Movie Review: 'Zodiac'
Nicoletta Sabella
Issue date: 3/22/07 Section: A & E
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With a new spin on fright, the film focuses on the obsessions of unsolved mysteries rather than on the gruesome realities of bloody crimes.
This suspenseful thriller is based off of the true-life '70s serial killer that terrorized the San Francisco Bay area residents. He killed his victims randomly either by gun or knife. "I just killed two people," is what operators heard immediately after he called 911 to report his crime. His claim to fame was the subliminal coded messages he sent to newsrooms and police stations in which his name was revealed. The first one was a plea to put the message on the front page of the newspaper or else more people will die by his hand.
Unlike what most viewers might expect, the movie portrays the criminal spree through the eyes of the journalists and policemen involved instead of through the criminal's eyes.
And boy was it a ride.
It starts off with Jake Gyllenhaal, who plays Robert Graysmith, the protagonist and slightly awkward cartoonist of the newspaper. He is a young divorcee that finds a distance between himself and his co-workers. When it comes to the new Zodiac front-page criminal investigation, Graysmith finds his niche in cracking the codes and being Paul Avery's sidekick, who is played by Robert Downey Jr. Avery is the lead crime reporter who is enthralled with the case. This was the newsroom.
Gyllenhaal's character is put off for the first half of the film, while investigators and journalists take over. A big segment of the film is focused on showing the audience the on-and-off relationship between reporters and the police and how touchy the investigation can get if unwanted information is leaked in an article.
Inspector David Toschi, played by Mark Ruffalo, and his partner Inspector William Armstrong, played by Anthony Edwards, are the two leading policemen in charge of the investigation at San Francisco. Toschi, notorious for needing animal crackers before investigating every crime scene, gets middle-of-the-night calls practically every time the Zodiac strikes again. Toschi and Edwards along with the other investigations throughout the three jurisdictions all through the area believe they have snagged the man in charge of the murders but have no evidence.
2008 Woodie Awards

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