CODEPINK
recommends these movies to your local group. Host
a DVD party with other local members and get informed,
activated and energized with these films and transform
your concern into action! |
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Iraq for Sale
Iraq
for Sale: The War Profiteers is the story of what
happens to everyday Americans when corporations
go to war. Acclaimed director Robert Greenwald
(Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price, Outfoxed
and Uncovered) takes you inside the lives of soldiers,
truck drivers, widows and children who have been
changed forever as a result of profiteering in
the reconstruction of Iraq. Iraq for Sale uncovers
the connections between private corporations making
a killing in Iraq and the decision makers who
allow them to do so.
Purchase now for only $5 Buy
it here.
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War Made Easy
War Made Easy reaches into the Orwellian memory hole to expose a
50-year pattern of government deception and media spin that has dragged
the United States into one war after another from Vietnam to Iraq.
Narrated by actor and activist Sean Penn, the film exhumes remarkable
archival footage of official distortion and exaggeration from LBJ to
George W. Bush, revealing in stunning detail how the American news
media have uncritically disseminated the pro-war messages of successive
presidential administrations.War Made Easy gives special attention to
parallels between the Vietnam war and the war in Iraq. Guided by media
critic Norman Solomon’s meticulous research and tough-minded analysis,
the film presents disturbing examples of propaganda and media
complicity from the present alongside rare footage of political leaders
and leading journalists from the past, including Lyndon Johnson,
Richard Nixon, Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, dissident Senator
Wayne Morse, and news correspondents Walter Cronkite and Morley Safer.
Purchase now for only $5 Buy
it here.
In the Valley of Elah
"In
the Valley of Elah" tells the story of a
war veteran (Tommy Lee Jones), his wife (Susan
Sarandon) and the search for their son, a soldier
who recently returned from Iraq but has mysteriously
gone missing, and the police detective (Charlize
Theron) who helps in the investigation. Paul Haggis
directs from his original screenplay based on
a story by Mark Boal and Haggis. This will be
Haggis' directing follow-up to the Academy Award-winning
"Crash." In addition to the Oscar-winning
screenplay for "Crash," his recent writing
credits include the award-winning "Million
Dollar Baby," for which he received an Academy
Award-nomination for Best Screenplay, and current
releases "The Last Kiss," "Flags
of Our Fathers," sino Royale" and "Letters
From Iwo Jima." The film is produced by Paul
Haggis, Larry Becsey, Patrick Wachsberger, Steve
Samuels and Darlene Caamano Loquet. A Summit Entertainment
and Samuels Media presentation in association
with Nala Films and Blackfriars Bridge.
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The Objective
In
Ghazni Province, Afghanistan, a Special Forces team meets CIA Agent
Benjamin Keynes, who explains their mission to find a very important
Afghan cleric by the name of Mohammad Aban. The team leader, Wally
Hamer sends the men to ready themselves. After being inserted, the team
finds a local guide, Abdul, in a village in Southern Afghanistan, where
the cleric is from. Together, they set out for the mountains, where the
cleric is reputed to be hiding.As they head further into the mountains,
they begin to have strange encounters, first with armed gunmen, who
simply disappear when shot, later with strange forces. The further they
go, the more dangerous it becomes, as the team realises they are
looking not for someone, but something that may not be of this world.
Buy it here.
The Messenger
Ben Foster stars as Will Montgomery, a U.S. Army officer who has just returned home from a tour in Iraq and is assigned to the Army’s Casualty Notification service. Partnered with fellow officer Tony Stone (Woody Harrelson) to bear the bad news to the loved ones of fallen soldiers, Will faces the challenge of completing his mission while seeking to find comfort and healing back on the home front. When he finds himself drawn to Olivia (Samantha Morton), to whom he has just delivered the news of her husband's death, Will’s emotional detachment begins to dissolve and the film reveals itself as a surprising, humorous, moving and very human portrait of grief, friendship and survival.
Buy it here.
Green Zone
Green Zone is a film set in the chaotic early days of the Iraqi War when no one could be trusted and every decision could detonate unforeseen consequences. During the U.S.-led occupation of Baghdad in 2003, Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller (Damon) and his team of Army inspectors were dispatched to find weapons of mass destruction believed to be stockpiled in the Iraqi desert. Rocketing from one booby-trapped and treacherous site to the next, the men search for deadly chemical agents but stumble instead upon an elaborate cover-up that inverts the purpose of their mission. Spun by operatives with intersecting agendas, Miller must hunt through covert and faulty intelligence hidden on foreign soil for answers that will either clear a rogue regime or escalate a war in an unstable region. And at this blistering time and in this combustible place, he will find the most elusive weapon of all is the truth.
Buy it here.
September Tapes
Commercial director Christian Johnston makes his feature film debut with the dramatic thriller September Tapes. The story takes place in Afghanistan, one year after the events of September 11. American journalist Don Larson (George Calil) and his two companions travel to Kabul in order to investigate the search for Osama bin Laden. After meeting with members of the Northern Alliance, he is arrested for taking photographs. While he's incarcerated, Don learns about a bounty hunter named Babak who may be able to help them. September Tapes premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2004 as part of the American Spectrum competition.
Buy it here.
The Hurt Locker
Based on the personal wartime experiences of journalist Mark Boal (who adapted his experiences with a bomb squad into a fact-based, yet fictional story), director Kathryn Bigelow's Iraq War-set action thriller The Hurt Locker presents the conflict in the Middle East from the perspective of those who witnessed the fighting firsthand -- the soldiers. As an elite Army Explosive Ordnance Disposal team tactfully navigates the streets of present-day Iraq, they face the constant threat of death from incoming bombs and sharp-shooting snipers. In Baghdad, roadside bombs are a common danger. The Army is working to make the city a safer place for Americans and Iraqis, so when it comes to dismantling IEDs (improvised explosive devices) the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) crew is always on their game. But protecting the public isn't easy when there's no room for error, and every second spent dismantling a bomb is another second spent flirting with death. Now, as three fearless bomb technicians take on the most dangerous job in Baghdad, it's only a matter of time before one of them gets sent to "the hurt locker."
Buy
it here.
My Country, My Country
Director/cinematographer Laura Poitras creates an extraordinarily intimate portrait of Iraqis living under U.S. occupation. Her principal focus is Dr. Riyadh, an Iraqi medical doctor, father of six and Sunni political candidate. An outspoken critic of the occupation, he is equally passionate about the need to establish democracy in Iraq, arguing that Sunni participation in the January 2005 elections is essential. Yet all around him, Dr. Riyadh sees only chaos, as his waiting room fills each day with patients suffering the physical and mental effects of ever-increasing violence. Dramatically interwoven into the personal journey of Dr. Riyadh is the landscape of the US military occupation, with Australian private security contractors, American journalists and the UN officials who orchestrate the elections. Unfolding like a narrative drama, MY COUNTRY, MY COUNTRY follows the agonizing predicament and gradual descent of one man caught in the tragic contradictions of the U.S. occupation of Iraq and its project to spread democracy in the Middle East.
Buy
it here.
No End in Sight
The first film of its kind to chronicle the reasons behind Iraq’s descent into guerilla war, warlord rule, criminality and anarchy, NO END IN SIGHT is a jaw-dropping, insider’s tale of wholesale incompetence, recklessness and venality. Based on over 200 hours of footage, the film provides a candid retelling of the events following the fall of Baghdad in 2003 by high ranking officials such as former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, Ambassador Barbara Bodine (in charge of Baghdad during the Spring of 2003), Lawrence Wilkerson, former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell, and General Jay Garner (in charge of the occupation of Iraq through May 2003) as well as Iraqi civilians, American soldiers, and prominent analysts. NO END IN SIGHT examines the manner in which the principal errors of U.S. policy – the use of insufficient troop levels, allowing the looting of Baghdad, the purging of professionals from the Iraqi government, and the disbanding of the Iraqi military – largely created the insurgency and chaos that engulf Iraq today. How did a group of men with little or no military experience, knowledge of the Arab world or personal experience in Iraq come to make such flagrantly debilitating decisions? NO END IN SIGHT dissects the people, issues and facts behind the Bush Administration’s decisions and their consequences on the ground to provide a powerful look into how arrogance and ignorance turned a military victory into a seemingly endless and deepening nightmare of a war. Buy
it here.
Taxi to the Dark Side
Alex Gibney (Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room) directs this Best Documentary Oscar winner that uses interviews, news footage and firsthand reports to examine the Bush administration's policy on torture. The film focuses on the case of an Afghan taxi driver who picked up three passengers and never returned home. Instead, he wound up dead at the Bagram Air Base, killed by injuries inflicted by U.S. soldiers. Buy
it here.
Iraq in Fragments
An opus in three parts, Iraq In Fragments offers a series of intimate, passionately-felt portraits: A fatherless 11-year-old is apprenticed to the domineering owner of a Baghdad garage; Sadr followers in two Shiite cities rally for regional elections while enforcing Islamic law at the point of a gun; a family of Kurdish farmers welcomes the US presence, which has allowed them a measure of freedom previously denied. American director James Longley spent more than two years filming in Iraq to create this stunningly photographed, poetically rendered documentary of the war-torn country as seen through the eyes of Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds. Winner of Best Director, Best Cinematography and Best Editing awards in the 2006 Sundance Film Festival documentary competition, the film was also awarded the Grand Jury Prize at the 2006 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and Jury Prize at the 2006 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. Buy
it here.
When I Came Home
When I Came Home is a film about homeless veterans in America: from those who served in Vietnam to those returning from the current war in Iraq. The film looks at the challenges faced by returning combat veterans and the battle many must fight for the benefits promised to them.Through the story of Herold Noel, an Iraq War veteran suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and living in his car in Brooklyn, When I Came Home reveals a failing system and the veteran’s struggle to survive after returning from the war. Buy
it here.
Restrepo
Winner of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize for a Documentary, RESTREPO chronicles the deployment of a U.S. platoon of courageous American soldiers in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley, considered to be one of the most dangerous postings in the U.S. military. From May 2007 to July 2008, Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger dug in with the men of the Second Platoon, Battle Company of the 503rd Infantry Regiment (airborne), stationed at Restrepo, sharing duties and shooting more than 150 hours of combat, frustration, routine, jokes, terror and bravery during daily life at the outpost. Hetherington and Junger, have made a film unlike any other about men in harm’s way. We see their courage. We experience their frustrations. We share their bonding. We hear the music they listen to, and we see the snapshots of their kids that they pass around. It is something that audiences have never before experienced. As they fight the Taliban, these 15 men win our hearts and minds in a way no fictional film can. Buy
it here.
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Winter Soldier
Winter Soldier documents the "Winter Soldier Investigation" conducted by Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) in Detroit, Michigan in the winter of 1971. This heartfelt, emotional story follows the VVAW as they call to veterans all over the country to come to Detroit to tell their stories. At the investigation, over 125 veterans representing every major combat unit to see action in Vietnam, gave eye-witness testimony to war crimes and atrocities they either participated in or witnessed. The purpose of the investigation was to bring to light the nature of American military policy in Vietnam.
Buy it here.
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The War Tapes
March
2004, just as the insurgent movement strengthened,
several members of one National Guard unit arrived
in Iraq, carrying digital video cameras. The War
Tapes follows three men: Sergeant Steve Pink,
a young carpenter who joined the Guard for college
money; Sergeant Zack Bazzi, a traveler and university
student; and Specialist Mike Moriarty, a husband
and father driven to fight by honor and redemption.
With Director Deborah's guidance, the soldiers
shot over 900 hours of videotape during their
yearlong deployment. These soldiers got the story
the 2,700 embedded reporters never could.
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Lions for Lambs
Robert
Redford directs this dramatic tale of intersecting lives that weaves
together the stories of an idealistic professor's attempts to inspire a
privileged student, a former student of the teacher who is wounded
behind enemy lines in Afghanistan, and a congressman whose interactions
with a seasoned journalist reveal much about the man behind the public
persona. Tom Cruise, Meryl Streep, and Robert Redford star in a film
scripted by Matthew Michael Carnahan.
Buy it here.
Generation Kill
A platoon of young but highly trained Marines leads the charge of
American forces during the 2003 invasion of Iraq in this gritty,
Emmy-nominated HBO miniseries that highlights the challenges soldiers
face on the front lines. Alexander Skarsgård, James Ransone, Stark
Sands and Jon Huertas head the cast in this realistic portrayal of war
in the Middle East, based on a nonfiction book by Rolling Stone scribe Evan Wright.
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Occupation: Dreamland
Occupation:
Dreamland is an unflinchingly candid portrait
of a squad of American soldiers deployed in the
doomed Iraq city of Falluja during the winter
of 2004. A collective study of the soldiers unfolds
as they patrol an environment of low-intensity
conflict creeping steadily towards catastrophe.
Through the squads activities Occupation: Dreamland
provides a vital glimpse into the last days of
Falluja. The film documents the citys waning stability
before a final series of military assaults began
in the spring of 2004 that effectively destroyed
it.
Buy the DVD here.
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Mission Accomplished
With
tongue planted firmly in cheek, journalist Sean
Langan swipes his title from the banner that flew
aboard the USS Lincoln in May of 2003 when President
George W. Bush declared the Iraq War a grand success.
Reporting from the notorious Sunni Triangle more
than six months after the war has "ended",
Langan captures a profound grassroots view of
resistance fighters and American troops in a region
where few reporters dared to travel. An important
and eye-opening documentary.
Buy the DVD here.
Uncovered: The War on
Iraq In
his documentary feature, UNCOVERED: The War on
Iraq, filmmaker Robert Greenwald chronicles the
Bush Administration's determined quest to invade
Iraq following the events of September 11, 2001.
The film deconstructs the administration's case
for war through interviews with U.S intelligence
and defense officials, foreign service experts,
and U.N. weapons inspectors -- including a former
CIA director, a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia
and even President Bush's Secretary of the Army.
Their analyses and conclusions are sobering, and
often disturbing, regardless of one's political
affiliations. Buy the DVD here.
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Control Room
A
chronicle which provides a rare window into the
international perception of the Iraq War, courtesy
of Al Jazeera, the Arab world's most popular news
outlet. Roundly criticized by Cabinet members
and Pentagon officials for reporting with a pro-Iraqi
bias, and strongly condemned for frequently airing
civilian causalities as well as footage of American
POWs, the station has revealed (and continues
to show the world) everything about the Iraq War
that the Bush administration did not want it to
see.
Buy the DVD here.
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I Know I am Not Alone
Armed
with an acoustic guitar and a video camera, musician
Michael Franti takes us on a musical journey through
war and occupation in Iraq, Israel and Palestine.
Along the way he shares his music with families,
doctors, musicians, soldiers and everyday people
who in turn reveal to him the often overlooked
human cost of war.
With its guerrilla style footage captured in active
war zones, the documentary is unlike the many
academic and politically driven pieces in the
marketplace, instead offering the audience a sense
of intimate travel and the opportunity to hear
the voices of everyday people living, creating
and surviving under the harsh conditions of war
and occupation.
Find a screening in your area.
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Arlington West
Arlington
West is a film that documents the reactions of
everyday Americans as they visit the sands of
Santa Barbara�s West Beach. Produced for Veterans
for Peace under the direction of Peter Dudar and
Sally Marr, this film shows an area that has sprouted
into a national phenomena and become the de facto
burial ground for the more than 1,000 American
soldiers killed since the war in Iraq began in
March 2003. In a series of close-up interviews
with proud and inquisitive soldiers, grieving
relatives, and passersby of all ages intermixed
with longer pans of the crosses and mourners in
action, Arlington West provides a meaningful glimpse
at a questionable war. Characters include everyone
from cute, forward-thinking kids to ignorant,
backward-thinking adults. Among other tear-jerking,
heartfelt memories of fallen friends and family all under the lens of "why?"
the scene of a young soldier who lays flowers
and kisses on the crosses of more than two dozen
of his former mates reigns as memorable. But most
troublesome of all is the sign early on in the
film that announces, "If we were to honor
the Iraqi dead, it would fill this entire beach."
If it goes on much longer, we may need to bring
in some more sand.
Buy the DVD here.
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Joyeux Noel
In
1914, World War I, the bloodiest war ever at that
time in human history, was well under way. However
on Christmas Eve, numerous sections of the Western
Front called an informal, and unauthorized, truce
where the various front-line soldiers of the conflict
peacefully met each other in No Man's Land to
share a precious pause in the carnage with a fleeting
brotherhood. This film dramatizes one such section
as the French, British and German sides partake
in the unique event, even though they are aware
that their superiors will not tolerate its occurrence.
Buy
it here.
Shut up and Sing
Shut
up and sing is a documentary film produced and
directed by Barbara Kopple and Cecilia Peck. The
film follows the Texas-based country music female
trio the Dixie Chicks over three years while the
group was under fire after lead singer Natalie
Maines publicly criticizing the President of the
United States George W. Bush in a 2003 concert
in London. The title of the film makes reference
to the request by proponents of American conservatism
(and by commentator Laura Ingraham in particular,
whose book was so titled) that entertainers refrain
from making political comments.
US vs. John Lennon
"The U.S. vs. John Lennon" tells the
story of Lennon's transformation from loveable
moptop to anti-war activist, and recounts the
facts about Nixon's campaign to deport him in
1972. With Walter Cronkite, Gore Vidal, Mario
Cuomo, George McGovern, Angela Davis, Bobby Seale,
G. Gordon Liddy, Yoko Ono, and Jon Wiener--and
archival footage of Richard Nixon, J. Edgar Hoover,
and John Lennon.
Buy it here.
Regret to Inform
On her twenty-fourth birthday, Barbara Sonneborn
received a knock on her door from a United States
Army soldier, and heard the words "We regret
to inform you...." Her husband Jeff had been
killed by a mortar in Vietnam. She received a
box containing Jeff's dog tags still encrusted
with his blood. Twenty years later, Sonneborn
embarks on a journey through the country where
he fought and died. Woven into her personal odyssey
are interviews with American and Vietnamese widows
from both sides of the conflict who speak openly
about the men they loved and how war changed their
lives forever.
Buy
it here.
View from a Grain of Sand
2001
saw an unprecedented level of international interest
in the lives of Afghan women living under the
Taliban. With the Talibans fall later that year,
the U.S. proclaimed the dawn of a new era in Afghanistan
that promised peace, democracy and liberation
for women.
Years after this new era was declared, Afghanistan
in once again in the news, not because of successful
reconstruction, but because of increasing violence
and a resurgence of the Taliban. And what about
the women? Since 2001, the media spotlight on
Afghan women had fallen, and with it, public knowledge
of the current situation they face. What are their
lives like now? Have they really improved since
a new government took power? Have they gained
any real rights or do they still live in fear
and repression?
VIEW FROM A GRAIN OF SAND examines these issues
through the eyes of three Afghan women: a doctor,
a teacher, and a right activist. You can visit
the film's site for more info- www.viewgrainofsand.com
You can buy a copy through CODEPINK here!
Sir! No Sir!
Sir!
No Sir! is a powerful film that shows how GI resistance
to the Vietnam War infested the entire armed services,
flourishing in army stockades, navy brigs, in
the dingy towns that surround military bases,
and throughout the battlefields of Vietnam.
Find out how to host a house party and
buy the dvd here.
The Road to Guantanamo
Road
to Guantanamo is the terrifying first-hand account
of three British citizens who were held for two
years without charges in the American military
prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Known as the �Tipton
Three,� in reference to their home town in Britain,
the three were eventually returned to Britain
and released, still having had no formal charges
ever made against them at any time during their
ordeal. Part documentary, part dramatization,
the film chronicls the sequence of events that
led from the trio setting out from Tipton in the
British Midlands for a wedding in Pakistan, to
their crossing the Afghanistan border just as
the U.S. began their invasion, to their eventual
capture by the Northern Alliance and their imprisonment
in Camp X-Ray and later at Camp Delta in Guantanamo.
Buy
it here.
Why We fight
Why
we fight is an unflinching look at the anatomy
of the American war machine, weaving unforgettable
personal stories with commentary by a "who's
who" of military and beltway insiders. Featuring
John McCain, William Kristol, Chalmers Johnson,
GOre Vidal, Richard Perle and others, Why We Fight
launches a bipartisan inquiry into the workings
of the military industrial complex and the rise
of the American Empire.
Inspired by Dwight Eisenhower's legendary farewell
speech filmmaker Jarecki surveys the scorched
landscape of a half-century's military adventures,
asking how-- and telling why-- a nation of, by,
and for the people has become the savings-and-loan
of a system whose survival depends on the constant
state of war.
Buy
it here.
Peace One Day
Peace
One Day is the story of one man�s attempts to
persuade the global community via the United Nations
to officially sanction a global ceasefire day;
a day of non-violence; a day of Peace. This documentary
charts the remarkable 6-year journey of the filmmaker
as he meets heads of state, Nobel Peace Laureates,
aid agencies, freedom fighters, media moguls,
the innocent victims of war and, eventually, everyone
who was anyone at the UN. An individual genuinely
can make a difference: The UN International Day
of Peace is now fixed in the calendar on 21st
September annually. The real challenge has now
begun - to get the world to unite on a day fast
approaching.
Buy the DVD here. |