Click for trailer.
When Sukarno was overthrown by Suharto following the failed coup of the 30 September Movement in 1965, the gangsters Anwar Congo and Adi Zulkadry in Medan (North Sumatra) were promoted from selling black market movie theatre tickets to leaders of the most notorious death squad in North Sumatra, as part of the Indonesian killings of 19651966. They also extorted ethnic Chinese, killing those who refused to pay. Anwar personally killed approximately 1,000 people, usually by strangling with wire.
Anwar and his friends eagerly re-enact the killings for the cameras, and make dramatic scenes depicting their memories and feelings about the killings. The scenes are produced in the style of their favorite film genres: gangster, western, and musical. Various aspects of Anwar and his friends' filmmaking process are shown, but as they begin to dramatize Anwar's own nightmares, the fiction scenes begin to take over the film's form, leading the film to become increasingly surreal and nightmarish. Oppenheimer has called the result "a documentary of the imagination."
So, what is this documentary about? On paper, it's concerned with the genocide of Communist Party members in Indonesia between 1965 and '66. But what elevates the film is the fact that director Joshua Oppenheimer chronicles these killings through reenactments gleefully performed by the men who actually committed the murders and rapes and tortures so many years ago. What unfolds is a film that is frightening, hilarious, and, at its best moments, otherworldly. I can honestly say it's the most haunting and emotive documentary I've ever seen. It's no wonder why Werner Herzog and Errol Morris signed on to be executive producers. To get more insight on this film, we spoke with them about the making of the film and how important it could be for the future of documentary cinema. Enjoy!
Wilbert L. Cooper
"The Act of Killing" takes more than a little getting used to. It's a mind-bending film, devastating and disorienting, that disturbs us in ways we're not used to being disturbed, raising questions about the nature of documentary, the persistence of evil, and the intertwined ways movies function in our culture and in our minds.
- LA Times. http://www.latimes.com/entertainmen...act-of-killing-review-20130726,0,811540.story
WERNER HERZOG AND ERROL MORRIS TALK ABOUT 'THE ACT OF KILLING'
http://www.vice.com/read/werner-herzog-and-errol-morris-talk-about-the-act-of-killing
Out of no where, one of the theaters near me was having a screening of the film.(Nuart) Werner Herzog & the Director were having a q&a immediately after. I'm not too familiar with Werner myself, but apparently everyone else in the world is.
Its something to just give a good look at folks. Sure, we've all seen subjects of genocide/mass killings covered. But this is covered in a very surreal way by the participants themselves. The message has been seen and heard before, but not in this way. And if the film gets popular enough, hell, maybe these guys will face some sort of war crime charges(or whatever form of a slap on the wrist will bring).
Schedule:
http://drafthousefilms.com/film/the-act-of-killing
Not sure what the schedule is like, a friend heard it on the local radio station(kcrw), and we made it to a very packed small theater the day of. The Documentary is quite the journey. Its been on my mind constantly.
Anyone else catch it, any thoughts?