I saw No End In Sight today. It's a very well made documentary about the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. It's first film by someone who was a political scientist and not a filmmaker. However, it's still a great looking film. The interviews are shot really nicely with great use of shadows. It's edited with nice use of splitscreens and great titles. The begining titles felt particularly modern.
The structure of the film is really effective, seguing easily from one aspect of the war into another. They cover a lot of ground, but the movie never bogs down. Two things that really sell the movie is they were able to get a lot of interviews with folks who were faily high level officials in either ORHA, the CPA or the military and that they shot some great footage in Iraq. They were able to get footage of Motaqdr Al-Sadr leading a rally and saying that the Little Satan has been replaced with the Great Satan. I was familiar with most of what they covered, but seeing the first hand interviews was still quite engaging. I think that is because the director knows about how policy is made and what and who to focus on. The filmmaker is a friend of George Packer who appears in the movie and the movie is essentially the film verison of Packer's book Assasin's Gate. He got the idea to do the movie because he would have dinner with Packer whenever he got back from Iraq and Packer kept telling him the situation was far worse than what was being reporting in the news. The best strength of the movie is the contrast between what was happening in Iraq and the burlesque that happened in Washington press conferences.
Rumsfeld: I picked up a newspaper today, and I couldn't believe it. I read eight headlines that talked about chaos, violence, unrest -- and it was just, 'Henny Penny the sky is falling.' I've never seen anything like it.
Cut to the footage of organized Iraqi looters driving construction cranes down the streets and American soldiers who were ordered not to intervene just watching them. Rumsfeld with his shtick and joking around seems like a sociopath.
The structure of the film is really effective, seguing easily from one aspect of the war into another. They cover a lot of ground, but the movie never bogs down. Two things that really sell the movie is they were able to get a lot of interviews with folks who were faily high level officials in either ORHA, the CPA or the military and that they shot some great footage in Iraq. They were able to get footage of Motaqdr Al-Sadr leading a rally and saying that the Little Satan has been replaced with the Great Satan. I was familiar with most of what they covered, but seeing the first hand interviews was still quite engaging. I think that is because the director knows about how policy is made and what and who to focus on. The filmmaker is a friend of George Packer who appears in the movie and the movie is essentially the film verison of Packer's book Assasin's Gate. He got the idea to do the movie because he would have dinner with Packer whenever he got back from Iraq and Packer kept telling him the situation was far worse than what was being reporting in the news. The best strength of the movie is the contrast between what was happening in Iraq and the burlesque that happened in Washington press conferences.
Rumsfeld: I picked up a newspaper today, and I couldn't believe it. I read eight headlines that talked about chaos, violence, unrest -- and it was just, 'Henny Penny the sky is falling.' I've never seen anything like it.
Cut to the footage of organized Iraqi looters driving construction cranes down the streets and American soldiers who were ordered not to intervene just watching them. Rumsfeld with his shtick and joking around seems like a sociopath.