IRAQ IN FRAGMENTS
Directed by: James
Longley
Internet Movie
Database Entry for full details
GRADE: A- (3.3/4)
2006.
I’d forgotten
that you could make a documentary outside of the Michael Moore/Robert
Greenwald style of made-for-TV, cut-and-paste jobs. Many of
the recent documentaries (eg. Who Killed the Electric Car?) have been no more cinematic than an episode of
Frontline, so James Longley’s Iraq in Fragments
was a pleasant surprise. It’s an artful and poetic
collage of images of destruction, commingled with a humanizing portrait
of ordinary Iraqi civilians; above all, though, it's cinematically interesting. Langley’s camera is
restless, and the effect is hypnotic and literally dizzying.
There is so much fascinating fodder all around him that it seems he
can’t film it fast enough.
The title refers both to the film’s tripartite structure as
well as the fragmentary nature of contemporary Iraq. There are no
interviews with pundits or talking heads -- all the footage comes from
the ground. Each
section of the film examines life among one of the country’s
different ethnic groups – Sunna, Shia, and Kurd –
usually focusing on one or two individuals. By examining the
different microcosms he hopes to elucidate the condition of the
macrocosm.
The violence is as ubiquitous as the cigarette smoke (Iraq seems to have no shortage of cigarettes and guns). As a
small Sunni boy says, “it’s scary,
there’s no security”; a group of Shia
fundamentalists beat and kidnap a group of men at gunpoint whose only
crime is the purveyance of alcohol in the market (“and I used
to complain about Saddam!” one declares); Kurdistan is
perpetually covered by billowing streams of thick black
smoke. Peter Galbraith, in his new book The End of Iraq,
argues in support of breaking the country up into three autonomous
regions, of the country getting a divorce so to speak. Langley demonstrates through images that the country seems headed
that way because of the deep, and partly manufactured, divisions
between its rival groups.
Iraq’s future, for now, is uncertain except in that it will
certainly be violent. The depiction of Shia religious fervor
in the second part is especially frightening to consider as the
future of Iraq, particularly as it seems probable given their majority
position. One cleric cryptically contends, “The
true democracy is Islam.”
Nearly
all the Iraqis on-screen gripe
about the American presence (fairly enough). But Mohammed's,
the child protagonist of the first chapter, father is absent because he
was disappeared by Saddam. Iraq was vicious under Hussein,
it’s just as, if not more, miserable now under the Americans,
and the prospect of a fundamentalist Shia domination on the horizon is
less than promising. The poor Iraqis seem perpetually fucked.
-- Henry Stewart
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