A somber polemic that presents a convincing case against using war as an economic booster -- although, Jarecki argues, that is precisely what the United States has been doing under every president since Truman.
Why We Fight (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:107
Fresh:85
Rotten:22
Average Rating:7.1/10
Consensus: A provocative and timely film that explores the military/industrial complex and the motivating forces that lead us to war.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for disturbing war images and brief language.
Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Jan 20, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $1,146,841
Synopsis: Released as the American military continues to make its presence felt in Iraq and across the globe, Eugene Jarecki's (THE TRIALS OF HENRY KISSINGER) WHY WE FIGHT asks some pertinent questions about... Released as the American military continues to make its presence felt in Iraq and across the globe, Eugene Jarecki's (THE TRIALS OF HENRY KISSINGER) WHY WE FIGHT asks some pertinent questions about the economic necessities of war. Speaking to a number of key figures including Republican Senator John McCain and author Gore Vidal, as well as lesser-know names such as Wilton Sekzer--a Vietnam veteran and ex-New York City cop who lost his son in the World Trade Center attacks--Jarecki's film is a bipartisan treatise that was inspired by Dwight Eisenhower's 1961 farewell address to the nation. Eisenhower spoke of a burgeoning American military-industrial complex, which he believed would threaten democracy across the globe. Jarecki takes a look at whether this has occurred by questioning his subjects on the links between big business and the military, while also talking to people whose lives are inexorably tied to the business of war. Fascinating revelations unfold, from Sekzer's attempt to pay tribute to his son to the thoughts of the fighter pilot who dropped the first bomb on Iraq at the dawn of the second Gulf War. Each of them gives their own unique take on the American military machine, while Jarecki intersperses their discussions with rapid-fire scenes of the machine as it lumbers into action. WHY WE FIGHT cleverly reflects the sharp divide that exists among the American people on why we are in Iraq. A number of people on the street are questioned throughout the film, with Jarecki asking them "why do we fight?" His subjects give a broad range of answers, and Jarecki himself does not search for a definitive solution to the question. Instead he simply gives us a variety of truths and lets the audience try to salvage something from an incredibly complex, sometimes mysterious, and often terrifying state of affairs. [More]
Starring: John McCain, Gore Vidal, Graydon Carter
Starring: John McCain, Gore Vidal, Graydon Carter
Director: Eugene Jarecki
Director: Eugene Jarecki
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Why We Fight
It raises questions that everybody, of all political persuasions, should think about.
... a sobering history lesson as well as a political polemic on foreign policy and the growth of war into America's biggest business.
Memo to left-wing anti-Bushies: Stories like this work. Don't lecture. Tell stories! Much better!
The film is a clear-headed anomaly of reason that one hopes won't get lost in the bicker-and-scream shuffle of TV punditry.
So what's the answer? Are we defending freedom or profits? ... See this film and judge for yourself.
Stands as a class-act stylistic rebuttal to Fahrenheit 9/11 -- it asks questions rather than bludgeons us with ridicule, and it has the grace to hint that we can think for ourselves.
These questions go to the heart of how the U.S. works as a self-interested "nation" (whatever that term can mean) and an ideological force.
I would like to believe that we still live in a world, and in a country were people will want to see something and will want to be informed.
As well-argued and well-presented Jarecki's case is, it won't seem particularly earth-shattering to anybody who has been able to look at America's military machinery with any sort of objectivity.
Jarecki's "Why We Fight" is a cynical account of the state of a world that is becoming, more and more, under the control of governments and corporations
All of that clarification and mainstreaming have made Why We Fight into a film that preaches to the choir, rather than incites debate.
Compulsory viewing in an age when the war of words is every bit as entrenched (and fierce) as the one with weapons.
Ike Eisenhower lives on in a critique of the military-industrial complex. Is anyone surprised?
the best documentary about militarism and America's political reach that I've seen, just edging out the 1972 Vietnam documentary Winter Soldier.
Latest News for Why We Fight
December 06, 2007:
Freakonomics Headed to a Theater near You
Perhaps you've heard of Freakonomics, the bestselling book by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, and thought it sounded interesting, but never found out, on account of how... More...
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