The earlier footage is nauseatingly shaky (people just couldn't hold the cameras steady) but people seemed to get better as the movie progressed. Some people did not seem to want to be filmed (I'm always irked when such people are shown in a release picture) but many people, especially children, seemed to love hamming it up for the camera.
The film shows a mixture of anti-American and pro-American sentiments. Although the film--especially in later portions--seems to be more pro- than anti-, that's not really what's important. What is important is that the message of the film is very loudly and clearly pro-Iraqi.
Indeed, this latter point is what struck me most about this film. Just listening to daily newscasts, one would get an impression that Iraq was some vast wasteland of desolation, but the movie shows a very different picture. People feel like they very much need security, which they don't have, but most also seem to have hope for the future.
I would highly recommend that anyone interested in this movie order it from NetFlix. It probably won't be possible for anyone who hasn't already gotten the film to do so before Tuesday, but even laying aside the issue of politics I would still recommend this film to anyone who wants to see how the human spirit can survive adversity.
theyve been surviving adversity for so long that just being able to speak and think for themselves is a blessing.
I hope that word of this video spreads so that people can see in this movie what I saw with my own eyes for a year. Iraq is not the ill planned quagmire-ish "distraction" that some people say it is.
I'm just glad that like the Iraqi people...I was there to see democracy born.
Thanks for the ping over!
I'm not that big on documentaries, but this one caught my eye while surfing IMDb.com today.
This movie is OUTSTANDING!!! Yes I have to SHOUT OUTSTANDING !!!
Shows that what we are doing out there DOES matter!