The Blood of My Brother (2005)
Facts
| Directed by | Andrew Berends |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2004 |
| DVD Release | November 7, 2006 |
| Running Time | 84 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 880215102993 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 7 17:40 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Koch International, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, Digital Sound, DVD-Video, Full length, Letterboxed, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: Arabic (Original Language), English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Or 10 new from $3.89, 13 used from $1.26 |
About The Blood of My Brother
Director Andrew Berends's documentary THE BLOOD OF MY BROTHER takes an up-close and personal look at the tragic consequences of the Iraq war through the story of an Iraqi family mourning the death of their eldest son who was killed by American forces while guarding a Baghdad mosque.System Requirements:Running Time: 84 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DOCUMENTARIES/MISC. Rating: NR UPC: 880215102993 Manufacturer No: LIF-DV1029 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| undisputable gratitude |
A lose of the closest relative is a tragedy to any family, in Iraq, the USA or any other place worldwide.
From the very beginning of a doco by de facto blaming the US army for the fatal shooting down of illegally armed-guarding the musk, inextricably linking this death with known political changes in Iraq and, as a result from family tragedy, a growing insurgency hardly meets objectivity.
Naked Iraqi home truth of lawless sustaining very grounds of this country since artificial establishing of her about a century ago is factually the most steadily destabilizing factor of Iraqi society, not surprisingly bringing about a recorded during a film repeatedly openly manifested intention to kill any "American and Jew".
The producers should be priced for their personal bravery while recording the happenings, of which explicit depiction triggers viewer's undisputable gratitude to those preventing the reality of such manifestation on the streets in their own countries.
July 7, 2007
| Superbly produced documentary about the Shia insurgency in Iraq. |
| Interesting, but flawed documentary |
Interspersed is - often quite gruesome - footage of the insurgency and the turmoil in Iraq, ranging from streetfighting in the Sadr City slum in Bagdad (where a crowd of Shiites cheer at the wreck of a downed American Apache helicopter) to grim scenes of wounded civilians. The viewer accompanies American soldiers searching the homes of suspects and interrogating them or stands right behind an insurgent sniper. These particular scenes are really outstanding and scary, as you are right in the middle of it. A particular frightening episode has Iraqi policemen opening fire on apparently unarmed Shiite demonstrators in Najaf.
This is quite powerful and harrowing footage.
It should be pointed out however that the documentary has its lighter sides as well. Even in the carnage of today`s Iraq there is sometimes some semblence of normalcy, like when we witness Ibrahim with friends at a carp barbecue on the Tigris riverbank, or Ibrahim in attendance at a horse race in a deleted scene in the DVD's extra features section.
My problem with THE BLOOD OF MY BROTHER is the lack of context. There should be explanatory narration or title cards regarding several incidents or persons involved (like the Shiite cleric Moqtada es-Sadr). So unless you are knowledgeable about the Iraqi situation, you will likely feel a bit lost.
An asset of the documentary is the great ethnic score, which deserves special mention. The music fits perfectly to the images!
The subtitles are easy on the eyes. There are also nothing to complain about regarding extra features. There is the film's trailer, which sells the documentary well and about a dozen deleted scenes, running about 30 minutes in total (some interviews with American soldiers about their experiences, a lengthy sequence detailing the raid on an Iraqi suspect's home, several scenes about Ibrahim, a trip to a filthy open-air slaughterhouse and a scene detailing the sale of black market gasolene). January 15, 2007
| Raw and Real. |
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