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Redacted
(2007, ***) While some reactionary observers who haven't seen Redacted have labeled Brian DePalma's latest film with such calumnies as "arthouse snuff-porn," there is at least the courage of his anger, which brings this rapid-fire, if indifferently written and acted, montage to a consistent boil. There are levels of staging and acting and phoniness and fear that work despite shortcomings. There are esthetic and moral qualms present in almost every frame of DePalma's fictional multimedia sketch of crimes committed in the American occupation of Iraq; his fury seethes. (It's hard to believe a 67-year-old manborn on September 11!who committed the dreary Black Dahlia to celluloid, made this.) The collage of elements in Redacted, like his earliest comic tracts, Greetings and Hi, Mom!, are meant to irritate; it's ready blog-bait for those paid by conservative charities to blow hard. Yet the movie is not anti-American, it's anti-simplification, anti-stupidity, anti-terror, anti-rape, anti-war. When his lumpen characters admittedly caricatured are faced with encroaching paranoia around them, their lives turn full metal Jekyll. They're casualties of warmongering. Drawing on all manner of media he'd assembled video diaries, European television documentaries, American TV coverage, websites, terror videosDePalma discovered the legalities are too deep on the ground, and that he could only make his own representation of what he'd observed and collectedhe couldn't mix and match fact with fiction. This led to the spat with his financier-distributors involving a montage of photographs at the end, in which faces had to be blacked outredacted, redux. Of course, he was
also part of the 1960s generation inspired by faux-vérité
like Jim McBride's piss-take, The Diary of David Holzman
("The D.I. of David Holzman"?). There are many cross-references
about the nature of representation, including the faux French documentary
using slow zooms in and out with Kubrick-style classical accompaniment,
a jab at the higher esthetic pretensions of the fictional crew. A character
unwittingly paraphrases Godard, "24-7, the camera doesn't lie."
(Godard observed, "Film is truth 24 frames a second.") I'm not
against some of the blunt elements either: a pacifist character named
"Brix" or the most corpulent and corrupt of the characters being
named "Rush": DePalma's satirical cards are on the table. This
is the kind of fierce, focused fire-and-brimstone cacophony DePalma ought
to have spent his late career making instead of the stately smear of Dahlia.
Still, I'd be curious to read the reactions to Redacted of filmmakers
who sweated bullets to make documentaries like War Tapes, Fragments
of Iraq and Gunner Palace. I'm sure they can make their points
about DePalma's appropriation and retooling of the vocabulary of their
nonfiction work as well, which would be far more telling ones than the
pained groans of professional sob sisters like the too-prevalent Bill
O'Reillys of the media.
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Release
Date: Starring: Patrick
Carroll, Paul O'Brien,
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