Written and directed by Dan Gilroy, Nightcrawler is the story of a man who takes part in an underground world of freelance video journalism as his obsession with getting footage to the news eventually becomes uncontrollable. The film is an exploration into the world of news media and how a man tries to capture footage of crime and sell it to the highest bidder in the news world. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Rene Russo, Riz Ahmed, Ann Cusack, and Bill Paxton. Nightcrawler is a dark and gripping film from Dan Gilroy. The news media is a world where it’s job is to cover the news to the world as news station will do whatever to present the news to the people. Some of which would often toe the line into what is right and wrong where some are willing to exploit moments of graphic violence just so they can boost ratings. The film is about the world of the news media where man takes part in the underground world of freelance video journalism as he brings a camera to shoot grisly footage of crime and deaths where he would sell his footage to a news station for money. Along the way, the man becomes ambitious in his operation where he goes to great lengths to get rich as well as get rid of competitors and such without any sense of moral ground. It’s a film that showcases where greed is the driving force as a man and a news director do whatever it takes to sell a story through the news media for ratings. Dan Gilroy’s screenplay is very unique for the way Louis Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal) is portrayed as this man who is just looking a way to make money as the film starts off him selling chain fences and whatever that he stole. Upon stumbling a van where two guys are filming footage of a car accident on the Los Angeles highway, Bloom gets the idea where he had to self-teach into getting footage the right way. While his early footage ends up being amateurish, he does impress a news station manager in Nina (Rene Russo) who needs Bloom’s footage to help boost her station’s sagging ratings. Helping Bloom is a young man named Rick (Riz Ahmed) who took the job to remember police codes and assist Bloom only for money. Yet, he is the film’s conscience as he wonders what he has gotten himself into as it plays into Bloom’s obsession to capture footage to sell. Even as Bloom begins this relationship with Nina that is very troubling where Nina realizes how much she needs him as it plays to Bloom’s own ambitions which becomes more troubling as the story progresses. Gilroy’s direction is very engaging as he shoots the film largely in Los Angeles and its nearby cities where the city itself is a character that is often riddled with crime and places that are just disturbing. It’s as if Bloom is in the right place and at the right time where he would use his car to drive to the location of the event at fast speed and be there. Even if there’s cops at the scene or he arrives before the cops do as he does whatever it takes to get the footage. Especially if it means dragging a man’s body or enter a home that is already opened and capture what has happened.
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