'Most Violent' crime drama explores ambition, ethics and love

Best Actress nominee Jessica Chastain arrives on the red carpet for the 85th Annual Academy Awards on February 24, 2013 in Hollywood, California. Chastain was nominated for the best dramatic actress Golden Globe in the movie "A Most Violent Year", and the film is expected to get a slew of nominations at the upcoming Oscars. PHOTO | JOE KLAMAR |

What you need to know:

  • Chandor was writing the script just as a tragic shooting took place at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in which a disturbed young man killed 26 people, including 20 young children.
  • Co-star Chastain was nominated for the best dramatic actress Golden Globe, and the film is expected to get a slew of nominations at the upcoming Oscars.
  • Starring Mark Wahlberg, "Deepwater Horizon" will explore the explosion and sinking of the offshore oil platform operated by BP, which sparked the worst oil spill in US history.

LOS ANGELES

One of this year's hottest independent films — watched closely in the Oscars race — is the gritty thriller "A Most Violent Year," set in crime-ridden 1981 New York.

The film, whose restrained style slowly builds powerful suspense amid acerbic humour, tells the tale of immigrant entrepreneur Abel Morales, who aims to build an oil empire with the help of his wife, played by Jessica Chastain, heiress of a fallen oil tycoon.

"For a long time I had had this idea about a husband and wife working together," writer director JC Chandor told AFP.

"I wanted the hero of the film to be Hispanic, because it is the most important recent wave of immigration" in the United States, he added.

"This movie is about ambition, and that's what immigration is about, building something better than what you've left behind."

26 KILLED IN SHOOTING
"A Most Violent Year," which opens in US theatres on December 31, takes place in 1981, statistically the most violent year in New York's history, with police completely overwhelmed.

Morales, faced with a series of brutal, anonymous attacks against his business and employees, tries desperately to protect his property and family.

The businessman has few scruples and only fears failure — but he does not want to break the law, while his wife and his lawyer (Albert Brooks) push him to take more radical measures to stop the attacks.

Chandor was writing the script just as a tragic shooting took place at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in which a disturbed young man killed 26 people, including 20 young children.

Chandor said he lived near the Connecticut town and was struck by the thought that "it could have happened in my daughter's school."

"It made me think of this idea of escalation, how an act of violence ripples on society," he said.

BEST DRAMATIC ACTRESS

Morales is played by Oscar Isaac, known for his star turn in the Coen brothers' "Inside Llewyn Davis" (2013) and who is featured in the upcoming "Star Wars." His portrayal evokes a young Al Pacino from "The Godfather."

Morales is "a person who feels like he's in the equivalent of a war zone," Chandor said.

The film has gotten rave reviews from critics, with a 95 percent positive rating on aggregator RottenTomatoes.com. It won accolades at its premier at the AFI festival in Los Angeles last month.

Co-star Chastain was nominated for the best dramatic actress Golden Globe, and the film is expected to get a slew of nominations at the upcoming Oscars.

It marks Chandor's third feature film, after "Margin Call," inspired by the financial crisis, and "All is Lost."

In his films, Chandor puts his characters in crisis, with either their survival or that of a major company — or sometimes both — in question.

MORAL CODE
The people must make decisions about acts against their moral code, sometimes committed in the name of survival, with some trying desperately to hold onto their ethics and not lose their soul.

His next film will take on one of the worst disasters to hit the United States in recent years.

Starring Mark Wahlberg, "Deepwater Horizon" will explore the explosion and sinking of the offshore oil platform operated by BP, which sparked the worst oil spill in US history.

It's a "poetic tragic take about where is our relationship with oil — which is we want it, we need it and it's getting harder to find," he said.

"We all need oil, we all use oil," and yet "someone has to find it for us, so we are far more guilty than these people" who work in the oil industry, Chandor added.