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How Iraq lost its dictator but gained '100 Saddams'
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How Iraq lost its dictator but gained '100 Saddams'
How Iraq lost its dictator but gained '100 Saddams'
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How Iraq lost its dictator but gained '100 Saddams'

2006
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Overview
Of all the documentaries to come out of the current war, \"Iraq in Fragments\" is the least violent and perhaps the most disquieting. [James Longley] locates a visual lyricism in the tumult and rubble: The poetic images he collects from a traumatized land act upon us in a way not dissimilar to Francis Ford Coppola's gorgeous napalm clouds in \"Apocalypse Now.\" A more hopeful version of \"Iraq in Fragments\" would have left us with the end of part one, as [Mohammed] liberates himself from his abusive boss to work for a relative. As he exclaims defiantly, \"I will never go back!\" he seems to speak for an entire war-wounded populace.
Publisher
Tribune Content Agency LLC
Subject