Except they state later in the film that no less than 20 separate interviews or interrogations came up with the same name for the courier. It wasn't just that single person shown in the film. It happened all over. THAT was what made Maya key in on it. So perhaps SOME mentions came as the result of torture, but I don't see how anyone could deduce from the film that it was the ONLY source. It just isn't portrayed that way. The one detainee we see at length was part of the mosaic that produced the impression for Maya that the courier was important. I'm certainly no advocate for the methods, but I just could not see where this vitriol is coming from.Alan Smithee wrote:I realize this has gone on long enough but I just saw the film yesterday. For everyone here defending the film I have to say that the critics are right, they do get intelligence from torture in the beginning of the film.Spoiler
the montage of her watching the torture tapes she hears the name over and over. The first time they get intelligence that helps them do something with that name comes from non-torture methods.
And whoever noted the lack of heroics in the final act is spot on. I was especially struck by the guy who ends up firing the fatal shots - and how overwhelmed he was by the act...so much so that he was paralyzed by the hugeness of it all. "I was the shooter on the third floor" - "I know man...good work". Now grab a bag and help us carry this shit. It was work for them, and I had the sense that they wouldn't actually sit down and think about it until long after the event. I'm not sure what exactly it is about that entire sequence, but I felt like it got into the mind of a modern soldier more than anything i've seen.