The Road to Guantanamo Movie Review
The Road to Guantanamo Review

"The Road to Guantanamo" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael Winterbottom,Mat WhitecrossProducer : Michael Winterbottom,Melissa Parmenter,Andrew Eaton
Screenwiter :
Starring : Riz Ahmed,Farhad Harun,Arfan Usman,Shahid Iqbal,Sher Khan,Jason Salkey
The search-for-Al-Qaeda exposés hit a strange turn with Michael Winterbottom
and Mat Whitecross' The Road to Guantanamo. A mockumentary that is supposed to
be taken dead seriously, we are thrown into a small hell of assumption and
horror that often reaches for, but never really matches, the sneaked Guantanamo
footage or any of the thousand torture videos produced by either side in the
lengthy war campaign. It's a stinger, but it has the taste and smell of plastic.
On a road trip to meet his bride, Asif (Arfan Usman) finds himself in need of a
new best man and groomsmen when his best friend cops out on him. Ruhel (Farhad
Harum) accepts it and their friends Monir and Shafiq take on the groomsmen
positions on the road trip to meet his future (arranged) wife. On their way,
they decide to take a bus to Afghanistan, for no other reason then to help
spread peace. They hit the border and a bomb explodes, setting off a terrible
series of events: Monir gets lost, the remaining three bump into Northern
Alliance soldiers who believe they are Pakistanis (read: terrorists) and send
the lot of them to Guantanamo. Winterbottom and Whitecross go all-out to show
the inhumanity of the tortures and tricky games that the three men are put
through before they are let out.
Winterbottom is playing the party line here, but whether this is a bad thing or
an acceptable thing comes as a mighty big quandary. Up until now, Winterbottom
oeuvre has been wonderfully spasmodic, swinging without care from the
punch-in-the-gut realism of In This World to the stunning '80s
post-punk-to-rave masterpiece 24 Hour Party People to the mesmerizing Tristram
Shandy. Road to Guantanamo seems to want to be like In This World, but its
presuppositions and tendencies towards extremes, as true as they might be, suck
out the soul of the film.
The film works as an exercise: contemplating the possibilities and the
ridiculousness of these current torture camps. The scene where the interrogator
tries to tell the three men that they are obviously on a video of a rally for
Osama Bin Laden teeters between horror and dark comedy so well that you'll find
yourself looking around to see how others react. But the characters, though
acted well by all three men, somehow get lost in the thralls of showing how
terrible these torture camps can be. Maybe the point was to suffocate with
torture: to give the audience such a grueling session that they suddenly jump
up and scribble "No Blood for Oil" on their chest and buy a Good Bush/Bad Bush
T-shirt. If that is Winterbottom and Whitecross' charge, then it seriously
lacks in gravity and it shows no sign of balance or experimentation.
As strange and unbalanced as it is, Guantanamo seems like an appropriate
addition to Winterbottom's assemblage; that small brown beauty mark that make
his work far from peerless but also distinguishes it as far more rambunctious
than most. You also have to give kudos to Winterbottom and Whitecross for
making a depressing movie with a "Road to..." title. Actually, I take that
back, The Road to El Dorado made me want to kill myself.
Next time I'm holding the map.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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