10/10
Must-see documentary is very nearly unwatchable at times.
10 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Much like the director's Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, the subject of Taxi to the Dark Side carries the dual burdens of public burnout and simultaneous public smugness. We're tired of hearing of prisoner abuse, and moreover, we think we know all there is to know about it anyway.

I wouldn't have guessed that I could be affected by unedited imagery from Abu Gahrib but as it turns out, it's 24 hours since I saw TTTDS and I can't shake the images from my head. Many will want to hide their eyes from what our own tax dollars hath wrought, and perhaps some will be right to do so. This is a brutal, agonizing, blistering and exhausting journey that doesn't pull any punches. No digital scrambling or government double-speak to hide the unpleasant parts - just pure evil.

The screening audience was active with conversation when the lights came up and one was heard to say that this was a truer documentary than any created by Michael Moore. I don't know what that means, but without a doubt no documentary I have ever seen has gotten under my skin to such a degree. What makes it brilliant is that it captures, simultaneously, the evil that men (and women) do AND the faith that we all carry for greater human achievement.

A college professor once described "Schindler's List" as the story of God's grace in a godless place. What's agonizing about TTTDS is that for much of the film God is nowhere to be found, beyond the desperate screams of "Allah" as extricated from captives by US Soldiers given no direction and without a magnetic north in their moral compass.

Those who not only condone but advocate the horrors on display in this film are all here, in their own words, to justify their leadership with the talking points we've heard again and again over the past 5 years. In the context of Bagram and Guantanamo Bay their words take on a sinister edge I'd not heard before. I can't recommend this film highly enough, nor can I suggest more strongly that you do not know what you're in for.
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