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Cyrus

Cyrus Confronts the Dark Side Reviewing the "Waltz with Bashir" Blu-Ray


Sometimes you know watching a movie that you’re not in the right place in your life to watch it. “Waltz with Bashir” is one of those movies for me. It’s not that I can’t appreciate that it’s a major and distinctive work, spectacularly innovative in its animation style or even that it has some disturbing and important things to say about war. It’s just that I’m personally ignorant as hell about the events of the Lebanese Civil War of which the film speaks. I felt like I was coming in halfway through a lecture, like the dummy everybody in class points and laughs at for not knowing about it already. Now that I’ve looked up more about this awful conflict, it’s become all too clear to me…I am the dummy who deserves to be pointed and laughed at. What can I do? History class was never my strong suit. Which was why I was doomed to repeat it, I guess. Managed to get by with a “C”.

Please forgive me for being the ugly American here, completely oblivious of major events in the rest of the world. If it wasn’t for foreign films I think I’d have no idea what it’s like living even outside of Austin. “Waltz with Bashir” presents a VERY foreign world to me, one where people allow such horrible things to happen that their own brains refuse to acknowledge that they ever happened. However, this isn’t a typical war film. It’s about the perception of war and how it changes in retrospect more so than war itself.


Ari lives in Israel and has realized something disturbing. After talking to a friend from his days in the Israeli army who is experiencing reoccurring nightmares about the Lebanese Civil War in 1982, Ari realizes he remembers nothing about his own wartime experiences. That night he has a surreal dream about the night of the infamous Sabra and Shatila massacre but one that poses more questions than it provides answers. He seeks out a psychologist friend who advises him to look for other people he was in Beirut with at the time and find out what they remember in the hopes of stirring his own memories. What follows is a series of interviews that reveal many upsetting and bizarre things, realities mixed with hallucinations and dreams that lead eventually to a confrontation with the truth of what happened there on that horrible day and why Ari won’t let himself remember.

There are so many haunting images and scenarios in “Waltz with Bashir” that the entire experience of watching it becomes somewhat dreamlike itself. You float with the characters through the haze of indistinct memories in a state of calm and passive observance until....until...knowing that the Israeli troops stood by and let the Lebanese Forces massacre Palestinian and Lebanese citizens in a bout of carnage is bad enough…animated it’s tough, but the film switches to video footage towards the end and suddenly and shockingly, anything dreamlike about the experience is all too over. “Waltz with Bashir” won’t let it’s audience hide from the truth any more than it’s main character. This was real, this was apocalyptic, this was humanity at it’s absolute worst. One can’t help but think of the Holocaust (which the film certainly intended) and the irony is not pleasant. How do we make peace with this, the atrocities that even our allies our capable of letting happen, that even we let happen? Who are the bad guys anymore and what do you do when you realize it might be you? It’s not surprising that Ari couldn’t remember. I’d block this out too.


If I’m not talking enough about the animation, I apologize because it merits high praise indeed. “Bashir” is perfectly suited to tell it’s tale in this fashion. The style is unique, similar in appearance at points to rotoscoping, but a completely different process, sort of an extremely high tech 3-d version of Flash animation. Let me tell ya, it looks AMAZING in HD. The oranges and blacks in particular, which dominate one particularly memorable series of memories and dreams, really pop like crazy. The characters and the way the camera's point of view expresses their three dimensions is strangely static yet all too realistic at the same time, like watching a paper doll suddenly expand into our world. It’s hard to describe without seeing it. Suffice it to say, it’s all just so gorgeous that you could even watch this without subtitles or sound and still be drawn into its unique vision.

SPECIAL FEATURES:

-Commentary by director Ari Folman
-Surreal Soldiers: Making “Waltz with Bashir”
-Q&A with Ari Folman
-Building the Scenes: Animatics


All of the special features add up to two things: This is something new and exciting going on in animation and that this guy Ari HAD to make this movie. I still don’t understand exactly what happened over in Beirut in 1982, why it happened, or what the historical repercussions have been since. What I do understand because of watching this, is how easy it is for us to forget or gloss over the darkest sides of ourselves. I grok better than ever that we can look at another human and because they think differently than us, we can divide them off into a sub group not worthy of the same consideration as ourselves and our friends. I totally get that if we don’t watch ourselves we can become the bad guy and not even know it. As was taught in those history classes that I arrogantly doodled pictures of "Space Ghost" through when I should have been paying attention, the story of humanity is this film, over and over again. Can’t we do better? Shouldn't we all be paying more attention? No wonder the aliens haven’t shown up yet. Dammit people, that's my ride you're scaring off there!*

Click Here to Buy Waltz with Bashir [Blu-ray]

Tags: bashir, cyrus, spill

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PFreaky PFister Comment by PFreaky PFister on July 8, 2009 at 1:16pm
I saw this movie two days ago, it was frickin awesome
Mr. Erreebus Comment by Mr. Erreebus on July 8, 2009 at 11:59am
Dam, I can't beleive I've never even heard of this movie. This one is going straight into the Netflix Que.

Don't feel to bad Cyrus, I Aced all my History classes, and still know next to nothing about the Lebanese Civil War, so it probably wouldn't have made any differece anyhow. : )
Zeek Slider Comment by Zeek Slider on July 8, 2009 at 7:54am
Holy crap! I didn't realize it was already out! Thanks Cyrus. I love that film and the look of it. It's certainly very powerful, and everything you said about it is right on.

And, yeah, I failed history as well. Didn't understand any of it until college when I had some Neo feminist teaching me how history actually works.
Papa Koulikov Comment by Papa Koulikov on July 8, 2009 at 7:08am
Thanks for the great review. I haven't seen it, but now I must check it out.
CULT STATUS Comment by CULT STATUS on July 8, 2009 at 2:45am
I haven't been able to see this yet but from what I've heard I bet it will be one of my instant all-time favorites. I don't think I'll do any bong hits before i see this though cause I might get really scared and hide in my bathtub for an hour or something.
Doctor Lightning Comment by Doctor Lightning on July 8, 2009 at 1:44am
PS: This is one of the best reviews I've read from you in a while, since you wrote very eloquently about your reactions to it and how it should also try and bring about some reaction from us, without getting too preachy. It's the kind of movie that can do that for a good writer.
Doctor Lightning Comment by Doctor Lightning on July 8, 2009 at 1:42am
This was one of my favorite films from last year, and certainly a true unclassifiable movie: it's animated, but it's also documentary, it's personal history and it's also a reflection on war. This movie stayed with me for quite a long while (in fact seeing this on the same day as The Wrestler basically turned this grown man into a pile of wobbly-jello emotionally).
MdU Comment by MdU on July 8, 2009 at 1:13am
Yeah, I was actually under the impression that this WAS rotoscoping. Now I'm very interested in this "3-D Flash" or whatever Cyrus was talking about.
Dylan Comment by Dylan on July 8, 2009 at 12:19am
i fuking love this movie
John Doe Comment by John Doe on July 7, 2009 at 10:10pm
The Middle East has a different set of rules.
As an Israeli I can tell you there were other factors involved in this event (like previous massacres in the Lebanese Civil War and the assassination of Bashir).
Blaming Israel is pointless, since the decision not to intervene and stop the Lebanese Phalangists was made by Ariel Sharon, without consulting any member of the cabinet (he was forced to resign shortly after that).

Living in this area makes you realize how flexible the terms "bad" and "good" are.
For instance: would you bomb a house from which Hezbollah terrorists fire missile into Israel, even though they are using a Lebanese family of 8 as human shields?
Or: can you bomb Hamas' weapon storage, if that storage is inside a school or a hospital? (and I kid you not, they actually do this shit)

So next time you see a dead 5 year old on TV, as sad as it is, don't be so quick to pass judgment on Israel- things aren't always as simple as the popular media tries to portray.

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