(Originally published on Letterboxd on August 16, 2014) - Comic-Con Episode Four: A Fan's Hope is a lazy documentary from all sizzle and no substance documentarian, Morgan Spurlock. Rather than focusing on the really interesting stuff like Mile High Comics owner, Chuck Rozanski's growing frustration with the show that has evolved into a multi-media pop culture festival, with very little attention paid to actual comic books, he focuses on geeks doing geeky things for the sake of geekdom.
Search This Blog
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Friday, May 31, 2024
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
It’s a Girl! (2012) | Film Review
(Original published on Letterboxd) - It's a Girl! examines the practice of gendercide--the wholesale killing or aborting of girls--currently rampant in the countries of India and China. As explained in this documentary, having and raising little girls is considered a hardship for many families, mostly having to do with wealth.
This film discusses the consequences of India's dowry system, and China's expectations on boys to continue family lines and supporting their parents as they get older. In both situations females are often looked upon as burdens, and executed in favor of having boys. For India, its the fear of having to pay a dowry to the families of the husband, and in China its the one child household law (intended to control the population).
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Act of Killing, The (2012) | Film Review
(Originally published on Letterboxd) - In the mid-60's there were massive genocides in Indonesia, carried out in the fight against Communism. Millions of innocent Indonesians and Chinese people were tortured and killed by young men who fancied themselves movie gangsters. Influenced by Hollywood gangster flicks, they dressed, spoke, and killed like their favorite movie characters of the day. Adopting the lifestyle of a "gangster" (defined by them as a "free man") these killers have gone on to life lives of financial and political success. None were brought to justice for their crimes, creating one of the most frightening societal constructs imaginable.
Josh Oppenheimer's documentary tells the story of these atrocities from the point of view of the killers. Agreeing to help them make a film about their part in the genocide, what these men reveal of themselves as they reenact interrogations and murders is soul crushing. Not only from the point of view of the surviving victims, but also seeing these men carry the weight of what they've done.
The Act of Killing does a great job of examining the human condition, without excusing its subjects, or making you feel sorry for them. There is a particular moment when a village is raided and burned to the ground that will likely haunt you for days after, and it should.
The most disturbing moments are when you see how self-aware the killers are as they reenact some of these moments. We get to see them discuss openly with Oppenheimer about how certain things will make them look bad, which they didn't seem to realize before doing it. Watching them backpedal, and then justify these actions cuts to the heart of the level of denial one would have to have in order to function after doing what they've done.
The honesty presented in The Act of Killing will astound and depress you. It should be mandatory viewing in high school history classes every year. Congratulations to Oppenheimer and his team for producing a profoundly disturbing look at just how awful humans can be.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)