Could be the poster film for the protest-the-war, support-the-troops mentality.
Occupation: Dreamland (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:29
Fresh:22
Rotten:7
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: This documentary of American soldiers in Falluja offers a revealing and complex portrait of Army life.
Theatrical Release:Nov 30, 1999 Limited
Synopsis: In 2004, filmmakers Ian Olds and Garrett Scott set out to create a truthful document of the American soldier's experience in Iraq by spending six weeks with the 82nd Airborne at their post in... In 2004, filmmakers Ian Olds and Garrett Scott set out to create a truthful document of the American soldier's experience in Iraq by spending six weeks with the 82nd Airborne at their post in Falluja, where their mission is to improve relations with the locals while maintaining order in the city. Unbeknownst to any of them, the city would become the site of one of the bloodiest battles of the war mere weeks after filming was completed. Virtually living with the small platoon and accompanying them on patrols that see gunfire and explosions, Olds and Scott elicit some surprising opinions from their soldiers. Despite an urging from Squad Leader Sergeant Chris Corcione, a former guitar player in a North Carolina death metal band, to refrain from making any anti-Bush administration comments on camera, several soldiers express doubt in their reasons for being there and lack of faith in the President's motives for sending them. Telling comments from residents of the city also serve as eerie foreshadowing of the violence that would eventually follow. Without taking any clear position, OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND also shows how the military provides a way out for young people with no other options--though the end result may often be a different kind of purgatory. [More]
Director: Garrett Scott
Director: Garrett Scott
Producer: Selina Lewis-Davidson
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Reviews for Occupation: Dreamland
The thoughts and experiences captured in this film reveal much that we haven't seen in all the action-oriented news footage and short-term embedded correspondence from the war.
A grunt's-eye view of the current conflict that needs to be seen, regardless of a viewer's political persuasion.
It vividly conveys a threacherous war in much the same way as a recent predecessor, "Gunnar Palace" which, through a more artful presentation is the better for it.
A compelling mosaic of voices, some discouraged, some enthusiastic, all aware that there's a job to be done and that they must do it to the best of their abilities.
It's frustrating to see these filmmakers continually lobbing softball questions at their subjects.
Gunner Palace is getting all the press -- while Occupation: Dreamland is easily just as good. If not better.
A reminder that our soldiers are people not unlike yourself. You can think what you want to about the war, but you have to respect that they put their lives on the line.
Succeeds in putting human faces on both the soldiers that we read about so clinically in our papers, as well as, to a lesser extent, the Iraqis who, not surprisingly, come across as both victims and aggressors.
Aside from the year it was made, there's nothing that Dreamland adds to a very, very full genre
Filmmakers Garrett Scott and Ian Olds spent many weeks with their subjects. As a result, soldiers opened up more for their cameras about reasons for enlisting and concerns about the job they were sent to do.
Without resorting to the steroid-pumped aggro flash of Gunner Palace, Occupation: Dreamland reinforces the impression that the American rodeo in Iraq was always a murderously pointless self-security op.
It offers a look at the kind of Americans not often put on movie screens.
The portrait that emerges is of proud and articulate recruits who are also young, often undereducated and usually underemployed.
Straightforward and immensely powerful, the movie offers a blunt assessment of the war from soldiers currently fighting it, and their perspective is not pretty.
Latest News for Occupation: Dreamland
March 06, 2006:
Indie Spirit Awards Distributed
Lost in the shadow of the weekend's Oscar coverage was the annual Independent Spirit Awards presentation, which is where you'll find ... a lot of accolades similar to the... More...
November 16, 2005:
"Penguins," "Murderball," and 13 Other Docs Vie for Oscar Eligibility
Variety's Award Central brings news on the 15 documentary films that have been "shortlisted" for Academy Award consideration. (And there are 2 seriously egregious... More...
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