by 8bitagent » Thu May 26, 2011 4:53 am
Just watched it. As always, a hypnotic visual/music feast. The song "Suzanne" always gives me goosebumps and a slight tear, and the use of it here was perfect.
Most documentaries deep down are meant to entertain...that's why I can enjoy the ambiance or feeling of even documentaries I find fool's gold(like Loose Change or Obession)
There's very few documentaries I refuse to watch, as I am rarely ever bored by them(by now I've probably seen close to a thousand documentary films)
Anyways, as always Curtis has this very lucid and loose narrative. At times I think he presents things more in a dreamlike state than truly rooted in tangible material.
I didn't think the whole thing was an apologetic white wash. To me the IMF and wallstreet came off as the predatory greedy destroyers of culture and civilization as I've long assumed them to be.
Surprised the film completely skipped over the Seattle 1999 and subsequent 2000-2001 leftist activist awakening of exposing the IMF/World Bank/WTO. Or the fallout of NAFTA.
And I had forgotten how massive the Indonesian/Thailand collapse of 1998 was, definitely on par or worse than some of the Arab spring. Both the IMF and Suharto were evil, just sad so many innocents were hurt. Look how Rockefeller globalists used the genocide in 1965 Jakarta to expand their own empire, as evidenced in Pilger's "New Rulers Of The World"
I love the use of footage of the Clintons and others who don't realize they're being filmed, or odd archival footage. And again, the music...just perfect. He needs to use Roxy Music and Arcade Fire:)
As far as 9/11, I actually have no objections to the notion that "Islamists wanted to destroy the central pillar of Western hubris". That certainly is one aspect, as I do not doubt bin Laden/Zawahiri and al Qaeda(as much as I believe them to be pawns of deeper forces) were convinced of this. 9/11 has many facets to it, all of which are both correct and false.
I had no idea this was essentially a documentary about Ayn Rand...some myths of her were deflated I guess. I would agree she wasn't some philosophical tool of the elite as spiritual writers had been half a century earlier. But the way she saw the world was just so lonely and cold...no wonder she ended up alone.
Anyways, can't wait for part 2 and 3!
"Do you know who I am? I am the arm, and I sound like this..."-man from another place, twin peaks fire walk with me