So I'm filing this slightly tweaked piece on filmmaker
Eugene Jarecki’s 2005 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner
Why We Fight as both a first-run film and DVD review, because the bulk of it was written for IGN, but never posted there. Go figure. To wit:
Set against the backdrop of a tidal wave
of voter dissatisfaction with the current quagmire that is the war in
Iraq,
the documentary
Why We Fight is
especially illuminating. There have been a whole slew of
Iraq
documentaries — seemingly one every other week, and many evincing filmmaking
technique either lazy, presumptive, goading or some combination thereof.
Why We Fight, though, is a bigger and much more edifying examination
of the business that is the American war machine, and how this has informed our
culture throughout time, but particularly the 20th century.
Jarecki was initially inspired to make
Why We Fight when, while making
The
Trials of Henry Kissinger, he stumbled across the farewell address of then-outgoing
President Dwight Eisenhower. In the classic speech, Eisenhower, the former
Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe during World War II, warned
Americans of
the dangers of what he called “the military industrial complex,” a
term coined to describe the increasing power of abetting bureaucrats and
unelected — and thus unaccountable — think tanks and corporations who peddle
the big business of war.
Why We Fight
delves headlong into the apparent realization of that
prophecy (America now has a military budget greater than all other 18
members of NATO, and all other discretionary portions of our federal budget
combined), and how that connects to and informs the American psyche at large.
In assaying American wars dating back to the end of World War II, one finds that
all too often there’s a tremendous gulf between what Americans initially think a
particular war is about when it’s starting and happening, and what they
gradually start to wonder about over time. In a disconnect between public
policy debate and more privately held aims, the reasons we’re given for conflict
are not necessarily in keeping with what’s been discussed and going on behind closed
doors.
It sounds like a pretty damning indictment of the state of
democracy, and in some ways it is. Unlike Michael Moore or Robert Greenwald’s
films, though,
Why We Fight tends to take
a less overtly politicized bent. Statistics are meted out, and multiple
personal narrative arcs interwoven. Front-line i
nterview subjects range from William Kristol and Gore Vidal to John
McCain and the Center for Public Integrity's Charles Lewis; the opinion is
substantive and broader, and the discourse deeper.
The involving result is as much an intellectual mystery —
more whydunit than whodunit — as it is a sketch of America’s
collective psychological state. Jarecki makes a convincing case that the
American DNA, though certainly driven by idealism, is also equally influenced
by the many bloodstains of its past. The shattering emotional impact, of
course, comes from the way Eisenhower’s dark words of warning about the
comfortably aligned political and corporate interests (see Halliburton, et al)
with regards to war-waging as a business strategy have seemingly come entirely
true.
Housed in a regular, single-disc Amray case,
Why We Fight comes with a robust slate
of bonus material that highlights its paramount value as an educational title. The movie is
presented on DVD in a 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer, which preserves the
aspect ratio of its original, limited theatrical exhibition. The transfer is solid
and free from any obvious digital artifacts. Color levels are crisp and bright,
and Jarecki does a good job of integrating archived material with interview
footage shot both indoors and outdoors, making for a streamlined viewing experience
from a visual point-of-view. An English language Dolby digital 5.1 audio track anchors
Why We Fight, and cleanly and clearly
captures the movie’s dialogue and the like. As one might suspect, the aural
demands of a doc like this are relatively low key, but a few scant passages
focusing on military hardware showcase some of the film’s deeper register
range. In addition to the aforementioned track, there are subtitles in French,
Spanish and Portuguese.
While
the film itself is a knockout,
the DVD is driven by more than 100 minutes of
special features, starting with a hearty collection of extended and deleted
scenes. Most of these are extended interview bits, and no less interesting than
some of the material that made the movie’s 100-minute cut.
Next up is
a feature-length audio commentary track by
Jarecki and Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, which is nice because it further
elucidates many of the themes contained herein while also sprinkling in a few
anecdotes that relate to either the film’s production or military life and
point-of-view.
An audience Q&A from a special screening of the movie,
Jarecki’s television appearances on The
Daily Show and The Charlie Rose Show
and a clutch of educational DVD-ROM material follow, turning the disc into a
handy lesson plan for educators. There’s also a nice historical timeline that
boils down American armed conflicts throughout time.
The bottom line:
Why We Fight is
about the danger inherent in looking at and talking about all wars in the
context of grand, ultimate-good-versus-ultimate-evil struggles, and the
dangerous sort of carte blanche that
creates. It raises big questions about big themes — the country’s core
principles, as well as its massive commitments to such a standing army and
attendant infrastructure — but distills them in such a precise and skillful
fashion that the movie gets you thinking rather than only making you angry,
irritated and frozen by rage.
For an interview with Jarecki, click here.
A- (Movie) A (Disc)