The Road to Guantánamo will drive you crazy, if you aren't crazy yet.
The Road to Guantanamo (2006)
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Reviews Counted:29
Fresh:24
Rotten:5
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: A gut-wrenching and riveting docu-drama that serves as a stinging indictment of U.S. military justice in an era of ever-increasing scrutiny.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for language and disturbing violent content
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Jun 23, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $221,178
Synopsis: The post-9/11 climate found the U.S. government resorting to many unorthodox methods to quash the perceived threat from further terrorist attacks. None was more controversial or more... The post-9/11 climate found the U.S. government resorting to many unorthodox methods to quash the perceived threat from further terrorist attacks. None was more controversial or more headline-grabbing than the detainment camp set up in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, which was constructed to imprison and interrogate Taliban and Al-Qaeda operatives captured by U.S. soldiers. Prolific British filmmaker Michael Winterbottom (9 SONGS) turns his cameras on the camp with this true story of three innocent British 20-something Muslims who were captured and held at Guantanamo for two years. Winterbottom cleverly marries extensive interview footage with the three men--Asif Iqbal, Ruhel Ahmed, and Shafiq Rasifknown, collectively known as the Tipton Three--with nerve-jarring reconstructive footage of what happened to them. After traveling to Pakistan for a wedding, the three men set out on an intrepid exploration of Afghanistan, only to find themselves captured by U.S. forces who mistook them for members of the Taliban/Al-Qaeda. The footage of the capture is intense and terrifying, with Winterbottom pulling some fearsome acting from his leads. But even that pales next to the reconstruction of their period in Guantanamo, where the men are stripped of their humanity and treated to brutal inquisition and torture methods, many of which seem untested and experimental in nature. Sometimes it's difficult to believe that one human being could treat another this way, until Winterbottom neatly intersperses more timely reminders from his interviews with the men themselves, adding further revelations to the shocking scenes the cast reenacts. Winterbottom mostly shoots on digital video throughout, and the gloomy, grainy texture of the film is perfectly used as a mirror of the personal hell these three men went through. Possibly Winterbottom's best film yet, THE ROAD TO GUANTANAMO is must-see cinema that is likely to leave its audience shaking with rage and despair. [More]
Starring: Riz Ahmed, Farhad Harun, Arfan Usman, Shahid Iqbal
Starring: Riz Ahmed, Farhad Harun, Arfan Usman, Shahid Iqbal
Director: Michael Winterbottom, Mat Whitecross
Director: Michael Winterbottom, Mat Whitecross
Composer: Molly Nyman, Harry Escott
Studio: Roadside Attractions
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Reviews for The Road to Guantanamo
While not an altogether convincing character study of the three detainees, Guantanamo is a nonetheless chilling indictment.
Offers a gripping rebuke of the way prisoners are treated at Guantanamo, even though it never entirely settles important questions about what the Tipton Three might have been up to.
Winterbottom's re-enactors do a persuasive job of depicting young men whose ad hoc decision to travel from Pakistan to Afghanistan put them solidly in the wrong-place/wrong-time category.
Your view of its accuracy depends entirely on how truthful you feel the narrators are. I found it easy to believe the general outlines of their stories. In times of war, bad things don't happen only to bad people.
The moviemakers tell the trio's engrossing story with a mix of battering immediacy, precision and discretion that puts you totally in the movie's grip.
One-sided and, in part, anti-American, but via the fictionalized sequences, the directors convey more angles of the story.
It actually displays a remarkable rectitude when it comes to dramatizing its subjects' ordeal.
...the film's urgency can tilt toward shrillness, but nobody else has made the disaster of Guantánamo so painfully vivid.
It’s stunning and it’s certain to spark a lot of discussion. But as a film, as a piece of art I think it’s a very important piece of art.
Watching this mélange of journalism and dramatic license can be enthralling and maddening at the same time, because the ring of truth, which the film has, is not the same as the truth, which remains unknown.
A riveting and disturbing documentary that falls short of greatness by not providing enough insight into the characters.
While the story is significant, the filmmaking is flawed. It seems like Guantánamo was rushed out for newsy impact when it really could have used some more fine tuning before release.
The Road to Guantanamo is a missed opportunity. This is a subject that deserves a more thoughtful documentary or docudrama, not a hastily thrown together amalgam of the two.
The movie begins as a not very compelling or particularly convincing road movie, and turns into a riveting prison drama.
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