MOVIE: CONTROL ROOM - you can rent rent from BLOCKBUSTERS
Plot Outline: A documentary on perception of the United States's
war with Iraq, with an emphasis on Al Jazeera's coverage
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0391024/
Plot Summary for
Control Room (2004)
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.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0391024/plotsummary
Control Room
Control Room - review of documentary film about Al-Jazeera, the
news agency:'While the documentary’s sympathetic portrait of Al-Jazeera
supplies clear ...
http://www.culturevulture.net/Movies8/ControlRoom.htm
A work of art that merely confirms what one already knows may be
comforting, but that doesn’t broaden the scope of one’s world,
and the world is certainly rich enough for constant broadening.
Control Room, a documentary about the Middle East news agency
Al-Jazeera, takes a perspective that most Americans won’t share,
but refusing to look at perspectives different from one’s own is
a denial of larger realities.
Control Room, made by Jehane Noujaim, co-director of the
wonderful Startup.com, is a much needed counterpoint for
Americans in the context of Bush administration propaganda on
the Iraq War. Indeed, Control Room brings along its own heavy
bias in favor of Al-Jazeera, which Donald Rumsfeld calls “Osama
Bin-Laden’s mouthpiece” even as he provides his own version of
American spin. While the documentary’s sympathetic portrait of
Al-Jazeera supplies clear evidence where Al-Jazeera is right and
the American government is wrong on certain Iraqi events, the
Al-Jazeera reporters interviewed admit their bias. They don’t
make ludicrous Fox News claims of being “fair and balanced.”
Control Room shows how propaganda works on both sides and how
the truth is often somewhere in between.
Al-Jazeera, launched in 1996, was the first independent news
channel in the Middle East, and soon became the most popular
news channel with over 40 million Arab viewers. Noujaim
intercuts the film among several members of Al-Jazeera,
including producers Sameer Khader and Deema Khatib, and the
disgusted and bitter Hassan Ibrahim, a journalist who used to
work for the BBC. At one point, an American reporter snidely
says to him, “Everyone who works for the BBC eventually works
for Al-Jazeera.”
Khader takes the most calm, philosophical approach to it all,
asserting matter-of-factly the importance of media and
propaganda in any war. He regrets the necessary involvement of
cant, but begrudgingly admires how good the Americans are at it.
Khatib, however, is the real cynic. He says if Fox News offered
him a job, he would accept in an instant, and he plans to send
his children to America one day for schooling. Hassan is the
idealist. Adamant in his beliefs of American imperialism, he
decries, “Eventually you’ll have to find a solution that doesn’t
involve bombing someone into submission… democratize or I will
shoot you.”
Most of the film takes place at Central Command, or CentCom, in
Doha, Qatar, 700 miles from Bagdad. The film follows Bush’s
threat of invasion through the toppling of Saddam Hussein. From
Al-Jazeera’s perspective, Noujaim recalls the Bush
administration’s changing rationales for invading Iraq, the use
of fear in the media to manipulate public opinion, Jessica
Lynch, the juvenile deck of cards designating the most wanted
men in Hussein’s regime, and the
too-coincidental-to-be-accidental bombing deaths of three
different Arab journalists on the same day by American planes.
From Rumsfeld accusing Al-Jazeera of faking pictures of civilian
deaths, Noujaim cuts to indisputable pictures of real victims
from the American bombing.
At the same time, she also shows the Arabs engaging in wishful
thinking about the inevitable outcome of the war. She explores
the controversy of Al-Jazeera televising graphic imagery of
civilian casualties and of American POWs. When Iraq finally
falls, she shows the Al-Jazeera team’s shocked disbelief as they
try to make their emotional response correspond to what they
must rationally have expected all along. Still, when an American
reporter asks an Al-Jazeera spokeswoman about bias in their
reporting, she cogently rebuts by asking whether the American
media is biased. State Department official Nabeel Khoury says
that Al-Jazeera does not hesitate to invite Americans to give
their point-of-view on the network and he frequently makes use
of these opportunities.
The American who gets the most attention in Control Room is
press officer Lt. Rushing. A handsome, articulate, young man, he
struggles to balance the American point-of-view with the
multiple Arab alternatives constantly barraging him from
Al-Jazeera. At one point, Rushing even admirably admits that,
try as he might to resist it, he sometimes gets carried away in
opposing a forceful argument and engages in inadvertent spin or
exaggeration.
The Iraq War has created controversy across the political
spectrum. About the outcome, Khader says pessimistically,
“People like victory. You don’t have to justify it. Once you
have it, that’s it.” This film was obviously made in the hope
that he was wrong.
http://www.culturevulture.net/Movies8/ControlRoom.htm