Nightcrawler follows the story of Lou Bloom (Jake Gyllenhall), a small-time petty thief and nominal jobhunter eeking his way around Los Angeles trying to make ends meet. Whilst driving home one evening Lou chances upon a dramatic road traffic accident and, stopping to investigate, becomes aware of the career potential in 'nightcrawling' Nightcrawling is the practice of trawling the police band radio every night for juicy accidents and crimes to film, translating into lucrative sales to the ratings hungry, morally abject local TV news stations. Lou gets a lucky break and manages to sell a graphic, but poor-quality video of a fatal carjacking to local news chief Nina (Rene Russo), who recognises a crude talent. Nina encourages Lou to bring her further footage, and so he gets his foot in the door of a seedy news industry, where the grimmer the tragedy, the bigger the paycheck. Lou hires an assistant, Rick (Riz Ahmed), to help him navigate the labyrinthine Los Angeles streets and decipher the coded police calls they track from the car. As Lou's career ascends, so too do the lengths he will go to frame a good shot or best his competition.
Lacking in any sort of moral compass, Lou manipulates everything and everyone he comes into contact with, from his assistant Rick, to the bodies at a crime scene. Nothing is off-limits and everything is a 'sale'. A gaunt looking Jake Gyllenhaal is super creepy as Lou, superficially earnest and hardworking, but underlying it all he is a sociopathic void. Lou is constantly spouting weird business platitudes as he gives it the bug-eye. Rene Russo and Riz Ahmed are excellent as the closest thing Lou has to friends, and it's fantastic to see Bill Paxton as a sleazy nightcrawling competitor. Note: it is scientifically impossible for Bill Paxton to be bad in anything. He rules.
On the face of it, Nightcrawler might sound like a grim ride, and although it feels OTT at times, it is no less compelling for it. It's grimly amusing in its own way. The absurdity of Lou Bloom's detachment and lack of empathy, combined with his self-help book motivational creed, lend themselves to some darkly comic scenarios. If you've ever pondered whether ambitious people are dangerous, then Nightcrawler is going to give you some bad dreams. It's a stylish yet seedy study of what happens when blind ambition and moral ambiguity collide. An extreme portrait of aspiration as a weapon.
IMDB: Nightcrawler
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