Does a good job in stating its case in a detailed and sober manner.
Why We Fight (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:107
Fresh:85
Rotten:22
Average Rating:7.1/10
Consensus: A provocative and timely film that explores the military/industrial complex and the motivating forces that lead us to war.
Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Synopsis: Released as the American military continues to make its presence felt in Iraq and across the globe, Eugene Jarecki's (THE TRIALS OF HENRY KISSINGER) WHY WE FIGHT asks some pertinent questions about... Released as the American military continues to make its presence felt in Iraq and across the globe, Eugene Jarecki's (THE TRIALS OF HENRY KISSINGER) WHY WE FIGHT asks some pertinent questions about the economic necessities of war. Speaking to a number of key figures including Republican Senator John McCain and author Gore Vidal, as well as lesser-know names such as Wilton Sekzer--a Vietnam veteran and ex-New York City cop who lost his son in the World Trade Center attacks--Jarecki's film is a bipartisan treatise that was inspired by Dwight Eisenhower's 1961 farewell address to the nation. Eisenhower spoke of a burgeoning American military-industrial complex, which he believed would threaten democracy across the globe. Jarecki takes a look at whether this has occurred by questioning his subjects on the links between big business and the military, while also talking to people whose lives are inexorably tied to the business of war. Fascinating revelations unfold, from Sekzer's attempt to pay tribute to his son to the thoughts of the fighter pilot who dropped the first bomb on Iraq at the dawn of the second Gulf War. Each of them gives their own unique take on the American military machine, while Jarecki intersperses their discussions with rapid-fire scenes of the machine as it lumbers into action. WHY WE FIGHT cleverly reflects the sharp divide that exists among the American people on why we are in Iraq. A number of people on the street are questioned throughout the film, with Jarecki asking them "why do we fight?" His subjects give a broad range of answers, and Jarecki himself does not search for a definitive solution to the question. Instead he simply gives us a variety of truths and lets the audience try to salvage something from an incredibly complex, sometimes mysterious, and often terrifying state of affairs. [More]
Starring: John McCain, Gore Vidal, Graydon Carter
Starring: John McCain, Gore Vidal, Graydon Carter
Director: Eugene Jarecki
Director: Eugene Jarecki
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Why We Fight
Yet another well-intentioned documentary that will preach to the choir but no one else.
Wisely eschewing any pretense of journalistic objectivity, Jarecki has fashioned a canny indictment of the current administration's military adventures, limning an alternate history of the rise of the American empire over the past 60 or so years.
There isn't a lot that's new in Why We Fight. Nor is it likely the anti-war film will preach to anyone but the converted. Nonetheless, it offers bits of intriguing history, and it urges us, perhaps, to reassess the stature of Eisenhower.
unlike [in Fahrenheit 9/11, Why We Fight lets its subjects do the talking; there's no constant narrative presence like in Moore's film. And as a result, it's considerably more persuasive.
Fahrenheit 9/11 for tweedy liberals who disdain Michael Moore's in-your-face persona.
Even if you don't agree with his analysis or conclusions, it's hard to see the cumulative weight of his [director Jarecki's] evidence as anything but prescient.
Eugene Jarecki's Why We Fight takes on enough subjects to make five great documentaries, but as a result is so scattered that it doesn't quite make for one good one.
It's hard to imagine a politician today addressing the public in Eisenhower's un-condescending, non-simplistic and honest terms.
Much of the information here is old news, and Jarecki's cursory collage style doesn't help his cause. But this is a case of compelling evidence overwhelming the drawbacks of form.
[Director Eugene] Jarecki says he was trying to connect our military past with the present. He doesn't do this as well as one might hope, but he certainly offers a fascinating treatise on current events.
[Reduces] to zero the chances that any impartial observer will be genuinely swayed by this cinematic position paper.
A stirring anti-war doc...deciphering fifty years of military misadventure.
...puts together a persuasive case that the U.S. government is driven in large part by the needs of the "military-industrial complex"
It's impossible to imagine anyone, right-leaning or left, coming away from this hugely important documentary unshaken by its representation of the United States and its military establishment.
Taken as a whole, Why We Fight is the work of someone who started with a conclusion and made sure he got there.
Latest News for Why We Fight
December 06, 2007:
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Perhaps you've heard of Freakonomics, the bestselling book by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, and thought it sounded interesting, but never found out, on account of how... More...
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