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Why We Fight


Directed by: Eugene Jarecki
Starring: The Military Industrial Complex
Genre:
Documentary
Run Time: 98
min.
Release Date:
January 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
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Image from Why We Fight

DVD cost: $8.98
Purchase:
Tower.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite?
Yes.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
WHY WE FIGHT is a
presentation of the Eisenhower Project, a national academic initiative
dedicated in the spirit of Dwight D. Eisenhower to promote study of the
forces shaping American foreign policy and defense.
Movie Quote: "We
have, not an obligation to go out and start wars, but certainly to
spread democracy and freedom, throughout the world."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Why We Fight
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The wonderful thing about the film is that it doesn't interject the documentary-maker's opinion. He simply goes up to individuals and asks, "Why do we fight?" The answers are as varied as the faces that grace the screen. Some say, "For freedom." Others shrug and comment, "That's a very good question." While still others intone, "It's part of our nature."
From a lowly Vietnam Vet turned cop, to a retired Pentagon official, to Presidential candidates, the camera pans across a broad stroke of Americans with this very basic question. But the answers are anything but basic.
The most telling of these is the Vietnam Vet turned retired police officer who's son was killed on 9/11 at the World Trade Center. Being a good American and dedicated father, this man asks the military to write his son's name on one of the bombs being targeted at Iraq. Eventually this happens, but once the truth about Al-qaeda and Iraq surfaces (there wasn't a connection, per President Bush, he begins to seriously question U.S. policy (both domestic and foreign).
Lines between politics, economy, jobs, morality, and the military are blurred beyond recognition when one watches this award winning documentary. And it's an excellent way to show how integrated all of these things have become within the American framework and mindset.
One problem: If there's anything that's more telling about a country, it's how it is viewed by its neighbors. I would've liked to have seen some interviews with Canadian and Mexican people or authorities (my only negative comment about this superlative film).
Similar films have come out recently that mirror much of these problems. SYRIANA being one — its focus was on the exact thing that WHY WE FIGHT shows us — and GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK which presented us the dangers of letting government bully us around without explanation. The fascinating relevance of these two films to this one is that SYRIANA and GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK were fiction (GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK wasn't really, but it was Hollywoodized) while WHY WE FIGHT was purely a documentary. That's what scared me the most. And it's also why I respect the makers of WHY WE FIGHT. They got their message across stronger than anything with special effects in it.