In order to get rid of terrorism in Kenya, Colonel Catherine Pawl, goes in a mission to put them under surveillance in order to seek the suitable chance to achieve the attack, but once something happens that turns the incidents down, after the appearance of a young girl, the thing that brings terrible for them.
Watching battle organized at arm's length is a strange and surreal experience, steeped in dread. When Eye in the Sky eventually touches down to put a viewer right into the centre of the action, emotionally speaking, it's a jarring transition.
The military and covert war-wagers are getting better and better at killing from farther and farther away, and filmmakers seem to be getting better and better in the drone-warfare genre.
Hood keeps the action tense throughout this nail-biter, which unfolds like a taut stage play. It offers no easy answers, only difficult questions about following orders and the cost of war.