Severe Clear

March. 12,2010      R
Rating:
6.5
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Trailer Synopsis Cast

Severe Clear is a film based on the memoirs of First Lieutenant Mike Scotti in videos made by him and others from the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines during the start of the 2003 Iraq invasion. The film explores the chaos and complexity of see the war.

Reviews

VividSimon
2010/03/12

Simply Perfect

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Vashirdfel
2010/03/13

Simply A Masterpiece

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Allison Davies
2010/03/14

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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Maleeha Vincent
2010/03/15

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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ps33
2010/03/16

The Coalition's decision to invade Iraq in 2003 must surely be the biggest foreign policy error in the 21st century. We know now that it was on a false premise, and that Saddam's regime posed little threat to its neighbours while usefully keeping Iraq's ethnic and religious divisions in check. The legacy of the invasion is beyond tragedy for the countless millions of people across the world since affected by the violence that has ensued. Severe Clear is not the best account of the invasion and views of the soldiers mounting it, but it's certainly interesting and sheds useful light on it.In contrast to the review currently on the front page of IMDb's entry for this documentary, Severe Clear does not seek to uphold the lie that the invasion was based on. Sure, the beginning records Lt Scottie's astonishing belief that Saddam had been behind 9/11 and therefore needed to be toppled. However, in the epilogue, Lt Scottie adds his shock at the fact that WMDs were not found and thus that the premise was false. The documentary also includes a montage of the post- invasion disorder against audio of Donald Rumsfeld dismissing media reports of chaos, surely suggesting Lt Scottie's disagreement with the Bush administration's version of events. But that's what makes the documentary interesting: it's based on the narrator's journal entries and footage as he experiences them, chronologically. So while he starts off super-patriotic, by the end he's disillusioned, he questions whether the invasion was the right thing to do, and he's under little doubt about the need for a heavy US presence amid serious challenges in the years ahead.More broadly, the documentary has its strengths and weaknesses. Using UK news commentary to provide context was effective I thought, both in providing an 'international' (i.e. not US) voice and because, rather surprisingly, the USMC were getting their news from the BBC World Service (!). The footage is graphic, arguably too graphic, with several corpses badly mutilated by shellfire shown.I was also not keen on Lt Scottie's narration, which lacked originality (e.g. his complaints about the US Navy's food) or spirit. I appreciate the documentary's budget was doubtless tight, but I think they should have looked at getting an actor to read the narration.In all though, an interesting documentary which makes all the more painful viewing in light of subsequent events.

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matte160
2010/03/17

A by the numbers documentary of the Iraq war. Now that everyone and their brother can bring a camera down there, there is a flood of available material. Thus we have a ton of documentaries about the two wars.This is not one of the better ones. It lacks any real sense of critical thinking and falls victim to flag-waving more than anything else but this is not the films main problem.The by far largest problem of the documentary is the protagonist Scotti. He's a pseudo-intellectual who narrates the documentary and through the course of the movie he will have said pretty much every blatantly stolen stereotypical thing someone can say about war. He tries really hard to sound both like a "cool soldier" and a guy who's really smart but fails miserably on both counts. This is of course a problem since the documentary stops being about the war and starts being about Scotti. And nobody loves Mike Scotti more than Mike Scotti.

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Tony Heck
2010/03/18

"Here's the truth about being a marine you won't find on the local news." Filmed in 2003 on his way from Afghanastan to Iraq to begin the march toward Baghdad during "Operation Iraqi Freedom", Lt. Mike Scotti of the Marine Corps shows the reality of what they went through. This is definitely the most accurate and truthful account of what the soldiers went through. From saying why they fight, what they feel, and what life is like. This is a documentary that is an absolute must see and the type that people will either love or hate, depending on their thoughts on the war. I say that based on the reviews that I have read of this movie and that makes me laugh because this is a soldiers home movie...not political at all but peoples opinions are so extreme on this that it becomes something that it's not intended to be. It shows both the good and bad. Iraqis cheering and wanting us out. The reason that I think people are giving this bad reviews is because the soldiers that are fighting are defending what they are doing and saying why they are there. Never once bad mouthing the president, although Rumsfeld gets a dig. Regardless of how you feel about the war this is a movie that needs to be watched. Overall, an absolutely captivating documentary that every American should watch. Like Tom Brokaw said "It's OK to be against the war, but never OK to be against the soldiers." This movie is the perfect example of that. I give it an A+ Would I watch again? - I would, and would show this to people.

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in1984
2010/03/19

Iraq from the front-lines. No setup, no objective, no talking heads, no "predetermined narrative", just an actual soldier filming actual war and recording actual news and politics as he goes into and fights the war.The director and editors do an impressive job keeping the film fast paced and connected without falling into a simple time line of video camera shots and comments from the troops' point of view. So it's a bit more interesting and developed than the average Wikileaks video. Important context is seamlessly added to provide perspective.All sorts of insights in this documentary, from the motivation of troops becoming soldiers, to their motivations going into the war, to their motivations as they fight it. It also captures much of the brutal and nasty nature of war. While it's sympathetic to the troops, it's hard to describe it as a sympathetic documentary.Watch, cringe, learn, laugh, understand.

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