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![]() The Materiel World
But... in the real world, real blood is shed. That's where the crush of
this year's nonfiction films comes in. Politics have always been the
province of documentary-makers, but the recorded view of the world we're
in is uncommonly serious-minded in 2006. In the real world, people die.
Every day. Soldiers are at risk around the globe. And, as Al Gore
suggests in "An Inconvenient Truth," the effects of global warming
might just kill us all, and we have only ten years to prevent it.
There's psychological damage to go `round, but the war that
television and politics don't want to call into question is
front-and-center in documentaries. Germany's fact-based entry for Best
Foreign Language Film Academy Award is called "The Blood of Others,"
and to paraphrase an old MGM slogan, we're shown "all the tears in
heaven."
Documentaries this year were about the real world, dispatches
freighted with blood and ethical disenchantment. Oliver Stone, whose
films veer toward controversial perspectives, made, of all things, an
uplifting 9/11 fiction film, "World Trade Center," but at London's
National Film Theater this week, he considers the world to be more
complex than studio films can handle, and that docs have, for several
reasons, taken the lead. Stone's newest rumblings are about
investigating the role of countries other than Iraq in American policy.
"For me the answer lies in the interim step, in Afghanistan. I think
there's a lot of light to be shed on the nature of that war, how it
came about militarily and politically, and also the nature of the war
with Pakistan, India and Iran. It's a great subject matter. It leads to
Iraq ... and there are already many movies about Iraq in terms of the
Internet and documentaries--in a sense, it's been usurped by
television, as 9/11 was, to a certain degree."
Documentaries can work on a smaller scale even with larger subjects.
Focus Features made a nominal theatrical release for Patricia Foulkrod's
brief, deeply infuriating "The Ground Truth," about the government's
systemic abandonment of soldiers after their return to civilian life
from active duty. The release highlighted a DVD release a few weeks
later, around Veterans' Day, encouraging viewing parties by taking a
page from the distribution model launched by producer-director Robert
Greenwald with agit-docs like "Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers,"
"The Big Buy: Tom DeLay's Stolen Congress" and "Wal-Mart: the High
Cost of Low Price," digging at the social costs beneath that
conglomerate's marketing catastrophes and hubris.
Fifteen documentaries made the Oscar shortlist, and four comprise
kaleidoscopic views of literal violence of war and tragic sudden death,
including "The Ground Truth," the tripartite look at Iraqis, "Iraq in
Fragments," a look at a Sunni doctor running for office in 2005, "My
Country, My Country" and the shot-by-soldiers "The War Tapes."
They're all essential and essentially dispiriting: these bold snapshots
are but scraps of a greater, bloodier, hidden truth. War's collateral
damage is examined in Barbara Kopple and Cecilia Peck's "Shut Up &
Sing," which observes the transformation of the Dixie Chicks as
musicians (and citizens) after their insult to the President "in a time
of war." They come out stronger, but the more worrisome violence is in
movies about religious influence, from Stanley Nelson's vivid
"Jonestown: The Life and Death of People's Temple," as much about the
death of 1960s utopianism as death by Kool-Aid; American Talibans
inculcating fundamentalist children in "Jesus Camp" (including a
shrill, squirrelly cameo by the now-defrocked, gay-bashing,
closeted-homosexual minister Ted Haggard) and Amy Berg's devastating
"Deliver Us From Evil," which uses one convicted pedophile priest as a
prism to examine the historical patterns of child sexual assault by
clergy.
And for your Christmas viewing pleasure, a pair of competing
poli-docs open: Siskel has local filmmaker James D. Stern and Adam Del
Deo's "... And So Goes the Nation," a look at the "reptilian" level
of the 2004 Presidential battles in Ohio, and the Oscar-shortlisted
"Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore?" depicting a pitched battle
for a Missouri U.S. Representative's race.
Also by Ray Pride Tip of the Week
Sentence Life
Gone Green Again
Tip of the Week
One Long Movie
Tip of the Week
School of Cock
Tip of the Week
Children Afraid of the Night
Craig, Daniel Craig
Tip of the Week
A Chicago Like No Other
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