Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Vietnam: Ghosts of War (Canada, Director: Micheael Maclear) — Michael Maclear is an insti­tu­tion in Canadian broad­casting. Not only was he the first Western journ­alist to report from North Vietnam during the war (even wit­nessing Ho Chi Minh’s funeral), he was the pro­ducer of the only ser­ious attempt to doc­u­ment the entire his­tory of the Vietnam con­flict (the 1980 min­iseries The Ten Thousand Day War). In this film, Maclear travels back thirty years later, to a Vietnam at peace. The thesis of the film is that super­powers (first, France and then the US) mis­read the situ­ation in Vietnam and that they con­tinue to do the same thing today in the Iraq war. The film points out how “arrog­ance and ignor­ance” make it very easy to start a war and very dif­fi­cult to end one. Maclear has a very idio­syn­cratic style and it didn’t always work for me (for instance, the film doesn’t follow a pre­dict­able nar­rative arc and felt about half an hour too long), but I appre­ci­ated the per­sonal view­point and the way he com­bined ori­ginal footage from the 60s and 70s with new stuff shot just this past year. (8/10)

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