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| Movie Review | The Journal of American History, 95.1 | The History Cooperative
95.1  
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June, 2008
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Movie Reviews



Redacted. Dir. by Brian De Palma. Prod. by Jason Kilot, Simone Urdl, Joana Vicente, and Jennifer Weiss. Film Farm and HDNet Films, 2007. 90 mins. (Magnolia Home Entertainment, http://www.magpictures.com/)

"You got a problem with sloppy seconds?" Just in case, midway through Redacted, viewers have not yet appreciated that these soldiers are really, really bad men, Brian De Palma has the repugnant B. B. Rush (played by Daniel Stewart Sherman) put that question to his buddy Reno Flake (Patrick Carroll). Rush is raping a fifteen-year-old Iraqi girl. Flake, meanwhile, is busy shooting the girl's family, but he has no problem with taking his turn. And so it goes. Another belt hastily undone, a zipper roughly unzipped, a thrust of the pelvis, and a second close-up of the girl's contorted face. Sixty seconds long, the sequence encapsulates everything grotesquely misconceived about Redacted—De Palma's rushed and furious reentry into territory already staked in his Casualties of War (1989). 1
      That film, based on a New Yorker article by Daniel Lang, centered on the kidnapping, rape, and murder of a Vietnamese village girl by a psychotic Sean Penn. This one, borrowed from "real reported events," presents itself as an "imaginative work." (The actual incident, which occurred at Mahmoudiya in March 2006, involved the rape of a fourteen-year-old girl, Abeer Qassim Hamza, and her murder—together with her mother, father, and seven-year-old sister—by five members of the 502nd Infantry Regiment, some of whom are now serving sentences.) In both films, the rape and murder occasions rupture between members of the company. Brutish perpetrators are confronted by appalled bystanders, who watch in horror but only later intervene by alerting senior officers to the atrocities they have witnessed. Michael J. Fox's role as the compromised moral conscience of Casualties of War is reprised here by Rob Devaney as Lawyer McCoy. In neither case do the higher-ups care to know how the grunts have lowered themselves. . . .

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