Blood Diamond So... [ iPhone ]

Let’s address the elephant in the room: Leonardo DiCaprio’s accent. Going into Blood Diamond , many were skeptical of a skinny American kid playing a Rhodesian gunrunner. But he pulls it off. This is the film where DiCaprio shed the last vestiges of his Titanic heartthrob skin. Archer is a predator, a man who uses his trauma as a shield. When he sneers at Solomon, “I’m a white man from Africa—you’re a black man from Africa. We’re not the same,” it’s chilling precisely because DiCaprio plays it with zero vanity.

On the surface, Edward Zwick’s 2006 film is a classic action-adventure set against the backdrop of the Sierra Leone Civil War of the 1990s. But to call it that is like calling Schindler’s List a film about a businessman. Blood Diamond is so effective because it weaponizes the very thing it condemns: desire. It uses Hollywood star power, explosive set pieces, and a ticking-clock narrative to pull you in, only to force you to confront the bloody price of your own luxury. Blood Diamond So...

Blood Diamond is so many things at once that it’s almost impossible to file it away as just a “thriller” or just a “war movie.” It is so sprawling, so morally uncomfortable, and so relentlessly kinetic that by the time the end credits roll over a haunting Leona Lewis song, you feel like you’ve run a marathon through hell. Let’s address the elephant in the room: Leonardo

However, the soul of the film is . God, what a performance. Solomon is not a warrior; he is a father. Hounsou’s eyes carry the entire weight of the genocide. There is a scene where he holds a gun to the head of a brainwashed child soldier—who happens to be his son, Dia—and begs him to remember who he is. Hounsou doesn’t just cry; he disintegrates. He deserved every award that year, and the fact he didn’t win an Oscar is a crime. This is the film where DiCaprio shed the