|
|
||||||||||||
| Out Now | New This Week | Coming Soon | The Buzz | Index | Archive A-Z | ||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden? (2008)
Release Date:
Friday, April 18, 2008
MPAA Rating:
NR
Rating Reason:
Not Available
Genre:
Documentary
Starring:
Morgan Spurlock,
Written By:
Jeremy Chilnick, Morgan Spurlock
Director:
Morgan Spurlock
Official Site:
Synopsis:
With a baby on the way, and a need to make the world safe for infant-kind, an unassuming guy from West Virginia takes on what no special ops team could do: he puts to use his complete lack of experience, knowledge, and expertise to find the most wanted man on earth.
|
|||||||
Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden? (2008) | Preview
Spurlock Talks About His New Film
Darrel Manson
When asked where the idea for the film came from, he said: It was 2005 when we started talking about what my next movie would be. We'd just finished the first season of 30 Days. Super Size Me did something none of us anticipated, which was play in about 75 countries around the world. It went so beyond our borders. The way it did that made me realize that my next movie I wanted to be something that dealt with an issue on a global scale and wasn't just an American issue, which this was. I live in New York City so this issue is constantly out there. I was there on 9/11, so this is something that's brought up consistently. Bush had just been elected to a second term and Osama had released a tape and suddenly the tape was everywhere—every television station, every radio station. People were talking about him again. He was pretty ubiquitous. Newscasts were like "Where is Osama? Where is he? Why haven't we found him? Why haven't we brought this man to justice? Where in the world is Osama bin Laden?" And I said, "That's a good question; I'd like to know that as well." We started formulating how we'd make a movie like this—how we would start trying to formulate the answers or tackle this topic... About two months into this project is when we found out that Alex was pregnant. At that point the film took a real shift for me personally. It really went away from just being where in the world is Osama bin Laden, and what kind of world creates an Osama bin Laden to also: what kind of world am I about to bringing a kid into? I think that kind of shift made it more personal for me and made the journey we went on and the people we went to talk to... ultimately made the film better. He was asked what would have happened if he had actually found bin Laden. We talked about it, [cinematographer] Daniel Maraschino and myself, what would happen if we would actually get to find him or get to speak with him. A lot of people have asked "what would you have said to him?" or "what would you have asked him?" The biggest thing for me would have been I'd like to hear from him: How's it end? How does it stop? How does the killing of innocent people end? How can the hatred end? How can it get to the point that there's peace and security for everybody? Maybe he's got a real answer. Maybe something real would have come out with actual steps. And we might have gotten a whole lot of crazy. But who knows. We would have gotten an answer and that would have been interesting. Similarly, he was also asked what would have happened if bin Laden had been found while he was making the film. Noting that it would have likely ruined the film, he went on: Even if they would have found him, I think a lot of things people talk about over the course of the movie would have remained the same. What you see happening over the course of the movie is as much as Osama bin Laden is not in Egypt or Morocco or Saudi Arabia or the Palestinian Territories or Afghanistan or Pakistan, he is in all those places. The spirit of Osama bin Laden, his ideology, the way that he thinks have infiltrated these countries, especially like people who are that minority of people that get all the airtime here in the United States. I think what the film does a really good job of doing is starting to give a voice to that silent majority—people we don't give enough airtime to in America. I think the film does a great job of getting out of the two-minute sound bites that we get on the news and painting a portrait of what life is like in the Middle East for a lot of these people on a daily basis. Continue: 1 2 Copyright © 2008 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
|
More About Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?
Reviews:
Previews:
|
||||||
Home | Movies | DVDs | Music | Books | Comix | TV | Games | HJ Live! | Terms & Conditions | Privacy | Contact Us | Subscribe |