war and corporate incest, sand signs
May 17, 2008 at 5:54 am | In media, movies, photoshop, progressive | Leave a CommentJohn Cusack’s War: The Actor Battles to Un-Embed Hollywood With His New Film, ‘War, Inc.’
Cusack, Leyner and Pikser are not predicting the future, they are forcefully–and with dark humor and wit– branding the present for what it is: the Wal-Mart-ization of life (and death) represented in the new US model for waging war. With 630 corporations like Blackwater and Halliburton on the US government payroll in Iraq getting 40% of the more than $2 billion Washington spends every week on the occupation, Cusack’s “futuristic” film is not far from the way things really are. A powerful, for-profit war corporation, run by the former US vice president “owning” the war zone; tanks with NASCAR-like sponsor logos speeding around the streets firing at will; “implanted journalists” watching the war in IMAX theaters in the heavily-fortified “Emerald City” to get “full spectrum sensory reality” while eating popcorn; a secretive “viceroy” running the show from behind a digital curtain are all part of Cusack’s battlefield in the fictitious Turaqistan. But how far are they from the realities of the radically privatized corporate war machine Washington has unleashed on the world?
“War, Inc.” is already an underground cult classic and will likely remain so for years to come. The film is not without its shortcomings–at times it is confusing and drags–but its faults are significantly overshadowed by its many strengths. It also accomplishes the difficult feat of being very entertaining and funny, while delivering a powerful punch of truth. “War, Inc.” is a movie that deserves a much wider viewing than the barons of the film industry are likely to give it. But by filling the theaters in the opening days, people can send a powerful message that there is–and must be–a market for films of conscience.
I’ve seen a good part of War Inc and admittedly an oversimplification its a little like Gross Point Blank goes to war. Jeremy Scahill says its confusing at times with which I would agree, but we probably part ways on defining confusion. Cusack, Leyner and Pikser seem to require that the audience not be passive viewers, but struggle to keep up with the story within the story. In one scene we’re digesting the dark corporatism of war and in the next we’re hoping the world weary characters played by John and Marisa Tomei to get together. A genuine romance within a darkly comic satire is difficult to pull off. War Inc official site.

“It is discouraging how many people are shocked by honesty and how few by deceit.” Noel Coward
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