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Bad Voodoo’s War. Clip of the Day.

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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Yesterday, I dropped the name of Deborah Scranton’s The War Tapes, a documentary shot by the soldiers on the ground in Iraq, within this story about the ultra-indie “pro-troops” doc challenging Redacted’s sales. It had slipped my mind that Scranton has a new documentary, also shot by soldiers, called Bad Voodoo’s War. Chuck Tryon describes Scranton’s “virtual embed” technique in his review:

Bad Voodoo’s War focuses on the experiences of a California National Guard platoon, showing us, as the website claims, “the war through [the soldiers’] eyes, filmed with their own video cameras.” In order to make the film, Scranton equipped the soldiers with cameras and then kept in close correspondence with the soldiers via IM and email as they continued to send her tapes of their experiences.

Because the film is part of PBS’ FRONTLINE series, you can watch it in its entirety on PBS.com. There’s also an associated website, where the soldiers in the film are blogging and posting video extras. I found out about this today via a Facebook message from Scranton; she pointed specifically to this clip, called “It’s Not A Matter of If, It’s A Matter Of When”––referring to a change in attitude about the chances of an attack at any time. There are also many video extras on YouTube, including the preview embedded above.

Telluride 2007: Redacted

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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depalma.jpgAbout 10 people walked out of this afternoon’s Telluride screening of Brian DePalma’s Redacted, most during a horrific rape scene right in the center of the picture. The bulk of those who stayed gave the HD dramatization of the real-life rape and murder of a 15 year old Iraqi girl by US soldiers an overwhelmingly positive reception.

DePalma, who is currently in Venice, participated via video chat in an after-screening Q & A that danced dangerously close to DePalma hagiography from the outset. Moderator Larry Gross (amazingly, the screenwriter of both 48 Hours and We Don’t Live Here Anymore) set the tone with his introductory statement, directed at DePalma: “Thank you for making this film, which seems like a real act of moral integrity on your part.”

That kind of language would have drawn a eye roll from me even if I agreed with Gross’ assessment of Redacted’s moral pedigree. It’s hard not to be cynical about a fictional film based on real-life events, made by a brand-name director, shot with documentary and “amateur” methods as a model but saddled with that famous filmmaker’s self-serving ideological assumptions about the military and the war. But on some level, it almost doesn’t seem to count as a “movie” at all. It’s more of a narrative aggregation of pre-existing elements aimed at serving the purpose of a singular ideology. Or, in two words: opportunistic propaganda.

Which is too bad, because conceptually, it’s a fascinating project.

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