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Iraq in Fragments (2006)
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Reviews Counted:65
Fresh:59
Rotten:6
Average Rating:7.6/10
Consensus: A stylistically bold, humanist take on the difficulties of post-invasion Iraq.
Theatrical Release:Nov 8, 2006 Limited
Synopsis: Iraq In Fragments illuminates post-war Iraq in three acts, building a vivid picture of a country pulled in different directions by religion and ethnicity. Filmed in cinema verité style, the film... Iraq In Fragments illuminates post-war Iraq in three acts, building a vivid picture of a country pulled in different directions by religion and ethnicity. Filmed in cinema verité style, the film powerfully explores the lives of ordinary Iraqis: people whose thoughts, beliefs, aspirations, and concerns are at once personal and illustrative of larger issues in Iraq today. Part One follows Mohammed Haithem, an 11-year-old auto mechanic in the mixed Sheik Omar neighborhood in the heart of old Baghdad. With his father missing, Mohammed idolizes his domineering boss, working feverishly for approval and affection. Several years behind in school and waylaid by war’s intervention, he’s torn between education and apprenticeship. Through Mohammed's eyes we see a growing disenchantment with the U.S.-led occupation, as well as tensions between Shia and Sunni Iraqis. Shown in extreme close-up, Mohammed's Bagdhad is a city caught between an idealized past, a dangerous present, and an uncertain future. Part Two is filmed inside the Shiite political/religious movement of Moqtada Sadr, traveling between Naseriyah and the holy city of Najaf. As tensions mount inside the country, we see the inner workings of Iraqi local politics as the Sadr movement pushes for regional elections and enforces their interpretation of Islamic law. Assuming control over the region, Mehdi Army militia overtake open markets and imprison suspected merchants of alcohol. Detainees and their impoverished families plea for mercy from this new authority. As the United States provokes an armed uprising among Sadr's followers, moderate views are swept aside. Part Three follows Iraqi Kurds as they assert their bid for independence, rebelling against the past atrocities of Baghdad rule. We follow these developments through the eyes of brick makers and childhood friends on a farm south of Arbil. An elderly farmer ruminates on his family, his people, and God, mindful of the legacy they all share, while his teenaged son tends sheep and dreams of medical school despite his father's desire that he serve God. We hear voices of both independence and nationalism, sentiments secular and religious, revealing a community where politics and faith are personal, public, and forever closely intertwined. --© Official Site [More]
Director: James Longley
Director: James Longley
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Reviews for Iraq in Fragments
Bafflingly, the threats in an occupied country consistently come from within, not without or overhead: what has the effect of the US occupation and Hussein's vicious rule been on these people? Offers a fragmented, obscuring picture of Iraq.
Much of what is captured will be familiar for viewers of Frontline or other recent documentaries.
People talk about the country being split into pieces, but there's not much shown to articulate how, when or why that is the case.
There are some striking images, but the film is less useful for not having any commentary on the confused events depicted.
Brings back nothing journalistically substantial from the war front.
Visually, the director's flair is impressive. But Longley's clear intention of using children's faces to better tug at our heartstrings would be more admirable if it didn't feel as shamelessly staged.
James Longley's haunting, oblique film, Iraq in Fragments, presents a collage of images, sounds and characters in an intimate, partial portrait of an unraveling nation.
It's head and shoulders above the rest in its clarity, intimacy and poetry, and it illustrates the dreadful predicament America has created in Iraq, which drove so many angry people to the polls on Tuesday.
A vivid, poetic evocation of life in post-invasion Iraq that works both as impressionistic collage and candid portraiture.
There’s something of a period quality to this beautifully photographed documentary snapshot of Iraq in transition.
Director James Longley doesn't say anything new about the politics of Iraq, but he leaves us with a vivid impression of its people, its places and its seemingly irreconcilable contradictions.
The struggles [documentary filmmaker James Longley] recorded in his dazzling Iraq in Fragments aren't battlefield conflicts, but the personal, religious and political efforts of Iraqi citizens to reassemble their shattered lives.
The film provides specifics, details of hectic life among ruins, faces filled with dread, desire, and defiance.
In the end, the movie is more than the sum of its fragments. The montages are intense, the images ravishing. The movie is tactile. When you finally feel this place, you understand just how little you understand.
Watch the evening news and you get a view of Iraq from high above the wreckage. In this fascinating doc, director James Longley shows us how things look on the ground.
A timely, lyrical and candid look at daily life in a post-invasion Iraq.
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