Directors Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg have found an impressive protagonist in Steidle, but they would have done better to expand the scope of the documentary beyond his personal recollections.
The Devil Came On Horseback (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:51
Fresh:50
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.8/10
Consensus: The Devil Came on Horseback is both a strong primer on the complexities of the situation in Darfur and a harrowing first-person doc.
Theatrical Release:Jul 25, 2007 Limited
Synopsis:
Marine Captain Brian Steidle is an unlikely hero. Not because he isn't brave; he has shown courage under fire. But Steidle's accomplishment is entirely unexpected; he is a soldier who is learning...
Marine Captain Brian Steidle is an unlikely hero. Not because he isn't brave; he has shown courage under fire. But Steidle's accomplishment is entirely unexpected; he is a soldier who is learning to change the world through peaceful means.
The subject is Darfur. The journey takes place over the course of 18 months. Steidle went to Sudan as an unarmed military observer working for the African Union. He left as a witness to what many believe is genocide in the western Darfur region, a conflict that has claimed 400,000 lives and displaced 2.5 million people. In the transformation from soldier to observer to witness and activist, we see a man at first confounded by his naiveté and then confronted by the urgency of a humanitarian catastrophe that he sees unfolding firsthand.
An everyman figure, Steidle is initially unequipped to absorb the horror around him. Like many, he would rather not engage with something so incomprehensible and terrible. But he does, and Annie Sundberg and Ricki Stern's (The Trials of Darryl Hunt, Sundance 2006) astonishing film journeys from Darfur to the United States, then to Chad, Rwanda, and finally the United States again. His odyssey becomes ours as the more than 1,000 photographs he took become evidence of a crisis that cannot be denied.
--© Sundance Film Festival
Director: Annie Sundberg, Ricki Stern
Director: Annie Sundberg, Ricki Stern
Producer: Ricki Stern, Annie Sundberg, Gretchen Steidle Wallace, Jane Wells
Composer: Paul Brill
Studio: International Film Circuit Inc.
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Reviews for The Devil Came On Horseback
With an estimated 400,000 dead since 2003, and 2.5 million Sudanese left homeless in the wake of the genocide, ignoring the story doesn’t seem like a humane option.
The Devil Came on Horseback means to upset you. To this end, it presents Steidle's photos and very vocal frustrations.
The Devil Came on Horseback is a documentary about the genocide in that part of Africa, and the film's strength is that it shows us the horror, rather than tells us about it. It's painful to watch.
[Steidle's photos] cannot be viewed without flinching, but they must be seen by as many people as possible.
Like the best art, documentary films can provoke strong emotions -- and The Devil Came on Horseback is definitely provocative.
Too often the movies view the problems of Africa through Western eyes, but Devil turns that weakness to a literal strength, because Steidle could do nothing in his position except take photographs.
...a moving and sometimes gut wrenching account of this latest holocaust. But, with so much focus on Iraq, this fine documentary may fall by the wayside.
Marine Captain Brian Steidle, who went to Darfur to monitor a peace agreement but instead became a witness to genocide, should be considered by Time for Man of the Year.
more than a great film, it's also the rare kind of non-fiction film that can actually open eyes.
But The Devil Came on Horseback has galvanized audiences at film festivals around the world precisely because it presents, in its calm, measured fashion and without much ceremony, pictures that nobody really wants to see.
The persuasive documentary The Devil Came On Horseback contains dozens of photographs that testify to this tragedy, yet the apathy pierces hardest of all.
One of the most searing and emotionally shattering documentaries ever made about the indifference of the world to genocide.
It is difficult to fault a film that only asks for an end to an unfathomably evil campaign that has left some 400,000 dead, and another 2.5 million homeless.
Sincere and purposeful, Devil has the potential to do for the situation in Darfur what An Inconvenient Truth did for global warming, which is to say, get people talking about it.
Latest News for The Devil Came On Horseback
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