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Taxi to the Dark Side accomplishes what a documentary, or just a concise analysis, regarding all of the facts in one of the many nightmares the United States’ involvement in the middle east should: to inspire the utmost disgust and condemnation of a system that has become as corrupt as it has (or rather always has been with this bunch). It’s uncontainable to think how all of this started, grew exponentially, and resulted ultimately in the horrors at Abu Gharyb and Guantanamo Bay, in that it is nestled in the twisted, criminal (yes folks, criminal) ‘policies’ of the Bush administration.
But Alex Gibney’s approach isn’t narrow-minded but multi-faceted: he’s interested in what a complex, ugly organism torture has become, the psychological just as much as the physical, and he has a man at the center of it. Dilawar, an innocent taxi driver from a poor farm in Afghanistan, was swept up by three other Afghan soldiers and sent to Bagram prison, where along with other supposed terrorists or terrorist collaborators was tortured (in his case especially in brutal fashion, as we learn in graphic description from those who participated first-hand), and died from the trauma.
His death was a controversy, but not one that ever got the kind of attention it deserved; until this documentary I never even heard of Dilawar or even much about Bagram prison. Yet it was at this prison, as well as the first biggie interrogation of the would-be 20th hijacker of the plane on 9/11 to crash in Pennsylvania (which, by false confession, led to an over-excited but false-rooted assumption that Al Quaeda had links to Baghdad), that led to Abu Gharyb, which revealed the horrors of soldiers in unyielding terror over their subjects but, more importantly, the virus that spread through the chain of command. Gibney’s approach is approximate and expertly probing: it’s not enough to just focus of Dilawar (even as his story could make up a whole legitimate documentary alone), or on Abu Gharyb. As in his previous film, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, it’s essential to dissect this wretched beast from top to bottom, to see not simply the soldiers first-hand accounts, but straight from the horse’s mouth the words from Cheney, Rumsfeld, Powell, and Bush himself.
| Directed by | Alex Gibney |
| Written by | Alex Gibney |
| Produced by | Alex Gibney, Eva Orner, Susannah Shipman |
| Original Music by | Ivor Guest |
| Edited by | Sloane Klevin |
| Cinematographers | Maryse Alberti, Greg Andracke |
| Actors | Moazzam Begg (playing himself), Brian Keith Allen, Greg D’Agostino |
| Run time | 106 mins |
| Rating | R |
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