What's epic in Morris' still and haunting assembly of talking heads is an indictment of photography, and by extension, history.
Standard Operating Procedure (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:95
Fresh:76
Rotten:19
Average Rating:7.1/10
Consensus: Well researched and finely crafted, Standard Operating Procedure is another gem from master documentarian Errol Morris.
Theatrical Release:18-07-2008
Synopsis: Master filmmaker Errol Morris turns his keen eye to the Abu Ghraib prison scandal in this intense and provocative documentary. Using interviews with the soldiers that appeared in the now infamous... Master filmmaker Errol Morris turns his keen eye to the Abu Ghraib prison scandal in this intense and provocative documentary. Using interviews with the soldiers that appeared in the now infamous torture photos, Morris strings their stories together with vivid reenactments and striking digital technology for a wrenching look at the events at the prison. With his trademark straight-into-the-lens interview style, it is chilling to see the familiar faces of Lynndie England and Sabrina Harmon as they try to articulate their experiences. The lawlessness and confusion in the prison quickly become evident, and as their stories unfold, the film slowly strips away the many puzzling questions that surround the incidents, exposing a much larger truth about corruption within the US military, corruption that appears to reach far beyond the handful of soldiers that took the fall for the scandal. Morris's reenactments are extremely vivid, and often shot in a beautifully cinematic style. While these techniques make for riveting filmmaking, they are sometimes considered controversial by documentary purists, and some might criticize his detailed recreations of such deeply disturbing events. However, others might deem the reenactments necessary to really bringing home the reality of what happened. Regardless of his methods, Morris does a masterly job of untangling such a complex, twisted story. He shines a glaring light on one of America's most shameful moments and, more importantly, exposes how little we truly know about our military's methods. [More]
Director: Errol Morris
Director: Errol Morris
Producer: Errol Morris, Julie Ahlberg
Composer: Danny Elfman
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Standard Operating Procedure
Morris widens our understanding of the real crimes that took place there. This is where the movie becomes not just a slant on history but also a vehicle for broadening our understanding.
Reduces one of the truly horrifying controversies in American military history to an intellectual puzzle.
Director Errol Morris tackled the Iraqi prison subject -- among the mass of recent Iraq war documentaries -- because he 'wasn't sure anyone else would tell it if I didn't tell it'.
After Errol Morris' "Fog of War", I was expecting something more provocative from him --- instead, what we get is a very lengthy, often repetitive viewing of the infamous photographs of Abu Ghraib.
The best I can say about this film is that it's important from the standpoint of having an historical record so an event like Abu Ghraib is not repeated.
Morris addresses the far more difficult question of why . . . the tragic flaw within the human psyche that could allow this travesty to occur, spelling out in stark terms why such behavior is, as the title says, is standard operating procedure
[A film] that is likely to outrage and provoke anyone who comes into contact with it.
The singular achievement of SOP is reminding us that truth is always a slippery construct, made all the more so by the fallible human mind and the ever-blinking eye.
Focus is really the heart of Morris' unsettling film, which strikes a remarkable balance between art and disturbance, between beauty and pain.
Relentless unpleasantness may be the most appropriate quality of this movie that disturbs in so many different ways.
If imaginative presentation is Standard Operating Procedure's biggest fault (and it does arguably create a dispassionate tone, ill-befitting an atrocity), it does make two hours of talking heads easier to absorb.
This film by the masterful Errol Morris gets closer to the actual events than any of them, with probing interviews of soldiers who were involved and careful scrutiny of the hundreds of photographs retrieved from three digital cameras at the prison.
Completely unlike anything I was expecting from such a film -- more disturbing, analytical and morose.
The movie’s a staggering work that traces the rotten blossom of this scandal close to its roots.
Even with an amazing filmmaker like Morris, it's impossible to yet fully focus the photos from Abu Ghraib and truly know what happened, who was right, who was wrong, and when it will happen again.
Errol Morris' smart new documentary remembers the Abu Ghraib pictures' effects -- the shock, the outrage, and the anger that greeted their release.
Standard Operating Procedure begins with the terrible volumes spoken by the photos, and then, after interviewing the guilty soldiers holding the camera, it forces us to look outside the pictures' frame to see what is obscured.
A misjudged degree of cinematic dazzle obscures the outrages at the core of Standard Operating Procedure, director Errol Morris' first documentary since The Fog of War, and the first Iraq documentary to focus on the infamous Abu Ghraib photo
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