Gunner Palace is important because of its unique depiction of military service.
Gunner Palace (2005)
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Reviews Counted:101
Fresh:86
Rotten:15
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: A shapeless documentary, but shows what's it like for the soldiers on the ground.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] on appeal for strong language throughout, violent situations and some drug references
Runtime: 85 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Mar 4, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $63,520
Synopsis: In this striking documentary shot in 2003, early on in the US-led war on Iraq, a group of American soldiers in Baghdad who have taken over a bombed-out palace that belonged to Uday Hussein, the son... In this striking documentary shot in 2003, early on in the US-led war on Iraq, a group of American soldiers in Baghdad who have taken over a bombed-out palace that belonged to Uday Hussein, the son of Saddam Hussein, offer the camera a view on their world. While they party poolside for most of the day and lead raids on homes of suspected bomb-builders most nights, they also have a lot to say about the war and their situation. Rapping to each other or to the camera, they use rhyme to speak their minds about various aspects of the war, their day-to-day duties, and life in Iraq. Their youth and immaturity is striking, as is the war itself and the nebulous reasons that they are stationed there. While the primary purpose of GUNNER PALACE is to give the perspective of the soldiers, secondarily viewers get a glimpse of Iraqi civilians and how they react to the US military presence--some are terrified, others are skeptical, still others are compliant and grateful if not totally sure why. However, giving voice to the soldiers remains the film's major theme, and for this reason, filmmakers Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein appealed the original R-rating given to the film by the MPAA, and won. With a PG-13 rating, filmmakers explained, teenagers considering military careers can watch the film and benefit from seeing soldiers in combat and hearing them talk about what it's like. [More]
Director: Mike Tucker
Director: Mike Tucker
Producer: Petra Epperlein
Studio: Palm Pictures
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Reviews for Gunner Palace
You certainly can't question Tucker's bravery, but you may occasionally feel the urge to ask him to be quiet.
The filmmakers strove to shock a society addicted to "reality" TV by forging through and actually showing them something actually real.
Frank and fascinating, Gunner Palace brings the Iraqi War home, putting the dangerous and boring lives of U.S. soldiers into equally provocative perspective.
First-time documentary makers (Michael) Tucker and ... Petra Epperlein ... get a little bogged down in letting soldiers express their feelings through amateur rap.
... in post-Saddam Baghdad much depends on the snap decisions of 19-year-old Americans.
It's a fascinating, sometimes furious, sometimes funny film about the soldiers in one unit in Baghdad, videotaped from a fly-on-the-wall perspective.
Impressive and intimate look at the realilty of the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Isn't a smooth piece of filmmaking, but the work of directors (Michael Tucker, Petra Epperlein) who simply want you to see what they saw.
While Gunner Palace has the immediacy of street rap, it is actually a throwback to the cinema verite style of pioneering documentarians D.A. Pennebaker, Albert Maysles and Frederick Wiseman.
But they're very good at documenting the tedium of the place and the work, the banal dangers of an occupation where the enemy could be anyone.
Lock 'n load as the flip-side of rock 'n roll, with literal battle raps that function as both painful autobiography and frontline reportage.
Tucker and Epperlein are pushing no agenda other than respect and support for U.S. soldiers, and that alone is worth watching.
The film's strength -- and its weakness -- is in its you-are-there view of guys who are e-mailing their loved ones back home one minute and breaking down the doors of Iraqi homes the next, on the hunt for the enemy.
Practically agenda-free, but a slice-of-life like this loses steam after about 45 minutes. At least a strident political viewpoint gives you something to talk about.
Gunner Palace succeeds as a series of snapshots of the post-war landscape ...
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