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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
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War Tapes, The
SenArt Films
MPAA RATING: Not Rated
Starring
Zack Bazzi,
Duncan Domey,
Ben Flanders,
Mike Moriarity,
Steve Pink,
and
Brandon Wilkins
In March 2004, just as the insurgent movement strengthened, several members of one National Guard unit arrived in Iraq, carrying digital video cameras. The War Tapes is the movie they made with Director Deborah Scranton and a team of award-winning filmmakers. It's the first war movie filmed by soldiers themselves on the front lines in Iraq. (SenArt Films)
| GENRE(S): |
Documentary
|
| DIRECTED BY: |
Deborah Scranton
|
| RELEASE DATE: |
DVD: May 15, 2007
Theatrical: June 2, 2006
|
| RUNNING TIME: |
97 minutes, Color |
| ORIGIN: |
USA |

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
100
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
Gripping documentary.

100
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
The best documentary to date about the military occupation of Iraq.

100
Baltimore Sun
Michael Sragow
It's an experience that blows your mind, clears it and educates it.

100
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
There's a lot to process when watching The War Tapes, and that's probably why the documentary gets even better a few days later.

91
Entertainment Weekly
Owen Gleiberman
The War Tapes captures how the war in Iraq, for all its terrible carnage and death, is in a way too random in its destruction to even be called ''combat.''

89
Austin Chronicle
Toddy Burton
A powerfully unique film.

88
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
Really the film is a deft first-person character study with a war zone for a background.

88
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
Must-see stuff.

88
New York Post
Kyle Smith
We get to know three of these courageous, funny, smart and perhaps permanently damaged men in a film that largely avoids telling us what to think and makes an effort to get near the truth of the soldiers' experience.

83
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Noel Murray
The War Tapes falls just short of greatness, because its scope is too limited.

83
Christian Science Monitor
Peter Rainer
This film is apolitical in the best sense - it bears witness to a time and a place.

83
Portland Oregonian
Marc Mohan
The edited footage has an intensity and immediacy you won't find on cable news networks.

80
Los Angeles Times
Mark Olsen
The film acutely captures the topsy-turvy uncertainty of life during wartime, where there's Burger King and land mines and Pizza Hut and snipers.

75
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
William Arnold
In the latest of what is getting to be a booming genre of Iraq war documentaries, director Deborah Scranton gives digital video cameras to five members of the New Hampshire Army National Guard so they can intimately record their year of service in the Middle East.

75
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Rick Groen
The documentary camera has made repeated trips to occupied Iraq, but never to such raw and honest effect as in The War Tapes. The reason is surprisingly simple: This time, the lens is being pointed not by embedded journalists, but by the American soldiers themselves.

70
The New York Times
Dana Stevens
Whatever your opinion of the war - and however it has changed over the years - this movie is sure to challenge your thinking and disturb your composure. It provides no reassurance, no euphemism, no closure. Given the subject and the circumstances, how could it?

70
The Hollywood Reporter
Frank Scheck
The latest in a series of big-screen documentaries dealing with the conflict, and it does so in a particularly involving, fly-on-the-wall manner.

70
Variety
Ronnie Scheib
The picture's deepest fascination lies in the soldiers' complicated reactions to the war, perceived simultaneously as funny, horrific, stirring and traumatic.

70
New York Magazine
David Edelstein
See The War Tapes. Maybe this picture can be worth a thousand lives.

70
LA Weekly
Tim Grierson
With its weary disillusionment, The War Tapes shouldn't be criticized for its seeming lack of outrage. Indeed, from the overwhelming grief and anger it uncovers, the film feels appropriately, uncomfortably numb.

63
TV Guide
Ken Fox
While we at home can't come close to experiencing the war in any real sense, we do come away from Scranton's film with a greater sense of the soldiers' everyday fear, helplessness and horror.

63
New York Daily News
Jack Mathews
A gripping, sometimes dramatic, sometimes annoying collection of jerky images and subjective impressions.

60
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
Make no mistake: The War Tapes is not an overtly political film. It appears to grind no partisan ax nor score either red or blue points. Whether viewers support the war or not -- or find themselves somewhere in the mushy middle -- this documentary won't fit comfortably into the pigeonholes of their preconceptions.

40
Village Voice
Michael Atkinson
On a strictly experiential level, Deborah Scranton's The War Tapes is remarkable, tactile, and affecting; as a piece of sociopolitical culture with context and ramifications of its own, it's a worthless ration of war propaganda--ethnocentric, redneck, and enabling.


The average user rating for this movie is 9.0 (out of 10) based on 3 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
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