1-4-13 'Zero Dark Thirty' Protesters Say It Glorifies Torture |
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Demonstrators Attend Opening Night of Zero Dark Thirty to Protest Torture from San Francisco Chronicle on Vimeo. From KQED | Original Article Osama bin Laden may be dead, but the controversy over his pursuit has never been more alive. A protester says "Zero Dark Thirty" gives a wrong impression of torture. (Andrew Stelzer/KQED) Protests are springing up against the film "Zero Dark Thirty," which opened in 25 cities on Friday, including Emeryville. Demonstrators outside a theater there warned that it inaccurately depicts torture as a helpful tool in hunting down the Al Qaeda leader. California Sen. Dianne Feinstein has waded into the controversy as well, demanding that the CIA account for the way it influenced the film. Here's how Guardian columnist Glenn Greenwald, who has been engaged in an online debate over the film, describes his main objections:
According to Feinstein's media release, it just didn't happen that way:
Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Senate Armed Service Committee Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and Senate Armed Service Committee Ranking Member John McCain (R-Ariz.) are asking the CIA to to document how the agency communicated with the filmmakers and its own employees about the film. In Emeryville Friday afternoon, a man dressed in an orange jumpsuit and a black hood over his head was chained to a sign reading"‘Don’t Buy CIA Lies!” Meanwhile half a dozen people handed out fliers. “When you see it, realize that it’s full of lies.” protester Mary Ann Thomas told KQED's Andrew Stelzer. But on his way in to see the film, Nathan Jongewaard said he wasn't concerned. “I think that audiences are intelligent enough to understand that a Hollywood movie is not gonna depict an absolute truth.” The controversy is particularly lively because the filmmakers have made unusual claims about its authenticity. In an interview with The New Yorker magazine, director Kathryn Bigelow, who was born in San Carlos and graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute, said she was striving for realism. "What we were attempting is almost a journalistic approach to film," she reportedly said. The film opens with the words "based on first-hand accounts of actual events." When The New Yorker writer challenged her about the information leading to the courier, however, Bigelow said, "It’s a movie, not a documentary." In this video, two actors from the film, Jessica Chastain and Jason Clarke, argue that the film does not depict torture as helpful in the bin Laden hunt, notably because the captive discloses the courier's identity during a meal rather than while being tortured: Some critics agree, including Andrew Sullivan writing in the Daily Beast:
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