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Is War, Inc. over-the-top, or not over-the-top enough?

Back in 1989, in his smash hit “Say Anything,” John Cusack famously stood with a boom box above his head outside the home of the woman he loved blasting Peter Gabriel’s “In Your Eyes.” With his latest films on the Iraq war, Cusack is standing outside Hollywood with a TV above his head broadcasting his political movies calling on the public to wake up and “Do Something.”

John Cusack began working on his new film “War, Inc.,” which premieres in LA and New York May 23, about a year into the U.S. occupation of Iraq. From the moment U.S. tanks rolled into Baghdad, Cusack was a voracious consumer of news about the war. He took it deadly seriously, regularly calling independent journalists and asking them questions as he sought as much independent information as he could. Watching the insanity of the erection of the Green Zone and the advent of the era of McWar, complete with tens of thousands of “private contractors,” Cusack set out to use the medium of film to unveil the madness. He wanted to do on the big screen what independent reporters like Naomi Klein, Nir Rosen and Dahr Jamail did in print. Over these years of war and occupation, Cusack has become one of the most insightful commentators on a far too seldom discussed aspect of the occupation: the corporate dominance of the U.S. war machine.

War Inc. trailer

Cusack is no parachute humanitarian. While he continues to do the Hollywood thing with big budget movies, he is simultaneously a fierce un-embedded actor/filmmaker who has been at the center of two of the best films to date dealing with the madness of the Iraq war. Without big money sponsors and the backing of powerful production companies, Cusack has spent a lot of his own money on these projects.

Cusack’s film “Grace is Gone,” was one of the most under-rated and under-viewed movies of 2007. Cusack should have been seriously considered for an Oscar for his portrayal of Stanley Philipps, a man whose wife dies while deployed as a soldier in Iraq. The film centers on Philipps’s painful inability to explain to his two young daughters (powerfully played by two amateur actors, Shélan O’Keefe and Gracie Bednarczyk) their mother’s death. Instead of telling his daughters the terrible news, he embarks on a surreal road trip to a theme park with the girls as he fights for his own sanity and grapples with his own support for the war that has just taken the life of his wife. The film is a jolting picture of a man caught in the free fall of a nervous breakdown and the ricochet impact of the death of soldiers in the war. It was an outright shame that “Grace is Gone” did not get wide distribution. I was at a screening of the film in New York and there were not many dry eyes at the movie’s conclusion.

Perhaps the film’s lack of commercial success was due to the so-called “Iraq movie fatigue” that took hold in Hollywood a couple of years ago. But “Grace is Gone” is not simply an “Iraq movie” or a “war movie.” It isn’t even really an “anti-war” movie. It is a haunting and moving film that cuts across political lines to tell the story of the suffering and shattering of so many U.S. military families with loved ones deployed in Iraq. Had it received the distribution it deserved, “Grace is Gone” would have resonated strongly with both supporters and opponents of the war, a rare accomplishment.

“War, Inc.” is a radically different kind of movie. In fact, it really defies genre. It is sort of like this generation’s Dr. Strangelove, A Clockwork Orange and The Wizard of Oz mixed together with the un-embedded reporting of Naomi Klein, spiced up with a dash of South Park. It is a powerful, visionary response to the cheerleading culture of the corporate media and a pliant Hollywood afraid of its own shadow.

On the surface, “War, Inc.” appears to be a spoof of the corporatization of the occupation of Iraq. Cusack plays a hit man, Brand Hauser, deployed to Turaqistan with the mission of killing a Middle Eastern oil baron (named Omar Sharif). Hauser’s employer is a secretive for-profit military corporation run by the former U.S. vice president, played by Dan Aykroyd. We first meet Aykroyd’s character as he sits, pants down, on a toilet seat during a closed-circuit satellite video-conference call to give Hauser his mission. Hauser arrives in the Turaqi capital and heads for the “Emerald City” (read: the Green Zone), where his cover is director of a trade show for the military corporation, Tamerlane, which is basically running the Turaqi occupation. Hauser soon falls for a progressive journalist, played by Marisa Tomei, who is in Turaqistan to investigate Tamerlane, and what follows is an insane ride through Cusack’s interpretation of the radical corporatization of war.

Singer Hilary Duff gives a surprisingly fun performance as a pop star, Yonica Babyyeah, who performs a song in the war zone with the lyrics, “You say you want to invade me, baby/Enslave me, baby.” As Duff delivers the song, she caresses a phallic gas nozzle decorated with diamonds while singing, “I want to blow you….up.” Obviously Cusack and his co-writers, Mark Leyner and Jeremy Pikser (_Reds_,Bulworth), sought to tap into the extreme nature of the corporatized war and take it to another level, but anyone who thinks the premise behind “War Inc.” is “over-the-top” has not been paying attention to real life.

Cusack, Leyner and Pikser are not predicting the future, they are forcefully–and with dark humor and wit– branding the present for what it is: the Wal-Mart-ization of life (and death) represented in the new U.S. model for waging war. With 630 corporations like Blackwater and Halliburton on the U.S. government payroll in Iraq getting 40% of the more than $2 billion Washington spends every week on the occupation, Cusack’s “futuristic” film is not far from the way things really are. A powerful, for-profit war corporation, run by the former U.S. vice president “owning” the war zone; tanks with NASCAR-like sponsor logos speeding around the streets firing at will; “implanted journalists” watching the war in IMAX theaters in the heavily-fortified “Emerald City” to get “full spectrum sensory reality” while eating popcorn; a secretive “viceroy” running the show from behind a digital curtain are all part of Cusack’s battlefield in the fictitious Turaqistan. But how far are they from the realities of the radically privatized corporate war machine Washington has unleashed on the world?

“War, Inc.” is already an underground cult classic and will likely remain so for years to come. The film is not without its shortcomings–at times it is confusing and drags–but its faults are significantly overshadowed by its many strengths. It also accomplishes the difficult feat of being very entertaining and funny, while delivering a powerful punch of truth. “War, Inc.” is a movie that deserves a much wider viewing than the barons of the film industry are likely to give it. But by filling the theaters in the opening days, people can send a powerful message that there is–and must be–a market for films of conscience.

Visit the official web site of “War, Inc.” or John Cusack’s web site to view trailers, get info on tickets for the premieres and to read more about the film.

Jeremy Scahill’s New York Times best seller, Blackwater: The Rise of the World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army&, is now available in substantially updated paperback form.

Scahill will be appearing with GNN’s Anthony Lappé at the Philadelphia Free Library, Tuesday July 1 at 7pm.

anthony

Posted by anthony
Anthony Lappé is GNN's Executive Editor. He's written for The New York Times, Details, New York, Paper, The Fader and Vice, among many others. He has worked as a producer for MTV and Fuse. He is the co-author of GNN's True Lies and the producer of their Iraq doc,...

Disclaimer: Statements and opinions expressed in articles published on this site are those of the authors and not of the staff or editors of GNN, unless otherwise stated.

RECENT COMMENTS

Too bad he bought and shelved Cosmic Banditos

but at least J.C. has shown over the years that he has a conscience unlike 99% of holywood

but, he plays both sides, which may be effective, or may be death by fabians

i just do not know

but i will watch the movies, and i look forward to seeing ‘Grace is Gone’ which I never, ever heard of.

johnnycivil @ 05/20/08 11:03:12

I can’t believe you, Mr Scahill, who so effectively researched and wrote about Blacwater would so slavishly salivate over a hollywood reactionary or is the appropriate oxymorn, re visionist. If you want some analysis, try Gillo Pontecorvo
Centripetal

centripetal @ 05/20/08 20:23:55

Other grammar issues aside… do you know what the word oxymoron actually means? Just curious.

tmcmistress @ 05/20/08 22:53:55

See also interview in Alternet

John Cusack says, Outsourced Warfare Represents a ‘Radical, Dangerous, Disgusting Ideology’

Maybe he’s not a word guy, maybe he’s just good at reaching people who aren’t word people.

OPEN QUOTE

Joshua Holland: Tell me a little bit about your new project.

John Cusack: Well, we thought of it as an incendiary political cartoon that would hopefully put America’s current imperial adventures in Iraq into a kind of a larger context. And maybe put a different lens on what privatization means; what this plan has been and what it’s been like when people try to privatize the very core things it means to be a state. And what it means to spread an ideology like that across the globe.

There are 180,000 contractors in Iraq and about 160,000 troops, right? And if one just takes that trend to its logical conclusion, well that’s where “War, Inc.” is set. It takes place at a time in the near future when warfare us an entirely corporate affair.

Holland: As a political nerd, it struck me as a highly referential film. I felt like your character, to some extent, was loosely patterned maybe on John Perkins, who wrote Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.

Cusack: You know, that book came out when we were already making the film, I believe. And I know we were writing it when Naomi Klein’s groundbreaking piece called “Baghdad Year Zero” came out in Harper’s. She’s a journalist I’ve always greatly admired and respected. And then as we were making the movie, she was writing the Shock Doctrine. I remember being aware of it while we were writing it. And I remember talking about it. But you know, this character was also based on [former U.S. Envoy to Iraq] Paul Bremer flying in while Baghdad was still burning and literally ruling by Fiat. Sitting down in Saddam’s old palace and banging out 50 or 60 new laws that would allow 100 percent foreign ownership of previously state-owned industry by these outside corporations. And he was running around in those Brooks Brothers suits and the military boots when he did it.

END OF QUOTE

I wasn’t even going to think about it until Jeremy opened his peeper and now I can’t wait to see it.

microdot @ 05/21/08 04:28:22

OK. So. But. Having said that, I do quite simply love the last paragraph. Sorry John. It’s too funny.

OPEN QUOTE

You know, maybe the only thing I would ask, or rather what I would say is America has been an empire. And America has done a bunch of horrible things to build that empire. A lot. But there’s also so many great things about America and there’s so many great things that America has done … you know, like the GI Bill and the rise of the middle class or the Marshall Plan after World War Two.

END OF QUOTE

Although, it’s true, I’m probably one of the few people on this planet that thinks that US-centric corporatism engineered world war two in the first place.

microdot @ 05/21/08 04:41:07

This is interesting too :

“. . . the studios all took a pass, but we found a small studio that does a lot of foreign sales, and

“they gave us about *a third of the budget we had for “Grosse Pointe Blank” — ten years ago.

“And we went to Bulgaria to shoot.”

END OF QUOTE

Did ya’lls see The Contract

microdot @ 05/21/08 04:47:09

Oops. Forgot the question mark. Sorry.

?

microdot @ 05/21/08 04:48:17

Just in case I haven’t already talked you into reading the Alternet interview, let alone forking out the bucks to see War, Inc while it’s still in the theaters

OPEN QUOTE some more

even last year when we were just beginning to screen it, the reaction was a lot different than it is now. Today, everybody seems to want to have … maybe not as in depth a discussion as the one I’m having with you, but everybody wants to talk about these ideas and use the film as a springboard to talk about what’s going on. And that’s very different than even six months ago.

END OF QUOTE

That’s some serious Holy Cow. John’s got a fair chunk of mainstream Corporate Mass Media Zombie pulse between his thumb and fore-finger.

So maybe we WILL have our first Black President.

. . .

I’m still voting for Cynthia.

microdot @ 05/21/08 04:55:06

Tamerlane, War, Inc.‘s Halliburton, from das wikie — for those of us who, like moi, are essentially clueless :

Timur, also written Emir Timur or Amir Temur (1336 – 19 February 1405), among his other names, commonly called Tamerlane or Timur the Lame, was a 14th century Turco-Mongol conqueror of much of western and Central Asia, and founder of the Timurid Empire and Timurid dynasty (1370–1405) in Central Asia, which survived until 1857 as the Mughal dynasty of India.

He ruled over an empire that, in modern times, extends from southeastern Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Kuwait and Iran, through Central Asia encompassing part of Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, North-Western India, and even approaching Kashgar in China.

Timur’s military talents were unique. He is known to have employed what is known nowadays as information warfare. Timur’s campaigns were preceded by spies whose task included collection of information and spreading of horrifying reports about cruelty, size and might of his armies – eventually weakening the morale of population and setting panic among the enemy forces.

Sources claim that when Timur conquered Persia, Iraq and Syria, the civilian population was decimated. In the city of Isfahan, he ordered the building of a pyramid of 70,000 human skulls, from those that his army had beheaded, and a pyramid of some 20,000 skulls was erected outside of Aleppo. Timur herded thousands of citizens of Damascus into the Cathedral Mosque before setting it aflame, and had 70,000 people beheaded in Tikrit, and 90,000 more in Baghdad. As many as 17 million people may have died from his conquests

microdot @ 05/21/08 05:27:02

I wonder if the Gnome De Cliff came from John’s Bulgarian sponsors.

microdot @ 05/21/08 05:28:43

‘course Cusak has always been a big Chomsky promoter so maybe they are all gatekeepers of allowable dissidence? doubt it but…

johnnycivil @ 05/21/08 11:17:04

i saw JC on Bill Maher’s show a while back talking about this movie, and i was pretty unimpressed at the time…seemed a bit too ham-fisted to be really effective.

this article, on the other hand, has me interested again.

i look forward to seeing ‘Grace is Gone’ which I never, ever heard of.

same

Number5Toad @ 05/21/08 12:48:49

md- i am certain ww2 was totally fabricated too
as Satre called it, ‘the phony war’

johnnycivil @ 05/21/08 18:36:44

That Cusack plays a hitman again and Dan Aykroyd is in it has me sold…

Science @ 05/21/08 18:45:07
anthony @ 05/23/08 11:51:48

mcmistress your cuioxyty has left you correcting grammar butt
do you know who pontecorvo is?
centripetal

centripetal @ 05/24/08 00:30:51

If you’re going to spend money on a movie about the “war” in Iraq, go see Errol Morris’ Standard Operating Procedure

EGisJUICE @ 05/24/08 03:38:42
SaryshaganTiger @ 05/24/08 03:45:49

The film critics I’ve read don’t seem to have liked it. Rotten Tomatoes’s consensus was “War, Inc. attempts to satirize the military industrial complex, but more often than not it misses its target.” Reading individual reviews, it looks like the movie was more crap than effective. Then again, what do film critics know about the military-industrial complex?

zephid @ 05/25/08 04:58:27

I’ve seen it, you all should too.

artmaxxx @ 05/27/08 09:48:55

this movie is absolute crap

criticalthinking @ 06/21/08 01:01:22

more crap than 2 girls 1 cup?

sisyphus @ 06/21/08 02:24:37

I prefer movies where the brave white cowboys massacre the noble savages sisyphus, how bout you?

criticalthinking @ 06/21/08 15:38:39

how ‘bout them apples?

criticalthinking @ 06/22/08 02:26:56
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