Most true film aficionados can spot aGuy Ritchiefilm within just a few minutes of watching. The British director has a patented and unique style that he has parlayed into several fantastic UK mobster movies likeLock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels, Snatch,and the action-adventure franchise that isSherlock Holmes. But inGuy Ritchie’s The Covenant, there are no hard Cockney accents, gratuitous violence, and the slow-motion style of delivering the action that is synonymous with the 55-year-old filmmaker. Instead,he opts to tell a character-driven story about the war in Afghanistanand just how far one will go in order to save another and the debt that is left with the benefactor of such an act of bravery and selflessness.

The CovenantstarsJake Gyllenhaalas a U.S. Marine andthe relationship that develops with his translator/interpreter named Ahmed(Dar Salim). While it is a rare outlier in style and story from the acclaimed director, it’s also a fresh take on a war that was going on in the Middle East for the better part of two decades that tells a familiar story, butfrom three different points of view, featuring perspectives from Americans, Afghani citizens, and the enemy Taliban fighters.

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The Covenant

During the war in Afghanistan, a local interpreter risks his own life to carry an injured sergeant across miles of grueling terrain.

What Is ‘Guy Ritchie’s The Covenant’ About?

In March 2018, United States troops were still in Afghanistan after first entering the country and region more than 15 years earlier. Gyllenhaal plays Master Sergeant John Kinley, who heads up an outfit that is charged with tracking down IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices) and other enemy weapons and armories. Among his dozen or so troops isa newly assigned native Afghan translator named Ahmed, who intends to facilitate the troops in an effort to navigate their way around the desert and communicate with the locals. Initially, Kinley is skeptical about Ahmed’s loyalty and motivation.He treats him more like a Taliban memberwho is just trying to avoid battle by signing up to help Americans.

But after Ahmed makes several crucial and wise decisions about how Kinley and his men should proceed that prove to expedite their search and save their lives,he earns the trust of Kinley and the group. Whenthe Marinesfinally gather intelligence on a cache of Taliban weapons and an IED factory, they seek to destroy them but are intercepted by the enemy, but still manage to accomplish their mission. Most of the American unit is killed, andKinley and Ahmed find themselves alone,stranded behind enemy linesand being hunted by the Taliban. Kinley has suffered a concussion and a gunshot wound to the leg and is unconscious. It is only through some quick thinking and local knowledge of Ahmed that he is able to get Kinley back to safety where he can then be sent home mere weeks before the Taliban retake control of Afghanistan.Kinley will spend the rest of the film making sure that he returns the favor.

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‘The Covenant’ Breaks Free From Past American Points of View

Over the last 20 years, dating back to when it became apparent that the American occupation and war in the Middle East was going to be an ongoing engagement,many films have tried to capitalize on the conflict from a variety of different perspectives. Most are singularly focused on what the American troops are interested in with little regard for the people of the country and the enemy they are fighting. Movies likeKathryn Bigelow’s outstanding Oscar winnerThe Hurt LockerwithJeremy RennerandAnthony Mackie;Three KingswithGeorge Clooney,Ice Cube, andMark Wahlberg;Clint Eastwood’sAmerican SniperstarringBradley Cooper, and another Jake Gyllenhaal vehicle calledJarheadmade in 2005, all fall into this trap.

These are worthy war film entries made by great directors, butthey fail to take a comprehensive view of all the people involvedin the decades-long war.The Covenant’s relationships, bonds, promises, and the human element of the players from all sides makes it intriguing and a worthwhile emotional investment on top of being asmart action war movie.

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Where to Watch and Stream ‘Guy Ritchie’s The Covenant’

A Bond. A Pledge. A Commitment

Guy Ritchie Drops His Signature Cinematography for a Human Story

Guy Ritchie’sThe Covenantis told in two separate and equally thrilling acts. The first is the American war effort in the waning days of the Afghan occupation where Ahmed proves to be much more than a local translator, buta man with incredible honor and integrity. He is a husband and father of a newborn and by helping the Americans, he is risking his life every second that he shares intelligence with the enemy of the Taliban.Ritchie opts for a more traditional shooting stylein order to tell the very profound relationship that forms between two strangers who will become inexorably tied over the course of the film. Once Kinley returns stateside and is alive only because of the efforts of Ahmed, he learns thatthe man who refused to leave another behind is in great danger back in Afghanistan. In addition to his family being at risk, Ahmed has landed on the Taliban’s most wanted list for aiding the Americans in destroying an IED manufacturing building.

Guy Ritchie Devotes Time to the Taliban Aspect in ‘The Covenant’

After obtaining the necessary visas with the help of a man whose life Kinley saved years earlier, he strikes a deal with a private security task force to go in and rescue Ahmed and his wife and child. But along the way, Ritchie takes the time to delve into the Taliban’s interest as Ahmed’s brother turns out to be a drug dealer who is protected by the new regime that he supplies. It is a rare timewe’ve seen the human face of the Taliban treated with a measure of understanding— not that it is deserved or undeserved — but it is yet another point of view that Ritchie manages to tell.It makes his story that much more rich and compelling, regardless of the politics involved. Ahmed’s brother decides to risk his own life and give Kinley information about where his brother has been forced into hiding.

What Ritchie impresses upon his audience is an unmistakable human bond and pact between one man and another man. It’s exciting to see the director break away fromhis prolific niche of British mob thrillersand deliver such apowerful and poignant personal story, one that also happens to be his best movie in years.

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Guy Ritchie’s The Covenantis available to stream on Prime Video in the U.S.

Watch on Prime Video

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