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    Why We Fight

    4.0 8

    Eugene Jarecki


    DVD

    (Wide Screen / Subtitled)

    $14.99
    $14.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 01/22/2008
    • UPC: 0043396138940
    • Original Release: 2004
    • Rating: PG-13
    • Source: Sony Pictures
    • Region Code: 1
    • Presentation: [Wide Screen]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 5940
    • Sales rank: 62,279

    Special Features

    Closed Caption;Extra scenes; Extended character featurettes; Filmmaker TV appearances: The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, Charlie Rose; Audience Q&A with filmmaker; Filmmaker commentary with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson; Theatrical trailer

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Robert Miller Composer

    Technical Credits
    Eugene Jarecki Producer,Screenwriter
    Susannah Shipman Producer
    Hans Eisenhauer Executive Producer
    Nick Fraser Executive Producer
    Roy Ackerman Executive Producer
    Peter Miller Sound/Sound Designer
    Paul Rusnak Sound/Sound Designer
    Brian Buckley Sound/Sound Designer

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Why We Fight
    1. What Are We Fighting For? [7:50]
    2. A One-Superpower World [10:22]
    3. How Far Does the U.S. Go? [8:52]
    4. Unwarranted Influence [5:20]
    5. The American Way of War [5:18]
    6. Too Close a Relationship [9:01]
    7. Army of One [6:45]
    8. A Militaristic Nation [5:39]
    9. Blowback [11:26]
    10. The Public Doesn't Need to Know [8:12]
    11. The Opening Shot [11:35]
    12. The World Has Changed [8:31]

    In 1961, as Dwight D. Eisenhower gave his final address to the nation before leaving the office of President of the United States, he warned that America "must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence...by the military-industrial complex." Nearly 45 years later, as the United States finds itself waging a war in Iraq for reasons that seem increasingly unclear with the passage of time, Eisenhower's statement becomes all the more pertinent, and the question becomes more apt: has the machinery the United States established to wage war helped prevent conflict, or has it done more to inspire it? Documentary filmmaker Eugene Jarecki offers an in-depth look at how the United States has readied itself for battle, and why and how the nation goes to war in the film Why We Fight. Named for Frank Capra's famed series of Defense Department films (which explained the motives behind America's entry into World War II), Why We Fight features interviews with foot soldiers, Army recruits, Pentagon personnel, decorated veterans, members of Congress, national security advisors, top military strategists, and many more as they talks about the core philosophies of American military strategy and how they have changed since the end of the Second World War. Why We Fight received the Grand Jury Prize at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival.

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    Eugene Jarecki's documentary Why We Fight takes its name from a series of propaganda films made by Frank Capra during World War II, which were designed to support the American war effort. But Jarecki has quite a different agenda now than Capra had then. Why We Fight is unambiguously anti-war, but unlike some 21st century anti-war documentaries, it doesn't exist just to hang the Bush administration out to dry. To be certain, Jarecki's film criticizes the faulty reasoning behind invading Iraq as stridently as anyone out there, specifically, Vice President Dick Cheney's connection to a company (Halliburton) that would directly profit from this invasion. But it presents another conservative president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, as the sage voice of reason underpinning the whole film, with his prescient warnings about "the military-industrial complex" -- in other words, a self-perpetuating war machine that burrows into the capitalist fabric of the country, independent of political parties and unaccountable at the polls. Meanwhile, Jarecki notes that Lyndon Johnson, a Democrat, used intelligence to justify military engagement in Vietnam that was just as flimsy as Bush's search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Why We Fight is an excellent balance between history lesson and current events, and it makes its case compellingly through the facts presented and the people interviewed -- most of whom agree with Jarecki's perspective, but some of whom do not (such as conservative hawk Richard Perle). Most memorable among the interviewees, from a standpoint of journalistic fairness, are the Iraqi citizens whom Jarecki went to the trouble of interviewing in their own backyard. Their presence adds one more voice to the debate, a voice that even the most conscientious of Jarecki's peers might have overlooked. Why We Fight is a highly illuminating portrait of a national psychology, full of sobering truths.

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