My kingdom for an "alert and knowledgeable citizenry"

Tonight Nellie and I watched Why We Fight (imdb | rotten tomatoes), a documentary about the American military industrial complex. At least, that’s how it started out, centering around Dwight Eisenhower’s 1960 farewell address, but it veered off to a few different topics, some of which were related to the main thesis only indirectly, if at all. The kid who joined up after his mother died, had little to do with anything, except perhaps to make the viewer seem anxious that such a twitchy kid would ever carry a firearm. The retired New York cop whose son died in the World Trade Center represented the general national anger and desire for revenge, ultimately manipulated by the Bush administration for its own purposes, but director Eugene Jarecki wasn’t really able to tie that to the central theme: that America is pushed into war because of the close relationship between the Pentagon, the armaments companies, Congress and (more recently) the Washington think tanks. The military budget — at $750 billion annually — is the single largest discretionary spend in the government’s budget. As one interviewee put it, when war is that profitable, you can be sure there will be more of it.

One of the more interesting aspects of the film is Dwight Eisenhower himself. The man was Supreme Allied Commander of Europe in WWII, was head of NATO and had served as a Republican president for eight years during the Cold War. Given all that, I’ve always found it interesting that he called so vehemently for the careful monitoring of what he dubbed the “military industrial complex” and asked citizens, in his farewell address, to remain vigilant against it lest it garner too much power. He once expressed worry at what would happen if someone ever sat in White House who understood the military less well than he, a fear that now seems well-founded indeed. Eisenhower understood the fear of standing armies, but probably accepted the present-day need for them; what worried him was the influence commercial concerns had on military policy, and the sacrifices that the accelerated and unnecessary spending would entail. He himself made speeches pointing out what could have been bought for the cost of one bomber…how many schools, how many hospitals, how many homes, and so on.

Had Jarecki stayed on this topic I think the documentary would have been even more powerful, but it instead moved on to next part of the theory: that, in order to sustain military spending, the government colludes with armaments manufacturers to seek out war. Every president eventually deploys the military to safeguard America’s interests in some part of the world or another, usually under the guise of defending freedom or spreading democracy, but in fact for much less noble reasons. Jarecki jumps back and forth between blaming this on the military industrial complex and neo-con plans for world domination; regardless of the specific cause, it happens, and it’s as predictable a pattern as one could imagine. Skipping over Grenada, Panama, Chile, Iran and dozens of others, we see a little more background on Saddam Hussein: how, as we all know, America propped him up when he opposed Iran, but in 1991 when he invaded Kuwait and threatened Saudi Arabia, the campaign began to portray Saddam as the devil himself. Even in 2003, when the media had twelve years to do a little research, the fact that he was a former ally was not mentioned. The message had to go out: he was a madman, bent on destroying America; he had always been a madman, and was suddenly the most pressing security concern on the planet. Evidence was manufactured to support this decision, and America chanted, “Oceania is at war with Eastasia! Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia!”

As you may have guessed from my last comment, I’ve just finished reading 1984. This film — describing in such depressing detail the propaganda methods Orwell described so many years ago — was just one coincidence I experienced within days of finishing the book. I also happened across this essay by Orwell on what compelled him to write, and this Salon article about Yevgeny Zamyatin’s book We, a dystopian novel in the same vein as 1984. Despite the eerie accuracy of 1984‘s detail, I never bought its central premise: that a political body would seek power only to have power, and to keep it only within their totalitarian grasp. I fancied this, in itself, a form of communist elitism that ran counter to human nature, and which would collapse on itself. I suppose the thought that we’re too corrupt to ever completely dominate each other was almost reassuring, until I watched Why We Fight. It reminded me that domination can happen quietly, spurred on and steered by the very capitalist human nature which, in my estimation, protects us from Orwell’s imagining of the future.

War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength. Doublethink doesn’t just exist; it’s available for half price.

House of D

This weekend we watched a movie called House Of D (imdb | rotten tomatoes), a well-intentioned film that just didn’t have any impact. At least, not on me; Nellie liked it a lot.

It was about the childhood of an artist, played by David Duchovny, who grew up with Robin Williams (doing his best Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man impression) as his best friend. There was all kinds of potential there, and it hit a few funny parts, but the movie was just too uneven. I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone, but I think Nellie would.

[tags]house of d[/tags]

50% & 13

I am now more than 50% done my MBA. Huzzah.

.:.

We just got back from the great TIFF lineup of ought-six; we couldn’t get D.O.A.P. or Little Children, obviously, but we got tickets for Blindsight, which was one of our second picks all along. T-Bone did okay too; she only got half her choices in her email, but she managed to get good picks with her vouchers (including The Last King Of Scotland).

[tags]tiff, toronto international film festival, mba[/tags]

La la dee la la la

We’re sitting in the lineup at College Park, waiting to pick up our tickets and exchange our voucher for (hopefully) a good film. We got here around 8:00, and in about 5 minutes they’ll open up. Just in time too; I fear we’re looking at piles if we stay here much longer.

[tags]tiff, toronto international film festival[/tags]

duvel troll dunkel bush

We just got our email from the film festival. We fared better than I expected, though I still suffered two major disappointments.

  1. Thu Sep 7: Requiem (2nd pick; we miss The Bothersome Man)
  2. Fri Sep 8: Citizen Duane (1st pick; we miss Chronicle of an Escape)
  3. Sat Sep 9: The Wind That Shakes the Barley (1st pick; we miss EMPz 4 Life)
  4. Sat Sep 9: Rescue Dawn (1st pick; we miss All the Boys Love Mandy Lane)
  5. Sun Sep 10: Candy (1st pick; we miss Retrieval)
  6. Sun Sep 10: Kurt Cobain About A Son (1st pick; we miss 2:37)
  7. Mon Sep 11: Diggers (1st pick; we miss Blindsight)
  8. Mon Sep 11: Fay Grim (2nd pick; we miss Little Children)
  9. Tue Sep 12: The Half Life of Timofey Berezin (1st pick; we miss 10 Items or Less)
  10. Wed Sep 13: Day Night Day Night (2nd pick; we miss The Hottest State)
  11. Thu Sep 14: The Pleasure of Your Company (1st pick; we miss Snow Cake)
  12. Fri Sep 15: we got neither D.O.A.P. nor Penelope.
  13. Sat Sep 16: Outsourced (1st pick; we miss Macbeth)

My two biggest disappointments there are obviously D.O.A.P, which has garnered massive amounts of attention since we filled out our form, and Little Children, which has been getting good reviews. We’re going to try for alternate screenings of these two, as well as The Bothersome Man and Blindsight. If those attempts fail, we’ll just be looking for anything we can get.

All in all, we did pretty well. We got 9 first picks, 3 second picks and a total miss (both of which were very popular films). We have some schedule flexibility, so I think we’ll do ok.

I’m also kind of glad that we didn’t get Macbeth; it’s getting shite reviews.

.:.

Our last two meals have been with CBGB, and they’ve both been very tasty (the meals, not our friends). Last night we went back to Volo, with them in tow, and sampled many kinds of beer. I had a Duvel (’cause they were out of the Delirium Tremens), a Cuvee Troll, a Dennison’s Dunkel and a large bottle of Maple Bush, shared with CB.This morning, after a good sleep, we met up at the Old Nick for some organic brunch. It was as good as our first visit back in May; I once again ordered the “well hung” — giant chicken sausage with scrambled eggs, home fries, onion/dill toast and salad — and was just the right amount of full when we left.

[tags]tiff, toronto international film festival, d.o.a.p., little children, bar volo, old nick, brunch[/tags]

"It's your fantasy; I'm Canadian."

Last night, tired and slightly bummed about our film festival lottery placement, we stayed in and watched a couple of Zip movies:

  • I’m Not Scared (imdb | rotten tomatoes) has been sitting on our shelf for a couple of months, and we finally got around to it. We both really liked it; it was interesting and well told, and the cinematography was amazing…it just cried out for a high-definition TV. Highly recommended.
  • Childstar (imdb | rotten tomatoes) wasn’t quite as good, but it was still a decent 90-minute distraction. I think Don McKellar can just do no wrong for me, and the same pretty much goes for Jennifer Jason Leigh (who, by the way does NOT look 44). A nice little dig at the film industry as well. Not bad.

[tags]i’m not scared, childstar[/tags]

Mediocre modern times

I’m not a big fan of the new Bob Dylan disc Modern Times. I certainly seem to be in the minority, and my own brother may disown me, but I only liked 4 of the songs (one of which was a cover). I just can’t get into mellower, jazzier, adult-contemporary-sounding stuff. The bluesy numbers, I’m all over; “Thunder On The Mountain”, “The Levee’s Gonna Break” and “Someday Baby” are great songs, and “Rollin’ And Tumblin'” is an adequate cover, but the rest just doesn’t do anything for me. It’s not bad music; it’s just not something I’d choose to listen to.

[tags]bob dylan, modern times[/tags]

Is that a vampire nun?

This post borrows liberally from two sites I pilfered from my brother.

First, after following the link in the weird little strip he designed, I decided to make my own. I suggest you do the same.

Second, this unsettling link from badscience — a site my brother pointed me to — talks about how the UK is changing regulation of homeopathic remedies to allow them to make medical claims without evidence. I’d hate to see Canada make a similar move, for fear that people would equate homeopathic remedies with actual medical treatment. More than they do now, I mean.

[tags]strip generator, badscience, homeopathy, mhra[/tags]

The lower 56

Of the 82 movies on my “short” list, we could only pick the 26 listed below. Here’s why we didn’t choose the other 56:

My wife didn’t want to see them:

  • A Stone’s Throw
  • Deliver Us From Evil
  • Four Minutes
  • The Island
  • The Wake

They’re coming to theatres in the next couple of months:

  • A Good Year
  • All The King’s Men
  • Babel
  • Bobby
  • Borat Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
  • Catch a Fire
  • Cheech
  • For Your Consideration
  • Shortbus
  • Stranger than Fiction
  • The Fountain
  • The Journals of Knud Rasmussen
  • The Last Kiss
  • The U.S. vs. John Lennon

Schedule conflicts:

  • Amazing Grace
  • After the Wedding

We just didn’t end up choosing them:

  • 7 Ans
  • A Few Days Later…
  • Abeni
  • As the Shadow
  • Away From Her
  • Bamako
  • Black Book
  • Breaking and Entering
  • Cages
  • Cashback
  • Chacun sa nuit
  • Copying Beethoven
  • Dixie Chicks – Shut Up and Sing
  • Fido
  • Griffin & Phoenix
  • Jindabyne
  • Lake of Fire
  • London to Brighton
  • Love and Other Disasters
  • Out Of The Blue
  • Quelques jours en Septembre
  • Seraphim Falls
  • Severance
  • Shame
  • The Book of Revelation
  • The Dog Problem
  • The Last King of Scotland
  • The Last Winter
  • The Namesake
  • Thicker than Water
  • This is England
  • Un Crime
  • Un Dimanche à Kigali
  • When The Levees Broke: A Requiem In Four Acts
  • Zidane: Un Portrait du XXIe Siècle

There were various reasons why we didn’t choose these. Some just lost out to our 26, some — like Away From Her and the Dixie Chicks documentary — were galas that we figured wouldn’t attract the director or any of the cast (which, knowing they’ll be in theatres soon, removes a lot of the attraction). Some — like When The Levees Broke — were just too long.

There were some very tough choices in there, like Cashback, Fido, Lake Of Fire, Out Of The Blue, and especially The Last King Of Scotland. Given all the buzz around that last one I’m afraid it’ll be the hit of the festival and I’ll have passed it up. But, that’s how it goes. Nothing to do now but enjoy the 13 we get and wait for the rest to be released.

[tags]tiff, toronto international film festival[/tags]