plays Aaron Feller, a naïve, fragile man, who has just published his first novel and is working on the second. He is thrown into a panic by the draft notice. He looks for help in all the right places, and doesn't find it. He then looks in all the wrong places, and does. He manages to face his inner demon and takes the appropriate corrective action.

The three friends interact with great chemistry. While Wood carries the film's main theme and presents it with pathos and comedy, the more political and preachy messages come from Klein and Bernthal. Bernthal's raging approach to life is engaging. He is always there for his friends, but not without cost. He chews up the scenery. Klein, on the other hand, gets the more conventional row to hoe, with everything from draft dodger to conscientious objector. He whines and bleats and tears his hair out (figuratively. Wood loses his, literally). Between Bernthal and Klein, we have Macbeth and King Lear, so it is up to Wood to bring the real interest. He crafts his character from thin air, as his scenes are mostly interspersed vignettes that are visually appealing and pathetically comic. In fact, Wood's sense of comedic timing matches the great stars of cinema, like Chaplin. He takes us from entertaining comic relief to riveting drama as Aaron takes a roller coaster ride from naïve to psychosis in 30 days to Day Zero.

This film has only been screened at the Tribeca Film Festival, where I am sure it will win awards and be picked up by a distributor (if not, the film industry is blind). It demonstrates that in the hands of a thinking director, three strong actors can create storms in tea cups. It also provides the viewing audience with Elijah Wood's best of many great performances on celluloid, and for an actor nearing his 40th film, it is a landmark.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Day Zero - Excellent Thought-provoking Film That Deserves A Wide Audience, March 3, 2008
Day Zero

CONTAINS MAJOR SPOILERS!

Despite anything you may have read in any
review..watch this film for yourself. It's worth it.

Day Zero

First off it's beautifully filmed. You would never guess it had such a
low budget. Well thought out shots and camera angles. Excellent use of
close ups of everyone. Their faces tell the story.

It's not entirely about war but about unprepared young men being
blind-sided by being drafted unexpectedly into a war they are unsure
of. Even Jon Bernthal's seemingly gung ho character isn't as sure of
what he wants as he first appears. He has too much heart and love for
other people. He's a genuinely good guy. What will fighting in a real
war and seeing it's horrifying atrocities do to his kind soul? He might
fight and survive but he won't come back the same man. He may have a
load of guilt that he will never be able to shake. Ideals shattered.
Nobility in shreds. His is the most clearly exposed character and has
the most screen time. He's very good. A new DiNero.

Chris Kline also was good and understated but you can see everything he
feels and how torn he his. To leave his cancer survivor wife that he
loves dearly. To abandon his career as a successful lawyer. To fight in
a war he does not believe is right. Or submit to a draft he believes
deprives people of their civil rights and due process of law. A solid
quiet and painful l portrayal.

Then of course Aaron..Elijah. Poor sad outcast Aaron. A person who
cannot even be his own friend. A person self-isolated and despite some
interesting life-experiences (the post grad trip to Malaysia) sadly
naive. He is locked within his own self-destructive psyche. If he
doesn't love and respect himself how can anyone else? Still he has
strong bonds with Bernthal and Kline. They get him. They might tease
him but they understand him and they are his friends and the only ones
who care about him. Elijah is very good. He shows Aaron's pathetic
shock at having his fragile life invaded by that draft notice. He is
completely unprepared for any kind of combat. Why he never considers
getting a psych discharge is surprising. He would have easily gotten
one. I knew a guy almost just like him back during Vietnam who was so
emotionally wrecked that although he braved two weeks of boot camp he
disintegrated so badly the army gladly sent him right home. The army
would have done the same for Aaron, I'm sure! But the poor thing never
sees this. Making us wonder if he truly sees himself clearly at all. He
does have talent as a writer. Something perfectly suited for his loner
psychological make-up. He was NOT a fraud as he thought. He took a folk
tale and enlarged on it for his book. Last time I looked that wasn't a
crime. Authors take such things as inspiration all the time. It was not
fraud. Aaron never sees his strengths. He just loathes himself and then
when it seems Dixon is disgusted with him after that mis-adventure with
the pimp, he really starts to come apart.

The head-shaving is a brilliant dissolving into psychosis scene. His
hair really was buzzed off and he still stayed 100% in character. That
is enormous credit to his professionalism.

When he calls his sister and she just blows him off it is the final
break for him. He can't see that his friends care. That they would help
him if he would let them. He is lost within his own madness. He cannot
see beyond it. His final decision is so sad because he feels he is
vindicating himself and freeing himself. That last smile of his, his
only real smile in the movie, is chilling. And for anyone who has ever
been there and felt anything like that it resonates deeply.

I love how he found this character and made him different from anyone
else he has played. His Depp-titude is becoming more and more apparent.
The little nervous tick of his cheek. The not-quite smiles. His
ineptness around women. ( Best line..."Maybe later." ) His descent into
madness. Elijah has talent in spades.

The supporting cast is all very good too. I love the young blonde
girl,Sofia Vassilieva, who loves Dixon. She just breaks my heart. An
actress to watch, I'm sure we'll see lots more of her. His older
girlfriend,Elisabeth Moss, is good, too. Ginnifer Goodwin is pretty
good but perhaps not quite the best.

All this comes down to why this wonderful, intelligent film got the
cold shoulder. Well of course it's never been PC to even appear
anti-war. But the thing is that's not really what this movie is about.
It's about how war effects different types of people and how they deal
with it. It doesn't tell you what to do it just makes you think what
you MIGHT do in the same situation.

What one thought did I take away primarily? War demolishes lives. Rich, poor, here, there.... it touches everyone to the core and no one remains the same.


It's a good film that deserves a wide audience. I hope very much it picks up on DVD and TV the interest it should have.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Broke my heart, but definately deserves it's 5-cent price
This movie is really sad and very realistic if the given circumstances were reality. But I honestly did not enjoy this movie. I purchased it because it was so cheap. Read more
Published 21 days ago by K. Gent

4.0 out of 5 stars Great little movie
All three of the main characters were great in their individual reactions to the news of getting drafted and most likely to go to war. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Patrick Nava

3.0 out of 5 stars Not impressed
I have been a huge fan of Elijah since The War. But I find this movie below his usually performance. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ryan

5.0 out of 5 stars Day Zero inspires....
I won't write a description of the movie because I think plenty of people have done that. What I will say is that no matter what your feelings are about the war, this movie... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Kathleen A. Dragomir

3.0 out of 5 stars One Time Glad
I put this DVD in my cart from the $4 buget bin @ our local video store. Bryan Gunnar Cole, who has done some editing work in television, directed his first feature. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Lee Armstrong

4.0 out of 5 stars Modern day draft stories
Three long time friends from NYC receive draft notices from the US military asking them to serve in Iraq. All three are due to report to duty in 30 days. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Reader

3.0 out of 5 stars The Fellowship of the Cliche
"Day Zero" is an odd indie movie. It's one of the few indie movies addressing the Iraq War,but that's no quality assurance. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Amaranth

3.0 out of 5 stars How Would Being Drafted Makes Men Feel? (Spoiler)
I have given this movie 3 stars, because, although the movie had my attention. There was too much cussing for me. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Arch

4.0 out of 5 stars I enjoyed it
I'm no critic, I just go on what I like. I enjoyed watching this. I'm a fan of independent films because they often have more substance to them than blockbuster, hollywood films... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Tracey Manning

4.0 out of 5 stars Ask not what your country can do for you -- ask what you can do for your country
Day Zero takes an honest look at what would likely happen if the draft were reinstituted today. With insight from three social tiers, the creators do a good job of displaying how... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Jason

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