PortlandCardFan
Registered User
So is it an acurate portrayal or not? If it's not then why the probe?
Saw it last night and it showed the same flaw that has bothered me since the time it was announced OBL was dead. TWO Blackhawks went in, one crashed and had to be destroyed.
I have ridden on many Blackhawks. The first thing I thought when I heard one crashed was "how the hell did they get everybody out?" There is NO WAY a Blackhawk can carry that many men, equipment, OBL's body etc. It just isn't possible. The most we have ever crammed into one was 8.
Not a spoiler, but in the movie they show two and only two Blackhawks making the trip. After the second bird is destroyed, all of a sudden there is a third Blackhawk that shows up. Picks up half the guys and flies out. It also shows a third landing back at the airbase.
WTF? In the movie it shows only two heavily modified Blackhawks in the hangar. Don't tell me a third one was called in after the second one crashed because that was a very long trip, and there was no time. They were only on the ground something like 45 minutes to and hour (I think).
Anyway, I don't get it.
That's all well and good bro. But was it a good movie?
Definitely. Agree with what others wrote: dragged a little in the middle, but the raid itself I could watch over and over again. It was awesome.
BTW- See my edit.
Saw it last night and it showed the same flaw that has bothered me since the time it was announced OBL was dead. TWO Blackhawks went in, one crashed and had to be destroyed.
I have ridden on many Blackhawks. The first thing I thought when I heard one crashed was "how the hell did they get everybody out?" There is NO WAY a Blackhawk can carry that many men, equipment, OBL's body etc. It just isn't possible. The most we have ever crammed into one was 8.
Not a spoiler, but in the movie they show two and only two Blackhawks making the trip. After the second bird is destroyed, all of a sudden there is a third Blackhawk that shows up. Picks up half the guys and flies out. It also shows a third landing back at the airbase.
WTF? In the movie it shows only two heavily modified Blackhawks in the hangar. Don't tell me a third one was called in after the second one crashed because that was a very long trip, and there was no time. They were only on the ground something like 45 minutes to and hour (I think).
Anyway, I don't get it.
edit: nevermind, at the time of the first reporting and not told in the movie, there were apparently two Chinooks that made the trip 2/3's of the way and waited. That makes sense since a Chinook can carry a crap-ton (that's an industry term).
Definitely. Agree with what others wrote: dragged a little in the middle, but the raid itself I could watch over and over again. It was awesome.
BTW- See my edit.
I could have sworn that they said a third one was on its way out when the first one went down. I also thought the third one was a normal one, not the stealth one. It even sounded different.
I agree 100% with that.
That wouldn't make sense though. The flight was too long. Nothing out of Afghanistan could make it in time. That's why I was confused.
If waterboarding is the worst kind of torture this country uses then people need to get a grip. There were far worse methods used by the Japanese during WWII.if torture is called for, do what you have to do.
Saw it, loved it.
People calling it a defense of torture just aren't watching past the first 30 minutes. The whole point is she's connecting the dots for about 6 years based on scraps of info she got, some from torture, and most from surveillance etc.,
Why most people leave that part out is beyond me. I suppose they're just concerned that people will see the torture scenes, see the end result and assume "torture=accomplishing something good ultimately" I think, if anything, that seeing gruesome depictions of torture on-screen would make many averse to us using it, irregardless of whether it led us to bin Laden or not. I don't think Bigelow was trying to make a statement at all. Just a compelling story. There was an article in WaPo about "Maya" a while back. Caught a few things from there in here, like the quote about her thinking that "I had a lot of friends die doing this, and I think that God spared me to catch UBL" (not verbatim) That was something one of her colleagues told the Post that she said at one point, highlighting the fact that (something the movie tried to do) she was EXTREMELY self-motivated and kind of abrasive and mildly arrogant.
That said, I think she might actually be Todd Haley...
Zero Dark Thirty and the utility and glory of torture
I want to explain why this point matters so much. In US political culture, there is no event in the last decade that has inspired as much collective pride and pervasive consensus as the killing of Osama bin Laden.
This event has obtained sacred status in American political lore. Nobody can speak ill of it, or even question it, without immediately prompting an avalanche of anger and resentment. The news of his death triggered an outburst of patriotic street chanting and nationalistic glee that continued unabated two years later into the Democratic National Convention. As Wired's Pentagon reporter Spencer Ackerman put it in his defense of the film, the killing of bin Laden makes him (and most others) "very, very proud to be American." Very, very proud.
For that reason, to depict X as valuable in enabling the killing of bin Laden is - by definition - to glorify X. That formula will lead huge numbers of American viewers to regard X as justified and important. In this film: X = torture. That's why it glorifies torture: because it powerfully depicts it as a vital step - the first, indispensable step - in what enabled the US to hunt down and pump bullets into America's most hated public enemy.
Torture wasn't glorified in the movie. It was part of the process of collecting data. Maya was visibly discusted by it.
In a sense yes. It was integral to the story because it happened. But was it integral to obtaining data? IDK, maybe. The writers didn't come out in the movie and say 'We got OBL thanks to waterboarding Ammar!!!'But apparently it was shown as being integral to the capture which wasn't true in real life.
I understand both sides because after all it is just a movie but it would seem that it paints a false (positive) view of the use of torture.
I watched it at home with the subtitles. I think it made it easier to follow.