Nightcrawler

“A screaming woman running down the street with her throat cut.” That’s the image Nina (Rene Russo) evokes when describing her news program in director Dan Gilroy’s tremendous thriller Nightcrawler. It’s tempting to adopt that as a metaphor for the entire film—Gilroy’s first, by the way, which makes his achievement doubly impressive—but while that is definitely part of the equation, what drives this movie forward is the menace that lurks just below the surface, beneath a calm exterior personified by Jake Gyllenhaal’s Louis Bloom.
A nocturnal rambler who scrounges for anything he can steal and sell, bolted down or not, Lou is a motivated self-starter. Full of meaningful acronyms, manufactured self-confidence, and drive powered by self-improvement seminars, catchphrase wisdom and insight, he’s looking for a career to break into on the ground floor. When he comes across the lucrative world of nightcrawlers, freelance stringers who race after breaking news stories—the bloodier, the better is the prevailing wisdom—he has the ambition, opportunity and, most importantly, the moral flexibility to excel.
Gyllenhaal, who shed in excess of 30 pounds for the role, has rarely—if ever—been better. Lou is calm, frank, goal oriented and even borders on charming at times, but this measured exterior belies the inherent violence you spend the entire movie waiting to see erupt. He has a hungry, animal energy—he’s often visually equated to a coyote—like a sociopathic used car salesman who isn’t afraid to use manipulation to secure a sale. And failing that, you’ve no doubt that ripping out the jugular is a viable option.
With his lax concerns about ethics, journalistic or otherwise, Lou traffics in human misery, never afraid to step across a given line, both metaphorical and police issued. And because of this, his footage is ratings gold, which leads to a symbiotic relationship with the vampiric Nina, who runs the night shift news at the lowest-rated network in town. Russo is also at the top of her game here; ruthless and desperate, she thinks she’s found a rube in Lou, only to be terribly surprised. As he continues down his dark path, pushing further beyond the boundaries and into extremism, she’s right there with him.
Nightcrawler circles around a bit before finding a rhythm and getting to the real meat, and is almost procedural in the way Lou gets into the trade. But once the momentum picks up, it doesn’t stop. As Lou grows more unhinged in his quest for the perfect shot—he doesn’t hesitate to move what may be a corpse, or a seriously injured man, at an accident scene for better composition—the film becomes a scathing indictment of an industry that favors ratings above all else, including information.