Live from Baghdad Movie Review
Live from Baghdad Review
"Live from Baghdad" Overview

Rating: NR
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Mick JacksonProducer : George W. Perkins
Screenwiter : Robert Wiener,Richard Chapman,John Patrick Shanley,Timothy J. Sexton
Starring : Michael Keaton,Helena Bonham Carter,Bruce McGill,Robert Wisdom,Lili Taylor,Joshua Leonard,Paul Gilfoyle,Michael Murphy,Clark Gregg,David Suchet,Hamish Linklater
Nothing fascinates the media as much as itself. So it should come as no
surprise that one of the best films (so far) about the 1990-91 Gulf War is a
drama about the reporters who covered it.
As part of its bid to make 24-hour news an institution, CNN sent producers
Robert Wiener (Michael Keaton) and Ingrid Formanek (Helena Bonham Carter) to
Baghdad in August 1990 to cover the brutal Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. The HBO
film Live from Baghdad is the story of how Wiener and CNN overcame adversity to
become the only network to continue broadcasting from Baghdad during the U.S.
air strikes.
Wiener and his team soon learn that it’s hard to get off the plane and
immediately get the story. They find plenty of evidence that Saddam Hussein is
a repressive dictator and a mass murderer, but they still allow themselves to
be manipulated by the Iraqi Information Minister, Naji Sabri al-Hadithi
(thoughtfully played by David Suchet). Wiener perseveres, building a
relationship of mutual respect with the minister, and he comes to understand
the country better.
Live from Baghdad features strong acting, especially Bruce McGill’s flamboyant
portrayal of Peter Arnett, and very good use of stock footage of the Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait and the U.S. bombing of Baghdad. (Surprisingly, though, the
filmmakers couldn’t find a body double to play Saddam, and resort to trick
angles.)
The film is flawed, however. For one thing, it spends too much time praising
CNN -- it’s just TV, after all. (Full disclosure: HBO and CNN are both
divisions of Time Warner.) The romance between Keaton and Carter is believable
but a distraction -- the film really should have been about the war, not the
reporters. Much of the film is about Wiener’s personal growth as he supposedly
learns not to be quite such an egomaniac, which is something journalists often
have a hard time with… ahem. Unfortunately, since Live from Baghdad was
adapted by Wiener from a self-penned autobiography, I’m not convinced that his
egomania is completely under control.
And yet the film unavoidably depicts the glibness and self-absorption of the
reporters, and in doing so, it gets close to the real story. Early in the
film, Wiener and his crew wisecrack about the poor service in Iraq and make
last-week-it-was-Kinshasa jokes. But by the time Wiener has learned diplomacy
and patience from his dealings with the information minister, he also comes to
see the shallowness and cynicism of journalists, including himself. As CNN
becomes a mouthpiece for American saber-rattling and Iraqi dissembling, Wiener
realizes that what is going on is not debate but merely dueling soundbites, and
he observes: “We don’t give [the audience] the tools they need to understand
the story.” How true. We have now fought two wars with Iraq, but we still do
not understand who the people of Iraq are, or what they want.
In Live from Baghdad, the information minister candidly informs Wiener that,
for Iraq, the war was about national pride -- a truth worth pondering. Pride
and egomania led Saddam to invade Kuwait (and before that, Iran, in the
bloodiest conflict of the 1980s). And really, what else besides nationalistic
pride caused World War II, or the U.S. Civil War, or many of the bloodiest wars
in history? And in every case, pride brought ruin and humiliation -- which is
why pride is a sin. Wiener doesn’t spell all this out in the commentary, but
he trusts the viewer to see it. And that’s good journalism.
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Review by David Bezanson
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