http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lxr8vzatJc1qca7yw.gif
― danzig, Friday, 1 February 2013 01:42 (thirteen years ago)
Not to stereotype, though he is pretty hammy.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 01:47 (thirteen years ago)
See the 3,000 human beings who tragically perished in the World Trade Center attacks on September 11. Do NOT see the hundreds upon hundreds upon hundreds of thousands of human beings who tragically perished in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan due to subsequent US invasions, bombings, and drone attacks. Do NOT see flashbacks of the United States creating and supporting dictatorial regimes to facilitate oil drilling in the region. Do NOT see Western sanctions imposed on Iraq years before September 11, 2001, which killed an estimated 500,000 Iraqi children. Also do NOT see people having qualms about the wisdom of killing bin Laden in the first place or the ethics of assassinating anyone based on a president’s secret “kill list.”
I feel like this is pretty much completely misreading the film as well as not understanding how to engage a film.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 01:48 (thirteen years ago)
"engage" as a verb that way = gtfo
― saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Friday, 1 February 2013 08:26 (thirteen years ago)
it's easy to play the "that's not what the film IS" game when the film is so little
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 13:25 (thirteen years ago)
yeah people with strong political beliefs about the movie are ranting about how all the film is is a glum progression through a "osama has got to be got" narrative that hops from one terrorist event to the next climaxing with ubl's death
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 13:26 (thirteen years ago)
i should say strong political beliefs about the real life events that the movie exploits to no end other than "I think we can all agree torture happened and this shit is heavy"
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 13:27 (thirteen years ago)
anybody who pulls some "oh, please leave it to the cineastes" crap needs to realize this isn't just playing in arthouses and isn't trying to
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 13:29 (thirteen years ago)
i mean i realize that some filmies get upset when people judge a movie for what it isn't rather than what it is, but when you make a reductive blockbuster out of one of the hottest topics in us foreign policy and call it journalism sometimes you just gotta deal with that
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 13:33 (thirteen years ago)
I can still bitch about it though. And seriously, where this film is playing is irrelevent.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:38 (thirteen years ago)
not if you're going to complain that people who care more about politics than movies are daring to discuss the movie
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:40 (thirteen years ago)
part of WHY you have more links to pundits than critics here is that the movie is more interesting as op-ed fodder than crit fodder
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:41 (thirteen years ago)
I'm not sure that's true but the political links are the only ones that people respond to. Granted, I get most of the links to write-ups about the film from Glen Greenwald's twitter feed, so I'm a bit to blame on that front.
I'm not complaining that people are talking about the film that aren't cineastes, it's just that a lot of these pundits are projecting so much of their own shit onto it (which is possible because, as you point out, it doesn't explicitly say much itself) that they've outright refused to consider what's going on with the movie.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:48 (thirteen years ago)
a large part of the problem is that editors tell newspaper critics not to do "politics" in their reviews
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 1 February 2013 14:53 (thirteen years ago)
so the critics judge the film on formalist grounds that are by nature amoral.
we all project our own shit onto the things we consume, they prob wldn't be understandable without us doing that - y'know, viewer + object = meaning
― Ward Fowler, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:55 (thirteen years ago)
is what's going on in the movie really that noteworthy? people with a professional stake in america's understanding of foreign policy are mad that america is being asked by hollywood to accept a simplistic CIA narrative - huffing that they don't acknowledge they're being asked to wearily accept a moody simplistic CIA narrative seems silly.
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:56 (thirteen years ago)
That's true, but a lot of the writing I've linked here from critics has been about the politics of it. J. Hoberman just released a book that deals with how Hollywood and cinema dealt with post 9/11 issues like the Iraq war and terrorism, so when he writes for the guardian about ZDT and it's politics and depiction of torture, he's not judging the film as amoral.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 14:57 (thirteen years ago)
Xpost to Alfred
i would love to see a pundit acknowledge that the insidiousness of the film (as i see it) is that its portentousness allows for people to have conflicted feelings about torture etc while still accepting a dubious Love The Troops narrative of What Happened, For Better Or Worse. But if they just say "ZDT is propaganda bullshit" while ignoring that nuance, I don't feel high'n'mighty about it because they're not wrong.
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:02 (thirteen years ago)
I saw that aspect differently than you and Zizek.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:07 (thirteen years ago)
But I really enjoyed that Zizek article, which I guess is crucial to my griping. It's not about disagreeing, it's about how they're reading what's actually on screen and then discussing it in a banal and unenlightening blog post.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:09 (thirteen years ago)
just gonna repost bigelow's read of her own movie
War, obviously, isn't pretty, and we were not interested in portraying this military action as free of moral consequences.
In that vein, we should never discount and never forget the thousands of innocent lives lost on 9/11 and subsequent terrorist attacks. We should never forget the brave work of those professionals in the military and intelligence communities who paid the ultimate price in the effort to combat a grave threat to this nation's safety and security.
Bin Laden wasn't defeated by superheroes zooming down from the sky; he was defeated by ordinary Americans who fought bravely even as they sometimes crossed moral lines, who labored greatly and intently, who gave all of themselves in both victory and defeat, in life and in death, for the defense of this nation.
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:22 (thirteen years ago)
Yes, but what Bigelow says for promotional purposes, or even what she genuinely believes, isn't the end all be all.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:24 (thirteen years ago)
"ugh, none of these people know how to read this movie, to deal with what it's actually saying"
"here's how the director reads it"
"well she might be lying and who cares"
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:25 (thirteen years ago)
No, not at all. I do think there is a degree of "look at how hard these people worked and how some died for it" - though I think the film lays Ehle's death down at her own stupidity - I just think it's more ambiguous than that. I know people who saw THL as a glorious ode to the troops, and maybe Bigelow thought that way when she made the movie, but the end product is, when it's at it's best, a critique of the Noble Warrior mentality that Americans tend to view the military with.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:30 (thirteen years ago)
i'm just saying that, if you're going to mock others for not being able to engage with the movie, you might consider that the ambiguity you admire is fairly superficial from an auteurist perspective (from curtis to keanu to chastain, she's implied that being the Good Guy is no fun and not without moral dilemmas) and, from political perspective, arguably mere window-dressing.
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:42 (thirteen years ago)
and that bigelow herself has reduced it to "sometimes they crossed lines, but"
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:43 (thirteen years ago)
Well we can disagree about the politics and the ambiguities, and I think it's reductive to say that bigelow's comments are "well they crossed a line, but...". I'm not mocking the people who interpret the film differently, I'm mocking the people who approach this as "hey what about drones and dead afghanis and dead Iraqis..."
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:48 (thirteen years ago)
how else would you approach it?
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 1 February 2013 15:49 (thirteen years ago)
By considering the film based on what it depicts and what it is about.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:50 (thirteen years ago)
And of course, how it depicts
gukbe, this is a DIRECT QUOTE: "(ubl) was defeated by ordinary Americans who fought bravely even as they sometimes crossed moral lines, who labored greatly and intently, who gave all of themselves in both victory and defeat, in life and in death, for the defense of this nation."
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:50 (thirteen years ago)
Also "we're not interested in depicting this military action as free of moral consequences."
I don't see a problem with approaching the men and women presented here as something other than a straight up good or a straight up evil.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:54 (thirteen years ago)
if you honestly think anyone is arguing for that binary, you're evading the point
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:56 (thirteen years ago)
And what point is that?
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:56 (thirteen years ago)
that while it's emotionally ambiguous about What Happened, it's not politically ambiguous at all.
it's also ironic to disqualify any opinion that the film should have acknowledged more aspects of the us' presence in afghanistan when the cia is complaining the film includes more torture than is relevant and the film infers a timeline between numerous terrorist activities outside The Hunt to argue for the necessity of ubl's death
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 15:59 (thirteen years ago)
I think it is politically ambiguous but hey ho.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 16:17 (thirteen years ago)
I also dont think those outside the hunt bits necessarily argue for the need for UBLs death.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 16:18 (thirteen years ago)
Surely it's more ironic to say this film is CIA propaganda when the CIA is complaining about it? Which is not a tack I would take but following on from your comment...
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 16:20 (thirteen years ago)
this has all been said before on this thread, but just because a movie allows for more conflicted feels than a rambo movie doesn't mean it's not a rambo narrative
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:21 (thirteen years ago)
the cia is complaining because it's even more rambo then they wanted
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:22 (thirteen years ago)
yeah i think this was a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too kind of movie, very hollywood in ideology
― goole, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:23 (thirteen years ago)
I don't see this as a Rambo narrative. I know we've gone over all this already, but I do like that it strongly suggests that torture led to UBL.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:25 (thirteen years ago)
sure it throws out enough particular ideas at you as maybes: maybe the degradation of torture is of greater moral weight than any purported utility, maybe getting osama is a pointless distraction, maybe devoting your life to the CIA is miserable, maybe we have no clue what we're doing in other societies, maybe our leaders are half-blind at best -- but there's no maybe about the central plotline: one woman worked like hell on her crazy scheme and the whole thing came off great!
idk if it's a rambo narrative as much as a "let's put on a show" narrative. or one of those misfit dance movies or something
― goole, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:30 (thirteen years ago)
the most interesting tension of the movie is how bad maya's reasoning is throughout, how little she has to really go on and how absolutely fanatically certain she is, how frankly right all of her detractors sound in their moment (ramirez, chandler). and of course we know "she" was successful irl. apart from the torture, this might be the creation of boal's that i think is worst.
― goole, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:33 (thirteen years ago)
it's all a bit Sarah Lund
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 1 February 2013 17:39 (thirteen years ago)
in rambo, a nutty maverick fights government bureaucracy to Avenge American Lives and Win A War that would otherwise go on interminably. I would argue the narrative of ZDT is fairly similar even if it's more emotionally conflicted
― da croupier, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:42 (thirteen years ago)
I think the "whole thing came up great" aspect is debatable. I linked up thread to the Taibbi piece where describes how the raid avoided the Michael Bay flash and yet he still had a "fuck yeah" moment, which just seems bizarre to me. I certainly felt a bit queasy by the end, and most of the people I saw it with didn't seem to find it terribly exhilarating or at least triumphant, and I saw it with a bunch of soldiers and probably a fair number of people that work in defense.
I guess Hoberman got pretty close to what I did at the end: Is Maya, like Ishmael, the lone survivor left clinging to the flotsam of the Pequod? Is she condemned, like Ethan Edwards at the end of The Searchers, to "wander forever between the winds"? What did it cost the girl (or Obama) or America to kill Bin Laden? Zero Dark Thirty slakes a thirst for vengeance and leaves an aftertaste of gall.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:43 (thirteen years ago)
It's hugely conflicted compared to Rambo, with its "do we get to win this time" aspect. There's certainly a degree of that and Dirty Harry maverick-ism going on, but I don't think the film portrays it in a positive way.
― Gukbe, Friday, 1 February 2013 17:44 (thirteen years ago)