DIRTY WARS (2013)

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Investigative journalism can be a tricky endeavour; you are usually investigating something that someone doesn’t want you to uncover. There is also the precarious matter of moving yourself out of the way in order to deliver the most honest depiction of your subject matter.

Here, American journalist Jeremy Scahill begins his journey in Afghanistan, goes back to America and ends up in Somalia to see how far reaching the effects of covert operations all over the world are.
The revelations are shocking but unsurprising.
At one point one of the U.S backed warlords in Somalia is asked about whether America offered to fund any operations to which he replies “..no comment” he is then asked what the impact of the foreign led missions that kill innocent people is, the warlord states:
“America knows war. They are war masters. They know better than me. So when they are funding a war, they know how to fund it….They are teachers. Great teachers.”

America knows war.

There are so many facets to war and many of which we are unaware so when you watch a documentary like this it begs the question- Who is the real enemy? Are we complicit in these operations that we know nothing about? Under the mask of democracy and anti-terrorism, the industrial-military complex is seemingly able to do what they want in order to achieve their goal, which is to perpetuate more war.
War makes money, ‘screw the unfortunates who happen to have been born in the wrong place in the wrong times. They’re brown and poor; no-one will mourn for too long.’
The problem is that here lies the true crime, the turning of a people into an enemy. America has literally created the enemy. If your family was murdered, wouldn’t you want revenge? It is a natural human instinct. Not necessarily right but a true instinct.

On a chess board one doesn’t feel any human sympathy for a fallen knight, merely annoyance if it’s yours (unless it is a trap) or elation that you have gained ground on your enemy.
This is how the war chiefs must feel; a separation from the human face of it all, they do what they believe must be done. Acceptable collateral damage.

Make no mistake that war crimes are being committed every day by people on both sides of the chess board and the bully seems to be winning.

It is tragic, insightful, damning and powerful and a must-see.
As people have said before me, it was never going to win the Oscar for best doc as it sheds too much negative light on the ongoing activities of the war machine that is both shameful and embarrassing for the American peoples.

Jeremy Scahill doesn’t always manage to get out of the way, which is a shame as it would have hit home far harder had he been clear enough to tell the story without bringing too much of himself to the fore. Not to throw the baby out with the bathwater though, this is still definitely worth a watch.

3.4/5

BUY IT ON DVD HERE

DOWNLOAD THE FILM ON iTUNES HERE

 

HERE COMES THE DEVIL ‘Ah Hi Va el Diablo’ (2012)

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In the tradition of Hammer, Grand Guignol and the master of Italian horror Dario Argento,comes this Spanish tale of a family ripped apart by a strange encounter with a hill.

Mood and soundscape is the key to the horror here; the use of sound to provoke fear in the audience is very effective. This is eerie at its best. There are plenty of quick zoom shots that at first seem a little kitsch and outdated but after a while add to the unsettling nature of the story. There is one scene with an excessive use of stage blood (Argento homage) but otherwise this is predominantly an exercise in atmosfear.

A mother and father allow their kids to go up a hill while they stay in the car and what happens next is not for the faint of heart.
The mother and father jump to a conclusion and are consumed by the need for revenge.
Revenge is the best medicine if your preferred medicine of choice is poison.
It’ll get you in the end.
If the stories have taught us anything it’s that it’ll eat you up and you will equally be punished.

Here Come the Devil plays on your fears as the devil is wont to do and takes you on a journey you’re unlikely to forget.

The last shot is so disturbing in its ordinariness.
Evil takes its roots where it can, amongst the weak and easily influenced.

A truly unsettling film.

3.5/5

BUY THE BLU-RAY DVD HERE

DOWNLOAD THE FILM ON iTUNES HERE