[Robert] Baer's Tocquevillean tour is a spare but indispensable political-cultural exposé of a country and region poised to play an increasing and increasingly troubling role in the history of our own.
The Cult of the Suicide Bomber (2006)
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Reviews Counted:13
Fresh:13
Rotten:0
Average Rating:7.6/10
Rated: Not Rated
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Jun 2, 2006 Limited
Synopsis: This documentary by terrorism expert Bob Baer explores the origins of suicide bombing, and the virus-like spread of its use as a tactic in guerilla warfare.
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Reviews for The Cult of the Suicide Bomber
[The film] matter-of-factly enters the mosques, homes, shrine rooms, personal spaces, and neighborhoods of Muslim martyrs, probing the suicide bomber paradigm as it grew out of the Iranian Revolution and became a global phenomenon.
An intriguingly idiosyncratic and highly personal filmed essay on the phenomenon of militarized Orwellian death cultists.
An engrossing if intellectually thin documentary that purports to explain how suicide bombing evolved from a weapon of war into a weapon of terror.
Many of us, of course, have spent hours at the movies relishing violence and explosions as entertainment. In the documentary The Cult of the Suicide Bomber, we see explosions in which real people die, and the sequence comes as a kick in the gut.
Former CIA agent Robert Baer, whose memoir See No Evil was the basis for the 2005 Academy Award-winning film Syriana, narrates this chilling expose of that most terrifying of modern terrorists: the suicide bomber.
While not dramatic like 'Syriana,' Baer's doc provides provocative commentary on the motivations of these 'martyrs.'
Our Puritan forefathers -- not to mention the small but growing sect of Christian "Dominionists" in this country -- might well understand the revivalist impulse.
Baer dutifully outlines the tactic's 30-year evolution from a battlefield weapon of war to a civilian-targeting, chaos-seeking weapon of terror.
The film effectively tracks the modern history of the insidious trend.
A fascinating history of how blowing yourself up became a popular hobby in the Muslim world.
Narrator Robert Baer tries to understand why humans would give up their lives to take those of others, and he's gained remarkable access to those at the center of this ideology.
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