obsession boyfriend i'm psyched     i'm dreading enemy

(need an explanation?)

advertisements


 
 

Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden? (review)

Wanted... or Not

Here’s the thing: If the mainstream media isn’t gonna do its job in speaking truth to power, someone else is gonna do it. And yeah, it might be that guy who ate nothing but McDonald’s for a month. It might be someone who’s aggressive and snarky and maybe a bit of jerk sometimes and makes it all seem like a joke.

(more below the ad... scroll down...)

please take my Blog Reader Project survey

But it’s not a joke, Morgan Spurlock’s Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?, even though it features animation of the (supposedly) most wanted man in the world breakdancing, and baseball-card stats for notorious terrorists, and a Star Wars reference, and a video-game fantasy of hand-to-hand combat between Spurlock and bin Laden, and Schoolhouse Rock-esque cartoon lessons in the recent history of American foreign policy, and just about every other kind of hipster Gen X pop culture-fueled sarcasm you can imagine. Of course it’s outrageous: it’s supposed to be. But it’s way less outrageous than the idea that a six-foot-four Arab who needs regular dialysis could possibly have eluded both the military and intelligence apparatus of the planet’s only remaining superpower for seven years. Or that our leaders don’t seem to be too concerned about that.

So it’s funny, sure, this laudably audacious flick, but it’s coming from a place of pain and rage, as if the surface lightheartedness of it were merely a way to keep those darker feelings tamped down lest they become overwhelming. Spurlock gets deeply personal again, as he did in Super Size Me, prompted on his globetrotting mission to find bin Laden by the news of his wife’s pregnancy: he has the sudden urge to make the world a safer place for his child. It’s all self-deprecating too: “If I’ve learned anything from big-budget action movies,” Spurlock snarks at us as the movie opens, “it’s that complicated global problems are best solved by one lonely guy crazy enough to think he can fix everything before the final credits roll.” Of course he doesn’t think he can do any such thing. But Where is not about the finding the answer but about asking the question, and about wondering why more people aren’t asking it. It’s about mocking our leaders and despairing of them at the same time, about loving America and the promise it once held not only for Americans but for others around the world, and hating to see how that promise has been shattered by the very guardians of it.

Because in between all the goofiness -- when he’s not looking up Osama bin Laden in the Riyadh phone book or just asking passersby outright on the streets of Cairo, “Do you know where Osama bin Laden is?” -- Spurlock talks to scholars and activists in places like Jordan and Israel and Morocco about the roots of terrorism in economic and social hopelessness. But he also talks to ordinary people on the streets of these places, and discovers that they have the same hopes and fears as the rest of us: they want a peaceful life and more for their kids than they had. It’s hardly a newsflash, except, well, it kind of is, because even though it’s only a small part of this zippy 90-minute movie, it’s more than most of us will ever have seen of regular folk in the Middle East.

What makes it all work is how honest and grounded Spurlock is. He’s not expecting world peace tomorrow. He’s not even saying that shooting off a rocket launcher -- which is gets the chance to do with his U.S. troop escort in Afghanistan -- is not “awesome.” He’s just wondering why we’re not all talking better and smarter and wiser about the things we’re talking about.

The DVD: The only extras are a collection of additional interviews and deleted scenes, but they’re as intriguing as the rest of the film. The “alternate ending” (no, it’s not a fantasy in which Spurlock does, in fact, find bin Laden), which posits a Western showdown between the U.S. and the Middle East, looks like snark and sounds like common sense. A conversation with three women in Saudi Arabia about being a woman there is revealing and poignant. A talk with a member of the Irish Republican Army about concepts of terrorism is highly provocative. And there’s more, too.

[buy at Amazon (Region 1)]     [buy at Amazon (Region 2)]

viewed at home on a small screen
rated PG-13 for some strong language
official site | IMDB
(more below the ad... scroll down...)



post a comment

who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]
[become a Facebook fan]
[follow me on Twitter]
[friend me on MySpace]

• contributor, Film.com
• member, Online Film Critics Society
• member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
• visit my scratchpad blog, MaryAnnJohanson.com
• read my Doctor Who fan fiction

photo by David Speranza

(postings feed)


top critic on Movie Review Query Engine


as seen on Rotten Tomatoes

Add to Technorati Favorites

monthly archives

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened (U.S.)
green for go Bolt
red for no Twilight
just opened (U.K.)
green for go Body of Lies
green for go Blindness
green for go Choke
green for go Waltz with Bashir [trailer]
box office top 5 (U.S.)
yellow for maybe Quantum of Solace
yellow for maybe Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
red for no Role Models
yellow for maybe High School Musical 3: Senior Year
yellow for maybe Changeling
top limited releases (U.S.)
green for go Rachel Getting Married
Dostana [trailer]
green for go The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
green for go Happy-Go-Lucky
green for go Slumdog Millionaire [trailer]
box office top 5 (U.K.)
yellow for maybe Quantum of Solace
red for no Max Payne
yellow for maybe High School Musical 3: Senior Year
green for go Zack and Miri Make a Porno
red for no Ghost Town
top limited releases (U.K.)
Dostana [trailer]
The Baader-Meinhof Complex [trailer]
Hunger [trailer]
green for go The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Of Time and the City
coming soon (U.S./U.K.)
green for go Australia [trailer]
yellow for maybe Good [trailer]
yellow for maybe Last Chance Harvey
green for go Frost/Nixon [trailer]
green for go Milk [trailer]
green for go Che
green for go Waltz with Bashir [trailer]
other current flicks (U.S./U.K.)
green for go Synecdoche, New York
green for go Pride and Glory
yellow for maybe The Duchess
green for go Religulous
green for go W.
red for no Soul Men
green for go Burn After Reading
green for go RocknRolla
red for no Eagle Eye
green for go The Secret Life of Bees
green for go American Teen
yellow for maybe Vicky Cristina Barcelona
yellow for maybe I've Loved You So Long
green for go What Just Happened
red for no Sex Drive
green for go Igor
green for go Trouble the Water
green for go Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist
green for go Good Dick

2008 screening log

new on dvd

11.18 (Region 1)
green for go Wall-E [buy]
green for go Tropic Thunder [buy]
yellow for maybe Up the Yangtze [buy]
red for no The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Complete Fourth Series [buy]
red for no Doctor Who: The Infinite Quest [buy]
green for go Monty Python: Flying Circus Complete Collection [buy]
green for go Star Trek: The Original Series - Season 3 Remastered [buy]
green for go Star Trek: The Original Series (Remastered) - Three Season Pack [buy]
11.17 (Region 2)
green for go Kung Fu Panda [buy]
green for go The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian [buy]
green for go The Forbidden Kingdom [buy]
red for no This Christmas [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Complete Fourth Series [buy]
red for no Doctor Who: The Infinite Quest [buy]
green for go Moonlight: Series 1 [buy]
green for go The Rutles: All You Need Is Cash: 30th Anniversary Edition [buy]
green for go V: The Complete Collection [buy]
green for go Stargate SG-1: Series 1-10/The Ark of Truth/Continuum [buy]
11.11 (Region 1)
green for go Love Songs (Les Chansons D'Amour) [buy]
green for go Star Wars: The Clone Wars [buy]
green for go Mister Foe [buy]
green for go Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman [buy]
yellow for maybe Hellboy II: The Golden Army [buy]
red for no This Christmas [buy]
red for no The Perfect Holiday [buy]
red for no Sukiyaki Western Django [buy]
green for go The Commander Set 1 [buy]
green for go George Gently: Series 1 [buy]
green for go The Sopranos: The Complete Series [buy]
green for go Harry Potter Years 1-5 [buy]
green for go Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Television Series [buy]
11.10 (Region 2)
green for go The Mist [buy]
green for go Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull [buy]
green for go Indiana Jones: The Complete Collection [buy]
red for no Speed Racer [buy]
green for go The Sarah Jane Adventures: The Complete First Series [buy]
green for go Torchwood: Series 1-2 [buy]
green for go The Tick: The Complete Collection [buy]
11.04 (Region 1)
green for go Kung Fu Panda [buy]
yellow for maybe Get Smart [buy]
green for go Primeval: Volume One [buy]
green for go Star Wars Prequel Trilogy [buy]
green for go Star Wars Trilogy [buy]
green for go Get Smart - The Complete Series Gift Set [buy]
green for go Fraggle Rock: The Complete Series Collection [buy]
green for go A Christmas Story (Ultimate Collectors Edition) [buy]
11.03 (Region 2)
yellow for maybe Journey to the Center of the Earth [buy]
yellow for maybe The Happening [buy]
red for no National Treasure: Book of Secrets [buy]
green for go Monty Python's Flying Circus - Series 1-4 [buy]
green for go Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law - Season 1 [buy]

my book (Amazon U.S.)

my book (Amazon U.K.)

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web