Green Zone (2010)

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Green Zone: Directed by Paul Greengrass. With Igal Naor, Said Faraj, Faycal Attougui, Aymen Hamdouchi. Discovering covert and faulty intelligence causes a U.S. Army officer to go rogue as he hunts for Weapons of Mass Destruction in an unstable region.

“I saw trailers for this movie on t.v (in Australia)…it seemed to be an action hero type movie…I actually wondered if this was the new u0026quot;Bourneu0026quot; movie for Matt Damon! Perhaps this promotional approach was due to a recent run of movies critical of the US in the current Iraq war being box-office misses. Anyway, I was prepared to watch the movie based on the trailers, but had second thoughts when the nature of the movie was mentioned on a movie review show on TV here in Australia. That nature concerned the movie venturing into the rationale of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSo, taking a punt, I saw the movie armed with this new information. Itu0026#39;s actually good…not depressing like movies with this type of theme can be. Not sure how much reality there is to it…it seems to cover the bases on the reasons given as to why the US invaded Iraq and the underlying reality on the ground.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhatu0026#39;s particularly interesting is how the Pentagon and the C.I.A. are depicted. No doubt there are numerous American movies where both organisations are depicted as suspect or evil. Here, one organisation comes off as acting in good faith and acting morally. Donu0026#39;t know enough about the war to say for certain if any US organisation can claim to have acted ethically, but this dichotomy is illuminating for the factoids it throws at the audience.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIf the movie does have a lot factual truth to it, then some of the events in it are truly disturbing…e.g. how the U.S. deals with people who may be able to disprove the official government line on the reasons for the war. Maybe this is just artistic license, or perhaps itu0026#39;s real politic as far as the U.S. goes…and anyone who has read Noam Chomsky knows that the U.S. goes all the way.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIu0026#39;m reminded of General Colin Powellu0026#39;s hand-on-the-heart moment in the U.N. where he showed satellite photos of vehicles and swore that these were mobile weapons of mass destruction delivery vehicles. Turns out that they were milk trucks…like the Iraqis said they were. Itu0026#39;s this u0026#39;evidenceu0026#39; which convinced a reluctant U.N. to take the USu0026#39; assertions as true and to authorise the invasion of Iraq. This movieu0026#39;s trailer is like General Colin Powellu0026#39;s moment of infamy…the trailer bears no relation to what you actually see. But itu0026#39;s more compelling than what the generalu0026#39;s photo turned out to be.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMatt Damon (as Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller) makes for a good lantern-jaw type hero…if such a figure actually exists, youu0026#39;d think they would have have been run out of the ranks for not towing the official line. Anyway, the movie is about Milleru0026#39;s role in finding those elusive weapons of mass destruction that President Bush assured us were there. When he doesnu0026#39;t have much luck finding them, he wants to find out why…”

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