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Berlinale
2004 presented an overwhelmingly serious program that festival director
Dieter Kosslick explained recognizes film as “…an art
form that holds a mirror up to reality; that examines the real in
retrospect, that is able to reflect upon real events and cry out
in condemnation.” But how much influence do filmmakers have
in defining reality, particularly when the medium is a documentary?
In the United States,
Americans saw the Iraqi war unfold as pre-sented by embedded reporters
– people who trained and traveled with American military.
Live action pictures showed spectacular bomb raids with refer-ences
to the “Shock and Awe” campaign of coalition forces.
Soldiers marched into Baghdad, prisoners were rescued, and statutes
to Saddam Hussein were toppled by the triumphant liber-ators. In
addition, the military U.S. Central Command (CentCom) set up a communications
center in Doha, Qatar, miles away from the actual fighting, for
the purpose of regular briefings for major news media. An Egyptian-American
director, Jehane Noujaim, traveled to the CentCom
communications post in Qatar to witness how the news media went
about the business of reporting war. In her film Control
Room, she focuses on Qatari-based Al-Jazeera, an Arab
news organization labeled as propagandist by the Bush administration.
Sameer
Khader, a senior producer for Al-Jazeera, is against the Bush policy
in Iraq but voices an appreciation for American values and a desire
to move to the United States and “exchange the Arab nightmare
for the American dream.” He is shown berating an employee
for arranging a live interview with a person who turns out to be
an extremist with wild unsubstantiated opinions about the Bush administration.
Translators broadcast press conferences from the White House live,
making faces to express their disbelief but nevertheless completing
the translation. Another producer for Al-Jazeera, Deema Khatib,
describes American war coverage as the most incredible piece of
theater she has ever seen. One example is the toppling of the statute
of Saddam Hussein led by American soldiers. As the Al-Jazeera team
watches the clip of a group of men rushing to the square, comments
challenge whether the men are even Iraqis because of their accent
and question why they appear to be around the same age; they question
where all the other people are and why did one man happen to have
an Iraqi flag from before Saddam’s reign?
Noujaim follows the
progress of the war by interviewing Lt. Josh Rushing, press officer
for Central Command. Rushing used to work in Hollywood negotiating
script content to ensure the U.S. military was portrayed favorably
in films. An aspiring actor, he appears very good at his job. Seemingly
open-minded, Rushing debates American policies with Al-Jazeera journalists,
but believes that the news station portrays America inaccurately.
She also meets with Tom Mintier of CNN who is outraged by the lack
of accurate information released by CentCom and with David Shuster
of NBC who believes in the Western press and constantly clashes
with Deema Khatib.
Featured in Noujaim’s
interviews is Hassan Ibrahim, a journalist for Al-Jazeera from Sudan
who went to school with Osama bin Laden, attended American universities
and once headed the BBC Arab News Service. He believes Al-Jazeera
is the only free news station in the Middle East. Passionately against
the war in Iraq and the American presence in the Middle East, he
praises the U.S. Constitution and hopes the American people will
stop the madness of the Bush administration. Al-Jazeera aired tapes
of American prisoners of war and dead American soldiers as well
as Iraqi civilian casualties, all images that were barred from American
broadcasts. Reports in the U.S. condemned Al-Jazeera for the broadcasts.
An Al-Jazeera journalist
sits among sandbags on top of the building that houses the headquarters
of Al-Jazeera in Baghdad. American bombers circle overhead. Ten
minutes later, the journalist is killed by American bombs. On that
same day, two other Arab news media headquarters in Baghdad are
also bombed, killing another two journalists. Those are the facts.
Why it happened can be considered either fact or fiction, depending
on the perspective of the journalist or viewer, but the position
of Noujaim is made clear.
One of the fascinating
aspects of Control Room is the effort to compare and contrast an
American with an Arab perspective by analyzing news events. A real
impact on these perspectives is made by how the interviews and news
events are edited down to just 84 minutes.
Another
documentary, Neverland: The Rise and Fall of the Symbionese
Liberation Army, takes a frank look at how the media
itself impacts the story. In Neverland, director Robert
Stone studies the rise of the Symbionese Liberation Army
(SLA), the first domestic terrorist cell in the U.S. to become a
media sensation. Interspersed among actual newsreels from television
archives are images of Robin Hood, Bonnie and Clyde and Che Guevara
– icons of the SLA members. Russ Little, one of the founders
of the SLA, explains how he grew up watching shows like Robin
Hood where heroes fought valiantly against an oppressive government.
Little railed against the government of Tricky Dicky Nixon and U.S.
aggression in Vietnam. Then came the killing of college students
at Kent State in May 1970 followed by the re-election of Nixon.
Nightly television highlighted the bloody battles of Vietnam. Massive
protests continued. So in August 1973, Little and Mike Bortin, along
with their radical Black Power cohorts Willie Wolfe and Donald DeFreeze
(who recently escaped from prison), joined together to fight a government
they considered hijacked by a bunch of warmongering, power-hungry,
right-wing criminals. Their only plan was to shake things up, which
began with murdering a black school superintendent in Oakland, California,
Marcus Foster, who they thought was part of a racist cop conspiracy.
Foster was in fact a well-respected member of the community who
was admired by students and parents alike. Little was arrested along
with Joe Remiro after being stopped by police with SLA paraphernalia
in the car. No one had ever heard of the SLA, and the police had
nothing else to go on.
The other members of
the SLA then decide to kidnap the daughter of right-wing publishing
magnate William Randolph Hearst Jr., and in early February 1974
they kidnap Patty Hearst, leaving her fiancé beaten. Here
the media frenzy really begins. No one knows anything about the
SLA. No one knows where Patty Hearst is or what the SLA wants. So
reporters start camping out in front of the Hearst mansion, where
it is not long before regular broadcasts are made, including statements
from Patty’s fiancé and parents.
The SLA takes advantage
of the media frenzy and demands that lengthy statements be disseminated
in the press. “Death to the fascist insect that preys upon
the life of the people!” is their motto. In the image of Robin
Hood, they demand that Hearst use his fortunes to feed the poor
in California. With far less than the $300 million demanded by the
SLA, Hearst does indeed organize a program to distribute food but
the process results in mayhem in San Francisco. About two months
later, Patty Hearst announces that she has joined the SLA and is
now Tania. Less than two weeks later, she robs a bank with other
SLA members. Two bystanders are shot. The bank security camera footage
of Tania brandishing a gun is shown over and over on the nightly
news. The next month, six members of the SLA die in a shoot out
with about 500 officers of the Los Angeles Police Department. The
entire assault is broadcast live on television with reporters scurrying
behind cars to avoid gunfire. Subsequent crimes of the SLA are followed
closely by the media. Patty Hearst and three SLA members are arrested
in San Francisco. Hearst is found guilty of bank robbery.
Neverland showcases
reporting sensational events plain and simple. Statements from the
Hearst family and friends, the SLA and Patty Hearst herself were
broadcast as the events happened, without spin. References in the
documentary to Robin Hood or Che and even the final televised interview
of Patty Hearst on a talk show serve to present the Zeitgeist surrounding
the Vietnam war era. Compared to Control Room, Neverland
reveals journalism for what it used to be, while Control Room
shows just how news today can be manipulated. Both films are well
worth seeing.
Perhaps
another way the documentary style can be used to manipulate rather
than just present facts is the collage documentary Freedom2Speak
V2.0, wherein a group of German directors collect
opinions and ideas of people in the film industry about American
foreign policy after 9/11. The central idea arose during the Berlinale
2003 as the crises between the U.S. and Iraq deepened. A Speaker’s
Corner was set up, and several camera crews fanned out among festival
goers. Over the course of twelve days, more than 100 people were
interviewed, and interviews conducted at the Speaker’s Corner
were streamed onto a monitor in real time and shown to the public
on www.freedom2speak.net.
After compiling a 70-minute documentary entitled f2s-berlinale that
aired on German television, directors Markus C.M. Schmidt,
Christoph Gampl, Brigitte Kramer,
Marc Meyer and Uwe Nagel pieced
together more than fifty interviews and twelve freestyle short films
for V2.0, this 60-minute film.
A unique feature of
this film is that anyone can log on the freedom2speak.net
website, watch the interviews and shorts, and edit the film however
they want. Look at comments from Dustin Hoffman, John Hurt, Minnie
Driver or Luc Picard; if you don’t like what you hear, edit
it for your own copy. Insert your own opinions as well. Regardless
of how the information was compiled, there is no question that this
film is a voice for peace and rally against the forces of war. Click
online and speak out or order the video.
Another
look at the use of documentary style is Go Further,
a film by Robert Mann of a bike tour along the
Pacific Coast Highway in California by Woody Harrelson. Harrelson
is convinced that social change is always the result of an individual’s
effort. He hires a bus that runs on hemp oil and assembles an eclectic
group of friends to bicycle and support him as he tries to raise
environmental awareness along the way. Harrelson’s companions
include a yoga teacher (Jessica Chung), a raw food chef (Renee Loux
Underkoffler), a hemp-activist (Joe Hickey), a junk-food addict
and flirt (Steve Clark), a lawyer (Tom Ballanco), a website manager
(Laura Louie of www.voiceyourself.com),
a bar fly (Sonia Farrell) and a college student who is picked up
on campus by Steve and joins the group. Joe Lewis, who Harrelson
met while filming White Men Can’t Jump, is the driver.
While Underkoffler cooks
up luscious raw meals including a chocolate avocado mousse (Harrelson
co-published her book Living Cuisine: The Art and Spirit of
Raw Foods), Clark sneaks off to the local supermarket for chips
and cigarettes. Along the road they stop at a small paper company
that makes paper out of hemp instead of trees and at a farm where
worms and manure are used to create a fertilizer for organic farming.
Not everyone is open to the concept. A woman views the upside-down
American flag on one of the bicycles as unpatriotic and as a total
block to listening to anything they have to say. Security guards
keep the group away from a manufacturing plant. Perhaps the most
compelling parts of the film are where Harrelson connects with those
along the way either by teaching an impromptu yoga class, speaking
passionately on environmental issues or giving a prepared speech
to a crowd. He’s well-informed and practical about how individuals
can indeed make a difference. Some credibility of the film is lost,
however, in the emphasis on Clark and his quest for junk food and
girls. He’s funny smoking pot and in his incredulity over
milk being full of blood and pus, but if environmental problems
are ever going to be seriously addressed by the mainstream where
changes can happen on a more global scale, the serious issues need
to be removed from the image of pot-smoking hippies. But for the
high school and college crowd, such a documentary film can be a
very powerful teacher. (MW)
One
of the funnier films at the Berlinale was the U.S. documentary The
Yes Men, which follows the antics of a group of political
activists who impersonate the World Trade Organization (WTO). The
Yes Men started by creating the bogus website gwbush.org
during George W. Bush’s 2000 election campaign. They quickly
moved on to bigger and better things by creating the gatt.org
website, which many groups mistook for the WTO’s website.
Soon, they were receiving invitations to international conferences
(in Austria and Finland) and even television programs (CNBC Marketwrap
Europe) to speak on behalf of the WTO. They attended these events
posing as WTO representatives, but instead of talking about real
policies, they lectured on such ideas as selling votes to the highest
corporate bidder, allowing countries to commit human rights abuses
with a system of “justice vouchers”, and even combating
widespread hunger by making the poor eat “recycled”
hamburgers. The film does a great job of showing activists “on
the front lines” while making a strong case for their ideological
viewpoints, plus its often very funny subject matter was a welcome
relief from all of the heavy films shown at the festival. (KG)
Death
in Gaza is another impressive documentary film about
today’s politics, and not just because the cameraman died
in the line of duty. James Miller and Saira
Shah go to Gaza, that Egyptian city full of Palestinian
refugees and controlled by Israel. They follow the lives of three
children: 12-year-olds Ahmed and Mohammed and teenager Nailja. Ahmed
watches as a friend is shot dead by an Israeli sniper. He turns
to his neighborhood paramilitary group and becomes their lookout
and general water boy. Mohammed’s mother cringes when he says
that he wishes to die as a martyr. Nailja has attended many funerals
of close relatives. Each day on the way to school the three children
observe Israeli soldiers and their allies, Bedouin Arabs, pull down
houses and bulldoze wide strips of land to create a no-man’s
land just a few feet away. The filmmakers visit masked terrorists
who have no qualms about using small boys for their wars, indoctrinating
them with the will to become suicide bombers. Each dead boy’s
photo is plastered on the public walls. His corpse is carried through
the streets. The martyr public relations department is alive and
well. Miller and his crew visit Nailja and her family. During the
day they “exchange pleasantries” with the Israeli soldiers
patrolling just a few feet from Nailja’s house. Around 11
p.m. they decide to return to their hotel. Carrying a white flag,
they call out to the soldiers that they are leaving the area. On
their way out 34-year-old Miller is shot in the neck between his
helmet and bullet proof vest and dies on the spot. So far no one
has accounted for the deed. The family has called for a full and
proper investigation. The Palestinian paramilitaries celebrated
him as a martyr and painted his name and dates on their walls, too.
In his short life of 34 years he won recognition for Beneath
the Veil and Unholy War, both films about Afghanistan.
Compared
to these other excellent films, the all-women Texas-Kabul
seems lightweight. German director Helga Reidemeister
interviewed Arundhati Roy, a best-selling novelist, on conflicts
with Muslims in India. She talked to Stascha Zajovic, who founded
the Women in Black in Belgrade. Every eleventh day of each month
these women demonstrate to remind people of loved-ones lost under
the Milosovic rule. Jamila Muhajed publishes the only women’s
magazine in Afghanistan. Sissy Farenthold is from Texas, 76 years
old, and a former law professor and politician. She works for worldwide
human rights. These women speak into the camera, almost by rote,
which may well be the case, considering that they must have been
interviewed hundreds of times. Their words about suffering and injustice
come across as clichés, even after their statements are underlined
by real pictures of desperately disadvantaged people in India or
Serbia and Afghanistan. What could have been a powerful film is
not, unfortunately. (BT)
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