
Director: James Longley. Documentary. Pictorial collage of life in contemporary Iraq, partitioned into three segments emphasizing
Sunni, Shia, and Kurdish experiences of the war and occupation.
To a degree that muffles my enthusiasm for the film, James Longley's aesthetic plan for Iraq in Fragments is something
of a self-fulfilling prophecy: that is, if you splinter your movie into discontinuous shards, you will certainly achieve an
effective mimesis of splintering, although you pay a certain price in sequence-level rigor and coherence. Portions of Iraq in Fragments
seem arbitrarily assembled in their montage; at other moments, the robust, aesthetically powerful cinematography poses
an equal risk of distracting us away from Iraq's contemporary agon and onto the facility, skill, and conceptual conceits of the filmmaker.
However, with those caveats supplied, I think Iraq in Fragments is a stirringly wrought documentary incorporating footage
that I can hardly believe anyone, especially a Western man with a movie camera, was able even to record, much less to safeguard
through the various trials of local unease, possible censor reviews, and what was almost certainly a bear of an editing
job. Iraq in Fragments looks as immediate and pressing in its sensual life on-screen as in its political and historical
convictionswitness its heightened rendering of colors, of textures, of skylines, of a city that is decimated without being the
rubble-pile that American news sometimes suggests, of facial close-ups at every juncture of the affective spectrum. The movie's
full-scale immersion in the catastrophe it documents is a world away from the articulate but critically
distant finger-wagging that characterizes so much modern documentary, and modern reportage in general. Longley was able to
"see" the artistic possibilities of Iraq in Fragments while serving as his own cinematographer, camera operator, sound
technician, composer, and editor because he insinuated himself so intimately with the quotidian life of a fractured country
and allowed people, not just images or ideas, to speak eloquently and emotionally on their own behalfespecially in
the first and third segments. The politics of characterizing an imperiled Sunni population (largely through the sentimentalized
figure of a chastised, laboring child), a martial and resurgent Shia army of true believers, and a tremulous Kurdish north
will be debated for years to come by the informed audiences the film draws to itself, but the especially salient point here
seems to be that Longley has crafted a documentary that is guaranteed an afterlife as both a global-political time capsule
and a benchmark of cinematic expression, blending the styles of the objective, anthropological survey and the personal essay-film
with uncommon and topically appropriate finesse. Iraq in Fragments arrives on screen replete with indelible images,
and with its finger credibly on the pulses of a country that is simultaneously passing away and convulsing into some new,
volatile iteration of life. Grade: B+
- Academy Award Nominations:
- Best Documentary Feature