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73 out of 88 people found the following review useful:
Frightening., 5 November 2004
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Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) from Luoyang, China
I spent some of last summer in Spain, traveling alone for a couple
weeks, as well as another week with my father, a Colombian immigrant.
The two and a half weeks that I spent there alone were an unforgettable
experience, despite the difficulty of speaking only the most basic,
functional Spanish. I essentially knew how to order coffee and ask
where the bathroom was, so I was limited to going into cafés and pubs
and ordering what I could point to. Once my father arrived, speaking
perfect Spanish, I was able to experience a much wider variety of what
Spain has to offer (not the least of which is the astonishingly
delicious paella), and my father, having not been back to Colombia in
35 years and never having been to Europe, was equally astounded not
just by the class and sophistication of the country and its people, but
by what could be found in bookstores.
Upon visiting the breathtaking Guggenheim Museum in a moderate sized
town in northern Spain called Bilbao, my father came upon a Spanish
book about the war in Vietnam. In perusing through the book, he and I
were both shocked at the things that were shown in it, particularly of
the atrocious acts of American soldiers. It's not portraying America in
a bad light, just not portraying them only in a good light, it shows
both sides, and it shows that the news outlets in America really play a
serious role in, to use the red flag word, propagandizing wars.
Control Room is a study of the Arab news network al Jazeera and how
this trend continues to this day. It is well known that the Bush
administration is among the most secretive administrations in United
States history, under the pretext of the struggle against terrorism and
the dangers in alerting the public, and thus the enemy, to all of its
policies and actions. What is truly disturbing, however, is the extent
to which this secrecy, at some level justified, is so grandly abused.
Donald Rumsfeld, our Secretary of Defense under President Bush, appears
a couple of times vehemently condemning anyone associated with al
Jazeera as a liar, propagandist, enemy of freedom, terrorist, etc.
Basically he makes no secret of his opinion that the network itself is
a terrorist organization populated and run by all of the above
caricatures created by the rhetorical Bush administration.
The movie's most moving sequences, interestingly enough, are those that
feature Iraqis, who look exactly what most Americans associate with the
typical insurgent or terrorist, sitting around and debating what to do
about the impending war, how to protect their children, their families,
their livelihood, their lives. Where Michael Moore went completely over
the top, showing kids dancing in the streets under Saddam and people
getting married (his intent to show some level of normal life, even
under Saddam, was instantly eclipsed by his opponents immediately
pretending that he wants people to believe Moore thought it was all fun
and games under Hussein), Control Room simply walks in with a camera,
filming normal Iraqi men and women anxiously watching the news, fearful
for their safety, not from Hussein and not even from their liberators,
but from the invaders.
In one telling scene, an Iraqi man criticizes Saddam Hussein, itself a
dangerous thing to do under the dictatorship, for not being more
prepared for the incoming attack in order to protect himself. This man
was disappointed in Saddam not for being a brutal dictator, but for
allowing the Americans to take over.
The most damaging assessment that the movie makes against Americans is
the way the Arab news outlets were destroyed. In one day, three
separate attacks were clearly aimed at news outlets, under the pretense
that they were distributing terrorist propaganda, but still with the
result that it showed the Iraqi and all of the Arab world that the
Americans want total control of what anyone hears about the war. As
Bush said, you're either with us or against us. It kind of reminds me
of how, if any newspaper or television news station or any kind of
media outlet criticizes one of the countless blunders made by the Bush
administration, it is instantly dubbed left-wing media by mostly the
more idiotic right wing nutcases, like Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage,
and the malicious Ann Coulter.
Theaters and video stores, in the run up to the 2004 election, have
been increasingly bombarded with a barrage of political documentaries,
mostly after Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 opened the floodgates of
political fervor in the film and video industry. Both sides are guilty
of underhanded tactics, and Control Room is not entirely free of taking
one side or the other, but it doesn't do it in the same way that
Fahrenheit 9/11 twisted things and theorized, nor does it do it in the
same way as Fahrenhype 9/11, which criticized Fahrenheit 9/11 as much
as possible for as many different underhanded tactics as possible, and
then went on to employ those same tactics itself.
Control Room is not a fancy documentary; it was filmed, I believe,
entirely on MiniDV, which is becoming the standard in home video
cameras, and is comprised mostly of people involved with al Jazeera
talking about what it's like to work there, as well as interviews
between al Jazeera reporters and American soldiers. Personally, the
most disturbing moments in the film were the entirely believable
suggestion that the Iraqis celebrating in the streets when Saddam's
statue was torn down were brought in by the Americans for the purpose
of the photo shoot (this is the definition of textbook military
propaganda), and the sickening scene in which one soldier absolutely
insists that the nation of Iraq is at least partially responsible for
the chaos that followed the fall of Saddam.
This, more than anything else I've ever seen in news or any kind of
media, is the clearest example of the total lack of any kind of postwar
planning by the Bush administration. They were so clueless about what
was going to happen even minutes after they succeeded in taking out
Saddam Hussein (by the way, I say 'they' referring to the Bush
administration, not to Americans as a whole, in which case I would, of
course, use 'we') that I genuinely wonder if they even planned on how
to get the soldiers back home to America, or if they thought that
Saddam was gone so let's go back to Camp David and play golf.
Oops, there I go going over the top. Now I sound like Michael Moore.
But the point that the movie sets out to make, and succeeds in very
well, is showing that all sides are necessary. No one side can be in
control of all news outlets, because that is a recipe for propaganda.
And not only do we have to make sure to allow other people to broadcast
their views, we can't just go in and destroy their news stations and
claim that it was because they were terrorist agencies, because that
act alone presents America as the bullies and, given our logic (or lack
thereof) in attacking Iraq after 9/11 rather than seeking out that
tragedy's perpetrators, we're doing badly enough in that area already.
46 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
If You Think Micheal Moore Is A Bad Filmmaker With Good Ideas..., 11 March 2005
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Author:
honeybearrecords from United States
For me, Al-Jazeera means one thing: proof. When I think of how skewed
and yellow video journalism is, I remember that millions and millions
of people in the world are getting their news from Al-Jazeera. That's
my proof that there is hope for the world. That they are willing to
challenge and question everything from Arab leaders to the United
States to the nature of unbiased news coverage
Since their start in
1996, they've been slammed in the Arab world for being too pro-American
and by the US for being pro-Al Qaeda. As most good lefties know, that
usually means you're doing something right. I have much respect for
Al-Jazeera and was excited to know that a documentary was being made
about them and their take on the War with Iraq.
The film "Control Room" is further proof. With time-tested verité
technique, we see what it is like to run Al-Jazeera and what kinds of
people make up the staff from the translators to the journalists. The
film travels back and forth between the stations headquarters in Qatar
and CentCom which is the main press briefing room set up by the US
military in Iraq. It's a breath of fresh air to see an entire network
of people who are smart and committed to the idea of debate and
communication. I don't think you could find that at any of the major
news networks in the States. Their operations, anecdotes and analysis
are worthy of a documentary alone.
But there are specific moments in the film that are especially profound
and upsetting even to a long-time commie like myself. First and
foremost, there is the death of an Al-Jazeera journalist. Before the
troops entered Baghdad, the US committed air strikes on civilian
targets including the building housing Al-Jazeera. In the attack, one
of their correspondents is killed along with three other journalists.
There is footage of the journalist facing him head-on right up until
seconds before the attack. That along with a plea for justice from the
journalist's wife and a completely absurd justification for the attack
from the US is both infuriating and literally sickening.
The second most important moment in the film is the so-called
liberation of Baghdad. As a result of the attack on Al-Jazeera, their
remaining correspondents were forced to return home to Qatar where the
network is based. Now recognized as a target of the US military, Iraqis
were naturally hesitant to house anyone representing the station. In
the end, only the ridiculous foreign press was there to cover the
troops coming into the town square and the people toppling over the
statue of Saddam Hussein. What's most illuminating is the analysis from
the Al-Jazeera journalists as they watch the events unfold. Senior
Producer Samir Khader talks about how he's from Iraq. He's lived in
Iraq. The people that toppled the statue were not Iraqi. They didn't
look Iraqi and they didn't have Iraqi accents. Another journalist
wonders why there are only a dozen people celebrating. Where were the
village people? Where were the women from the area? How is it that one
of them just happened to have the old Iraqi flag in his pocket? Had he
"just kept it there for the past ten years?" Producer Deema Khatib
wonders where the troops were. Where was the army? It becomes very
obvious, as people have been muttering for some time now that it was
all a faked, staged event for Western "news" cameras.
Finally there is the case of Lt. Josh Rushing. Throughout the film, he
is the American representative that has debates and discussions with
the many Arab journalists. Despite having to take the absurd position
of defending US aggression, he is intelligent and empathetic. At one
point he becomes self-analytical and candid talking about how he had
seen images of dead Iraqi casualties one day and it didn't affect him.
The next day, he was footage of American casualties and it made him
sick. At that point he really had to face himself and while still in
the process at least recognize how much he hates war. That story
doesn't end there. With the release of the film, the Pentagon ordered
Rushing not to comment on the film. Offended by this gesture, he is now
seeking to leave the Marines.
"Control Room" is a movie about the War with Iraq. But that's not the
half of it. It's a movie that will hopefully widen the debate about
television and what is objective journalism in this country. It's also
another stone catapulted through the wall of Arab stereotypes. It's
also an intelligent and engaging film that is as challenging as it is
satisfying.
25 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
Rumsfeld's 'truth' may come more from the beleaguered Arab network than the carefully controlled coalition., 17 June 2004
Author:
John DeSando (jdesando@columbus.rr.com) from Columbus, Ohio
When Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld declares in the early stages of
the Iraq War, ''Truth ultimately finds its way to people's eyes and
ears and hearts,'' I knew I would like 'Control Room.' I did feel truth
peeking through the eyes of the Al Jazeera Satellite Network war
coverage, perhaps the most damning moment coming when the coalition
forces attack the Al-Jazeera building and kill a prominent journalist.
Egyptian-born, Harvard-educated director Jehane Noujaim, having worked
with D. A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus on ''Only the Strong Survive''
and ''Startup.com,' is no objective documentarian: She cuts her film to
the best advantage of the Arab network as the voice of the Arab
oppressed and to the obvious discomfort of the ' occupying' forces,
especially the US.
If you factor in her bias and listen to the occasionally reasonable
Centcom Press Officer, Lt. Josh Rushing, you may yet believe that
Rumsfeld's 'truth' comes more from the beleaguered Arab network than
the carefully controlled coalition. But Rushing provides the most truth
in the film, for instance, when he confesses, 'Our rule back here is to
not spin, but sometimes we catch ourselves doing a little spin on a
story. You can't help it.' Lt. Rushing is one of the more interesting
characters, at first a central-casting officer spouting the Pentagon
message. But when he sees film of suffering and dead American soldiers,
he admits, "It makes me hate war." Regardless of which side you're on,
most viewers can relate.
When an Arab producer exclaims that the drama unfolding is just like an
American movie, where the god guys are easily identifiable, the bad
guys will be punished, and the audience wants to know how the ending
will be reached, the director mixes fiction and reality in a way that
reminds all students of film there cannot be truly unbiased films once
someone picks up a camera.
Let 'Control Room' stand tall next to last year's Earl Morris
documentary 'Fog of War,' starring a still-sharp and still-deluded
Robert McNamara, looking a bit like Donald Rumsfeld. His statement
about Al Jazeera, ''We are dealing with people who are willing to lie
to the world to make their case,'' is too ironic to be left out of a
documentary that makes a liberal criticism of the neocons' great war
seem, well, believable.
There are so many secrets and lies in the world political scene today
that I am reminded of Joseph Conrad's Marlow in 'Heart of Darkness,'
who said there was 'a flavor of mortality in lies, -- which is exactly
what I hate and detest in the world -- what I want to forget.' The
official body count in Iraq may be mute testimony to the legacy of
lies. Like the 9/11 Commission report on the lack of connection between
Iraq and al Quaida, 'Control Room' tries to balance the scales before
Michael Moore's 'Fahrenheit 9/11' upsets it even more.
21 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Made me want to be a journalist/documentary filmmaker, 4 April 2005
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Author:
PauldeRev from United States
I don't, on average, give anything a 10 out of 10. Control Room,
however, I simply cannot praise enough. If there were ever a
quintessential journalistic document to point to 100 years down the
road and say: "THAT was what it was like in the world, sonny boy," this
documentary would be it. It will make you feel differently about
journalistic objectivity, terrorism, mortality, and (most importantly)
the world outside the United States. I wish every U.S. citizen (the
ones who vote anyway) could see this documentary. If it grossed half as
much money as Farenheight 9/11 -- the world would be a better, more
critically minded place.
We could all be journalists, and we could all keep our world in check.
You can, too. SEE THIS MOVIE. ACT ON WHAT YOU BELIEVE.
20 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Superb Documentary, 30 June 2004
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Author:
David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
"Control Room" takes a hard look at the Al-Jazeera news network, but on a grander scale shows us how important the role of media is in war. Media is a tool or war, and war a tool of media. There's some disturbing stuff here, and also some raw moments of human emotion (war is hell, and covering war can tear out someone's soul). The makers of this film also show how propaganda can be spewed from both sides (Fox News, anyone?) and no war can be fought intelligently without propaganda and the media. In the end, this is probably the closest thing we will get to an unbiased look at the strife in the Middle East. We the viewers feel sympathy for those innocents caught in the cross-fire and empathy for all sides involved on the battle fields and behind the scenes. Powerful, thought-provoking, educational and debate worthy, there need to be more documentaries like this in times like these.
17 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Should be REQUIRED for some viewing, 29 January 2005
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Author:
fevercity from United States
I'll be the first to admit that this film is good but not great. All
politics aside, I was just left hanging in the balance wanting MORE.
Though I can appreciate their limited access to outside footage and
English-speaking counterparts, certain scenes tended to drag on a bit
and left me wondering what could have been.
That said, per my subject heading, I feel that this should be REQUIRED
viewing for any concerned citizen grappling with the media coverage and
news-spin of this and all other wars. Much like BRAVO's "Anatomy Of A
Scene", the unfolding of the 'end of the war' and the subsequent
toppling of Saddam's statue in the square both serve as serious
examples of Al Jazeera news coverage vs. 'The Big Boys'. It's just
completely different when seen through the intelligent, capable eyes of
the Al-Jazeera staff than what we're spoon-fed by Fox, et. al. Check it
out...... Really.....
13 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Life at Cent-Com, 1 February 2005
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
"Control Room" shows the preparations prior to the Iraq conflict, as
the world news media was positioning itself for the war that everybody
knew was coming. The Cent-Com, or center of communications, was
something the United States arranged in order to disseminate news about
the Coalition's invasion of Iraq. This way, the different
representatives of the global media would get the news from one source,
without having to follow the fighting troops on the ground.
In a way, this was the U.S. attempt to put its own input in what it
wanted to the world to know. In doing so, little did the powers that be
considered what a small Arab news network would do to tell viewers in
that part of the world about what they perceived was going on. In doing
so, Al Jazeera became one of the most hated news group by the people
trying to liberate Iraq. From Donald Rumsfeld and his colleagues, one
couldn't expect any differently.
In a democracy, all voices have a right to be heard. Unfortunately, for
Al Jazeera, they stepped on too many toes by telling a different story
from the official one Washington wanted everyone to know. That was only
the beginning.
Up to that point, Al Jazeera was considered an enemy by most Arab
states in the region because in their way of thinking. This news agency
was pro-coalition, therefore, pro-American and anti-Arab. Al Jazeera
became a symbol of opposition to the U.S. involvement in Iraq. Al
Jazeera had the advantage of being from the region and understanding
the mentality of the people, something the American planners didn't
take into consideration.
At the Cent-Com commanding post we meet Josh Rushing, the American in
charge of coordinating the news. He is a decent man. At times, he is
seen torn between reality, as the Al Jazeera correspondents tell him
and his own loyalties to his country and the war cause. We doubt that
after this documentary was shown, he is still at his post!
There are disturbing moments when we watch people hurt in the conflict.
War is ugly and lots of innocents die. There is a segment in which one
of the Baghdad's reporters sits at the roof of the building that housed
the Al Jazeera's studios visually frightened as the bombing increases.
Later on we get to know that Tarek Ayoub was killed in the bombing of
that building. Was it a coincidence or a deliberate attempt to silence
those irritating little men?
Al Jazeera was the antidote to the Fox News machinery. In watching the
documentary, the viewer gets to see the story told from a different
perspective. In a way, our view is balanced because we see the other
side in a way we didn't know existed.
17 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Perception and Substance, 6 March 2005
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
They are a horde of sand monkeys screaming hysterically, jumping up and
down, waving their fists in the air, and they all have their heads
wrapped in tablecloths stolen from Italian restaurants -- right? Well,
not quite, according to this documentary from Noujaim, which focuses on
the producers and staff of the much-maligned al Jaziera satellite news
channel which broadcasts to the Arab-speaking world.
The reporter we get to know best, a big guy who looks like Luciano
Pavarotti in makeup for a performance of Otello, and who speaks English
fluently (his wife is an Englishwoman), is like most other reporters of
whatever channel or nationality -- practical, cynical, and good
humored. He doesn't give us an anti-American diatribe. He's way too
cool for that. He's watching, for instance, the tape of a demonstration
in which yelling, leaping children surround some Americans entering
Baghdad and he's listening to the English translation. The children are
shouting "Allah" something or other and the on screen translator
comments that the kids are saying "God be with you Americans!" The
reporter smiles and turns to the camera, explaining that what the kids
are actually saying is, "God damn you Americans." He has a keen sense
of irony.
So does another translator who is watching Bush's "Mission
Accomplished" speech on live TV and giving the Arabic translation to
the audience. When Bush is finally finished telling us how successful
we and our allies have been, how the war has ended, the translator
shuts off his mike, lowers his face and wordlessly chuckles.
At another point, after the victory, Iraqis are seen breaking into a
bank, emerging which armfuls of money, which they then gleefully tear
up and toss in the air. Watching this on TV an al Jaziera staff member
remarks that these are Kurds and they're tearing up the dough because
it's the new Dinar with Saddam's picture, and in that region they've
always used the old pre-1991 currency. At the same time, elsewhere, an
American newsman (from CNN, I think) is watching the scene and calls to
someone to find out what it is these looters are tearing up. Is it
money, or what? And when asked at a briefing to explain why these
looting incidents are going on in the destroyed and chaotic cities, an
American general replies that this was going on under the noses of the
Iraqis themselves. (In other words, some Iraqi authority should have
put a stop to it.) But the film makers are mistaken if they think that
most of this isn't already known to American audiences. The problem
isn't so much that American audiences were ignorant of some of these
things, but that they preferred the perception to the substance. Take
the concept of victory. The perception is "the liberated people"
pulling down a statue of the reviled Hussein. That's part of the
substance too. Another part of the substance is videotape of dead and
bloody American bodies sprawled on a cement floor, a part that, like
the coffins arriving at Dover AFB, we'd rather exclude. Al Jaziera
showed both scenes.
I don't mean any of this to sound too simple minded. It's a thorny
problem. Exactly how do you edit the substance so that what appears in
the media is acceptable -- in the sense that it doesn't get you fired
or killed. The journalist's code of course is to be "objective," but
objectivity itself depends on perception.
A sympathetic Marine captain, seen in several interviews, doing his
best to answer unanswerable questions, poses the conundrum in its most
basic form. Something like, "I was watching American TV and saw shots
of these bodies of dead civilians, including kids, and I thought,
that's too bad. Then I ate dinner and went to sleep. Recently I was
watching al Jaziera and saw shots of bodies of dead American GIs, and I
really got MAD. Then I thought, maybe THEY feel the same way." The
officer is a surprisingly earnest guy in an impossible job. He's trying
to learn Arabic, is terribly flattered when asked to come home and have
dinner with Pavarotti and his English wife. His happiness at being
treated amicably is almost palpable.
If you put the wrong material on the air, you're liable to pay for it.
Al Jaziera's headquarters in Baghdad was bombed during the war and one
of its reporters killed. Another Arab news agency was bombed at the
same time, and a hotel too. The financial reporter from al Jaziera was
banned from the New York Stock Exchange too. (Not mentioned in this
film.) We're going to have to wait for another documentary to explain
the reasons for that, I guess.
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
media criticism, 2 June 2005
Author:
youngdubzgirl from United States
I found myself watching this film by myself in the dark, got up half
way into it and emailed every person in my family and extended family
that they had to netflix this film.
I found that because it wasn't trying to be artsy, or controversial, or
uncover any hidden secrets, this film truly worked magic in its "roll
the cameras and lets see what happens" form of cinema.
I tried thinking of my favorite part of the film, but really, it was
all amazing. Without making insinuations or suggestions, the film truly
lets the viewer decide for himself what the real truth is, more so than
in any Michael Moore film ever made on any subject. This film truly
puts Michael Moore to shame.
Pay attention to every "character" in this film: they all have
important roles on how the media and government, and in turn society,
collide and interact.
I found it most amazing that any assumption or doubt I had about any of
these characters were completely wrong in the end, and what you find is
that they are all on the same side: the side of truth....the only
problem is whose truth they believe.
I can't express clearly enough how important it is for everyone to see
this film. If you saw Farenheit 9/11, you absolutely have to see this
film. ABSOLUTELY HAVE TO SEE THIS FILM!!!!
11 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Moving, 25 July 2004
Author:
leighs73 from Philadelphia
Two things moved me very much about this film:
The first was Lt Rushing, one of the US military media liaison officers
at Centcom. His open-mindedness, fairness and plain decency are very
rare to find in any spin doctor, let alone one working for an army
during a war. He is a credit to himself, his family and his country,
and I sincerely hope he hasn't suffered any professional repercussions
for his honesty in this piece.
The second was the man who was the head of Al Jazeera. It was funny
when he said he would accept a job at Fox News the second it was
offered. But it turned out to be heartbreaking when he said as soon as
his children are old enough, he'll send them to the US for education,
in order to escape the "Arab nightmare" and live the "American dream".
It's so sad that that part of the world is such a mess that even people
who love it and have grown up there and are rooting for it recognise
that there is little hope there for their children. If only that
sentiment could be channelled into finding a solution for the problems
in the Middle East.
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