From James Longley's 'Iraq in Fragments.' Courtesy of Typecast Pictures
Between Iraq and a Hard Place: Three Docs Debunk Our Mainstream Media's Propaganda
America's view of war has certain conventions. There are always two
sides. If our own country is involved, then we are undoubtedly the good
guys. And when our enemies die, they die deservedly. But upon
reflection, and with the availability of more information, the good
guy/bad guy line becomes less clear-cut, and is frequently crossed or
redrawn.
As America continues its fourth year in the maelstrom that is Iraq, a
number of documentaries are closing the distance between the home front
and the war zone, capturing not only the conflict but also the human
cost of the warfor combatants and non-combatants. Patricia Foulkrod's
The Ground Truth: After the Killing Ends, James Longley's Iraq in
Fragments and Andrew Berends' The Blood of My Brother tell stories of
the war from perspectives rarely accessed through mainstream media
outletsperspectives of the invaded, and the physically and psychically
wounded.
"From watching movies, a lot of us feel we know what war is," The
Ground Truth's director, Patricia Foulkrod, notes. "We have this
fascination and tradition with it, but the truth is we don't have a
clue." Although her film includes footage shot in Iraq of US soldiers
on patrol, she considers it just a glimpse of their experience. Her
interest lies in what happens to these soldiers when they return.
Because there's no war at home, Americans are able to hide and deny
what their soldiers do. "We wave them goodbye," Foulkrod continues.
"Then we see shots of them coming home, and we don't show anything in
between." The Ground Truth, which opens this fall through Focus
Features, details the shattered lives and illnesses, such as depression
and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), that today's soldiers face
upon their return from both Iraq and Afghanistan.
National Guardsman Paul Rieckhoff, who appears in the film, shared some
sobering statistics with the teary-eyed audience following a screening
at Sundance: "Over one million people have gone through the theater in
Iraq or Afghanistan since September 11. Roughly one in four return with
PTSD. The unemployment rate among veterans is double the national
average. We're seeing a tremendous human toll. It's not just a foreign
policy issue; it's becoming a domestic issue."
As Foulkrod goes behind the image of a jubilant military homecoming,
filmmakers Andrew Berends and James Longley go behind the standard
footage most often televised of Iraqis: the angry, chanting
demonstrators; the bearded cleric exhorting the crowd; the grieving,
wailing woman clad in black.
Both Longley and Berends comment on the complexity and diversity of
Iraq, which has not been conveyed adequately. "Iraq has 1,000 years of
history and culture," explains Berends, who spent six months there in
2004. He made the journey not knowing what his story would be,
motivated by the conviction to witness and document events first-hand.
He spent one week embedded with US troops, and the rest of the time
criss-crossing Baghdad with a translator, free to seek out the
experiences of Iraqi civilians. "I could go out every day and find a
new story and every day a tragic story," recalls Berends. His final
product was two complete films: The Blood of My Brother and When Adnan
Comes Home.
The Blood of My Brother premiered at IDFA in 2005 and had its US
premiere at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival. The film was released June
30 through LifeSize Entertainment. Ultimately, the story found Berends.
Ra'ad, a volunteer guard at a mosque, was mistaken for an insurgent and
was killed by US troops. Ra'ad's friends implored Berends to tell
Ra'ad's story. "Initially, I felt the story was over, but they brought
me to the family," Berends recalls. "It was a very strange thing to
show up on the third day of mourning to film. I met his brother and
mother and realized the drama was in the family going forward." The
film follows the family for six months, interweaving scenes of fighting
and the family mourning and suffering, which does not lessen over time.
In fact, their financial situation declines precipitously because of
Ra'ad's death.
Longley spent two and a half years in Iraq, well out of the "green
zone," and living in a neighborhood near one the world's oldest
universities. Although Longley initially considered embedding, he
"didn't succumb," as he found it easer to get material on his own,
accompanied by a translator. Embedding meant following the conventions
of a war movie. "I had a different mind-set," says Longley. "I was in a
war zone but not making a war movie."
"People do have this idea that there is an American side and then
there's an Iraqi side," Longley explains. "It's not a side; it's a
condition, and people either suffer more or less, per the occupiers."
Shot vrit-style using Panasonic DVX cameras, the film shows the
normalcy of daily lives: kids at school, men at work, shoppers in the
city markets. American troops and tanks are backdrop. "The occupation
is there," he continues. "It's either good or bad for people, but it's
not the center of their life; they can take it or leave it."
Iraq in Fragments is divided into three parts to illustrate how
Americans have been conditioned to view Iraqis--as Shiites, Sunnis and
Kurds. The reality is much more Byzantine. The first segment follows an
11-year-old Baghdad boy who works in an auto repair shop; we see the
occupation as it impacts his impoverished life. In the segment entitled
"Sadr's South," Longley shows the rise of Shiite power from inside the
holy city of Najaf.
In April 2004, the security situation drastically changed in Iraq with
the siege of Falluja and the Abu Ghraib prison revelations. It became
impossible for Westerners to move about freely. Longley moved in
September 2004 to northern Iraq. There he shot "Kurdish Spring," a
portrait of a relatively peaceful farming community. His emphasis was
on a very personal story of inter-generational disconnect.
Lyrically shot, with an emphasis on visual imagery, the film earned
Longley prizes at Sundance for documentary cinematography and
directing, as well as the first-ever documentary editing prize, shared
with Billy McMillin and Fiona Otway. The film also won the Grand Jury
Prize at Full Frame. Complex, layered sound design adds atmosphere and
sets a mood that helps push the film along.
Longley was able to finish production physically unscathed but explains
that the security situation is fundamentally worse. As more and more
Iraqis are affected, the interconnected nature of the society--its tribal
aspect--takes over. "In Iraqi culture, if a brother is killed then the
family must take revenge, not just you," Longley explains. "Your entire
clan is obligated to take revenge."
The Blood of My Brother aptly illustrates the ripple effect of one
man's death. Ra'ad's brother comes to decry the Americans. But what
Berends found after following both the American and Iraqi fighters in
Sadr City is that the war came down to young guys shooting at each
other. "I couldn't help thinking, if they would sit down at a table
with each other and close that distance, it would be impossible for the
war to continue," theorizes Berends. Part of his impetus in making both
documentaries was to close the distance between America and the Iraqi
people and the continuing war that "most people here don't want to
think about it."
On the domestic front, The Ground Truth aims to expose the war's
reality and heartbreak for returning soldiers, also ignored or avoided
by most. Says Foulkrod, "I tried to show how shattered many people
truly are when they come back from an environment, a situation where
they are doing and seeing things they never imagined possible for thema
kind of heartbreak that we have never experienced that they will have
the rest of their lives. What we do to people when we ask them to kill
has to be taken seriously if we care about human life." She recently
struck a deal with Focus Features to release the film.
Iraq does not appear to follow the conventions of an archetypal
conflict. There aren't tidily packaged evil-doers or enemies, and these
films reflect the war's ambiguous, difficult nature. The political
reasoning behind the conflict seems invisible on the streets and in the
neighborhoods of Iraq. Returning soldiers have difficulty living with
the betrayal they feel. But unlike those affected, after watching the
films and seeing the futility of conflict, the difficulty of resolution
and the terrible human cost, the audience goes home to peace. It
doesn't seem that the soldiers and Iraqis can even hope for it.
Kathy McDonald is a Los Angeles-based arts and entertainment journalist.