For those willing to go along for the ride, it is a harrowing experience, as Gibney makes his case that the United States, in its haste to retaliate for the atrocities of 9/11, has itself crossed a bloody line in the sand.
Taxi to the Dark Side (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:81
Fresh:81
Rotten:0
Average Rating:8.3/10
Consensus: Taxi to the Dark Side is an intelligent, powerful look into the dark corners of the War on Terror.
Rated: 15 [See Full Rating] for disturbing images, and content involving torture and graphic nudity.
Runtime: 1 hr 46 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:13-06-2008
Synopsis: Alex Gibney's TAXI FROM THE DARK SIDE is a perpetually shocking documentary about the Bush administration's use of torture when dealing with political prisoners, with a particular focus on those... Alex Gibney's TAXI FROM THE DARK SIDE is a perpetually shocking documentary about the Bush administration's use of torture when dealing with political prisoners, with a particular focus on those captured in Iraq and Afghanistan. The title of Gibney's movie is derived from the treatment meted out to an Afghani taxi driver named Dilawar, who was mistakenly fingered as a terrorist, then killed during a torture session conducted by American troops. Despite the title, Dilawar's case is just a small part in Gibney's jigsaw, as the director uses excruciating and comprehensive details surrounding the taxi driver's death as a starting point in his search for the people who have permitted such incidents to occur. Gut-wrenching and fully uncensored pictures from Abu-Ghraib feature alongside interviews with military personnel (some of whom tortured Dilawar) as Gibney's search slowly heads into the upper echelons of the military and, ultimately, into the Bush regime itself. TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE is a powerful, well-executed piece of filmmaking. Gibney's skills as a director come to the fore as he manages to pull some surprisingly candid revelations from his subjects, while his choice of newsreel clips featuring the likes of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld are extremely well chosen. Perhaps the most eye-opening scenes come from a press trip to the U.S. facility at Guantanamo Bay, where Gibney and others are given a tour of the facilities, including the site gift shop, where gallows humor is stretched to breaking point with the sale of souvenir t-shirts bearing the legend Behavior Modification Instructor. The film concludes with Gibney pulling the focus back to Dilawar once again, highlighting the futility of his death as a number of commentators show how torture isn't, and never has been, an effective method for extracting information from people. [More]
Director: Alex Gibney
Director: Alex Gibney
Screenwriter: Alex Gibney
Producer: Alex Gibney, Eva Orner, Susannah Shipman
Composer: Ivor Guest, Robert Logan
Studio: ThinkFilm
Reviews for Taxi to the Dark Side
The film should be applauded for being so thoroughly assembled and well-researched.
There seems to be far more shrouded in darkness than Gibney's flashlight reveals.
[Gibney] raises an alarm to America's conscience, angrily asking why we the people have allowed our values - and even our safety - to be compromised by such secret policies.
A film like this remains important, both as an indictment of the present day and as a warning to future generations that the ends don't always justify the means.
For all its brilliant dissecting of U.S. policy, practice, and cover-up, the movie closes with an effort to make Dilawar visible once again.
Taxi to the Dark Side is a stunning indictment of torture as policy, a brilliant documentary whose arguments are so well-supported and reasonably made that you can't ignore them.
'America -- when she is right, to be kept right. When she is wrong, to be put right.' If that's your idea of patriotism, take time out to see Taxi to the Dark Side.
Not a pleasant experience, but just as not every film needs to be 'important,' neither does every film need to be empty escapism.
How dark? You've probably already had some inkling but decided you didn't really want to know. The movie made me physically sick.
Along with No End in Sight, this movie is one of the essential documentaries of the ongoing war.
An astonishingly comprehensive look at the use of torture (or whatever euphemism you prefer) in the war on terror.
[Director] Gibney posits that reliable but time-consuming interrogation techniques, which required skill and patience, have been replaced by procedures one person describes as 'this side of the Marquis de Sade.'
[D]oes what it does so damn well, and... what is does is so sadly so vitally necessary, even if you wish it weren't...
Taxi to the Dark Side joins a growing list of outspoken documentaries that question the rationale and conduct of America's presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, and our willingness to destroy freedom in order to save it.
Utterly engrossing and captivating in its inquisitive scope. Provocative and polarizing, Taxi invites us to eavesdrop on a movement of mistrust and mischievous mayhem
The film is very reminiscent of No End in Sight in its ability to induce teeth-gnashing, using one cab driver's wrongful death story to launch into a breakdown of how the American military's interrogation system has, well, broken down.
Director Alex Gibney's somewhat inelegantly titled Taxi to the Dark Side is a harrowing gut-punch to America's belief in its own unassailable righteousness.
I couldn't articulate my devastation. This film remains with you like a wound bleeding truth.
Latest News for Taxi to the Dark Side
December 19, 2008:
RT Interview: Director Alex Gibney on Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
Documentarian Alex Gibney was tasked with the challenge of bringing structure to the extreme life of controversial journalist Hunter S. Thompson. RT talks to him to find out more. More...
September 26, 2008:
Alex Gibney Feels Gravity ![]()
For his next project, "Taxi to the Dark Side" director Alex Gibney will executive-produce and "serve as mentor" on "Gravity," a documentary about the world of BASE jumping. More...
August 07, 2008:
Further Reading: Celebrating the Brilliance of The King of Kong
One documentary from the US last year spoke to avid videogamers more than any other, and in the process told a brilliantly human story about good, evil and Donkey Kong. In this... More...
June 26, 2008:
Gibney Says ThinkFilm Failed Taxi to the Dark Side ![]()
Alex Gibney's Taxi to the Dark Side won an Oscar, but its box office performance was a disappointment, to say the least -- and Gibney says the financial woes of the... More...
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