If learning about other cultures shows that we're all basically alike, Operation Filmmaker is a reminder that foreign countries have their own share of nitwits, too.
Operation Filmmaker (2008)
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Reviews Counted: 26
Fresh: 24
Rotten:2
Average Rating: 7.2/10
Consensus: Operation Filmmaker is a darkly funny, ironic tale of a cross-cultural exchange gone wrong.
Theatrical Release: Jun 4, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: In the wake of "Operation Iraqi Freedom," American actor Liev Schreiber had an idealistic notion: to rescue an Iraqi film student from the rubble of his country and bring him to the West to intern on a Hollywood movie (Everything Is... In the wake of "Operation Iraqi Freedom," American actor Liev Schreiber had an idealistic notion: to rescue an Iraqi film student from the rubble of his country and bring him to the West to intern on a Hollywood movie (Everything Is Illuminated). It promised to be a heartwarming tale, a small victory out of the troubled mission of the U.S. war in Iraq. But as in the war itself, "good" intentions yielded unintended consequences, and even this operation doesn't go according to plan. Director Nina Davenport becomes personally involved in Schreiber's charitable effort, and soon finds herself embroiled in a complex moral quagmire and all-consuming power struggle between filmmaker and subject. Operation Filmmaker is an engaging, sometimes comical political parable, taking the viewer on a riveting ride from Baghdad to Hollywood.--© Official Site [More]
Starring: Alberto Bonilla, Liev Schreiber
Starring: Alberto Bonilla, Liev Schreiber
Director: Nina Davenport
Director: Nina Davenport
Screenwriter: Nina Davenport
Studio: First Run Features
Reviews for Operation Filmmaker
The antagonism between filmmaker and subject reminds us that reality is never a passive still life, but a volatile entity with its own ideas on how it is to be represented.
Davenport focuses deep on the Hollywood do-gooder mentality and her own complicity in treating Mohmed as a symbol of the war and not as a flawed person.
It's fearless filmmaking. And the surprising observations about cultural differences and insights into the movie production process make the whole thing worthwhile.
What might have been a vanity project emerges as a surprisingly complicated morality tale.
Everyone here comes out smelling bad -- that's why the film's so good.
An exit strategy in Iraq? This self-aware study shows how hard it'll be.
Veteran documentary filmmaker Nina Davenport parses an ill-conceived experiment in cross-cultural understanding that began with the best intentions.
The whole film could be seen a metaphor for America's misadventures in Iraq: Schreiber and company came in expecting flowers and sweets from a grateful native, and wound up in a quagmire.
You can bet Nina Davenport didn't set out to make a documentary as bracingly honest as the one she ended up with.
The film's parallels between Mohmed's travails and the Iraq war are forced, but overall this is a fascinating odyssey that never plays out in ways you would expect.
As the story of an exasperating, manipulative, lazy and entitled young man, it’s one for the books.
A blunt, bitterly ironic snapshot of cultural misinterpretation and personal hubris, Nina Davenport’s Operation Filmmaker slyly plumbs the motivations of indie Hollywood do-goodism for uncomfortable parallels to blinkered neocon nation-building.
Despite the dubious moral of the film and on-the-fly camera technique, it is interesting to watch the pathetic story unfold.
Engaging, provocative, and often discomforting, Operation Filmmaker reveals increasing tensions between Muthana and his would-be benefactors, including filmmaker Nina Davenport.
This essentially comic tale maps a contagion of mutual exploitation that seems to have burnished the careers of everyone involved.
Operation Filmmaker is an absorbing story about the best intentions gone terribly and comically awry.
Davenport's unnerving film becomes grindingly uncomfortable not long after its cheery beginnings
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by: filmforlife 10/16/07

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