Taxi to the Dark Side (2008)
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Director: Alex Gibney Cast: Alex Gibney (Narrator) Country: USA 2007 Year: 2008 Score: ***** MPAA Rating: |
Winner of this year’s Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, Alex Gibney’s (ENRON: THE SMARTEST GUYS IN THE ROOM) excellent TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE examines the controversial subject of American torture of terrorist suspects exposing those directly and indirectly responsible while examining key humanitarian issues regarding to the subject matter.
Gibney has assembled an impressive cast of interviewees that includes those convicted of murder in the prisons (military police, interrogators and soldiers), the FBI, New York Times journalists (who first exposed the inhuman practices), the International League for Human Rights President among others. The most candid testimonies are the ones delivered by torture victim Moazzam Beg and a tortured WWII prisoner who lend their views on torture. Gibney’s images and sketchings of torture in the cells aid in creating the atmosphere.
Gibney proves in the film that the Bush Administration is directly responsible for the torture. He is just not finger pointing but lays out all the evidence and witnesses as in a court of law. The film here ticks like a time bomb as the disturbing facts hit the audience with the terrible truth.
In addition, Gibney interviews the FBI in interrogation techniques. If torture does not obtain worthwhile information, the obvious fact that torture performed just for the hell of it must be the obvious reason. Gibney delves deeper to illustrate how the Bush Administration disregards the Geneva Convention on the treatment of prisoners and how when murder was discovered brought blame only to the lowest level of the echelon. The most disturbing (and true) fact – this point packs quite the punch – is revealing that 99% of those released from U.S. custody would surely have the same sufficient animosity towards the U.S. as a true terrorist.
TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE is yet another affecting picture condemning the U.S. torture practices in prisons from Afghanistan and Iraq to Guantanamo Bay. Michael Winterbottom’s ROAD TO GUANTANAMO and this year’s Best Documentary Oscar nominee NO END IN SIGHT are two other films worthy of mention.
Narrated by director Gibney himself, his words and voice add an additional conviction to the dialogue uttered. TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE is superbly paced with a whammy of an ending. Gibney’s late father delivers a no holes barred conclusion during the end credits that will guarantee to leave one breathless.
Review by: Gilbert Seah

