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September Tapes

Franko

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A bit surreal...being here and seeing places that I drive past on a regular basis.    :eek:

A review of the movie......

http://www.haro-online.com/movies/september_tapes.html

Fact and fiction mix together in The September Tapes, a fictional movie that passing itself off as a documentary, along the same lines as The Blair Witch Project, or even Incident at Loch Ness.   The premise is that filmmaker Don Larson (George Calil, Tiger Heart), still reeling over the events of 9/11, vows to travel to Afghanistan to find Osama bin Laden.   He is angry, frustrated, and wants to know why bin Laden killed so many people.   During filming, writer/director Christian Johnston, Calil, and translator Wali Razaqi (In the Wrong Hands) actually traveled to Afghanistan and filmed, without letting people know that this was a fictional movie.   So in a way, it was real, since the three were actually looking for bin Laden while playing characters looking for bin Laden.

The big problem with The September Tapes is that it smacks of opportunism.   It feels like Johnston is using the tragic events of 9/11 to make a film.   It is a valid criticism that would not be as strong if the movie were better.   In fact, reading about making the film was more interesting than the film itself.   The Larson character is driven by frustration.   He is thinking with his heart, and not with his head, so many of his actions are rash.   This is extremely frustrating for anybody watching the film, since Larson acts like he has a death wish.   Razaqi is the calming presence.   He is the only way that Larson can communicate with the people around him, and is frequently diffusing tense situations.   However, Razaqi is often whiny and annoying to both Larson and the viewer.   The worst element about these characters is that they are inconsistent.   Usually, Razaqi whines and complains, but sometimes he sucks it up and shows a surprising amount of courage.   Larson wants to press ahead and quickly as possible to find bin Laden, then pauses one morning to play football with local children.

The plot of the film also borders on the incredulous.   It is highly unlikely that an American with a camera would get anywhere close to bin Laden, and even more improbable that somebody like Larson would.   Yet, Calil, Razaqi and Johnston did manage to get out near the Pakistan/Afghanistan border with some bounty hunters who were also looking for bin Laden.   Johnston spends a lot of time with Calil, having him deliver long, ill-informed monologues into the camera.   The Larson character embodies the stereotype of what many people in the Middle East probably think of Americans.   He is headstrong, stubborn, and doesn't listen to their side of the story.   The end of the film reveals Larson's true reasons for filming, and it's pretty bad.   So let's talk more about the making of The September Tapes.   It uses the same, jerky camera motion that announces it is a documentary, and supposedly many of the bullets, guns, and missiles are real.   But there were a few reshoots too, so this is a fake reenactment of a scene in a fake documentary that some participants believed was real.   Got it?

The real question is why Johnston chose to film this movie the way he did.   The crew went to Afghanistan less than a year after the attacks on the World Trade Center.   It was both brave and rash of them to do this.   Although there are some tense moments in The September Tapes, especially when Calil and Razaqi are in running gun battles, fictionalizing the story takes a lot of the dramatic impact away.   If Johnston made an actual documentary, it would have been much more powerful.  

Pretty much sums it up....the fire fights were pretty realistic, RPG rounds actually flying instead of the CG crap that Hollweird has been spewing out. The tracer are real...I'm just surprised buddy didn't get wacked.

Regards
 
He didn't get whacked because the movie was filmed in pakistan and the actor who played "Buddy" was also in Band of Brothers,
it is a fiction movie, I just finished watching it. I find it too much Exactly like the blair witch project with AK-47's.
 
Future Unknown said:
He didn't get whacked because the movie was filmed in pakistan and the actor who played "Buddy" was also in Band of Brothers,
it is a fiction movie, I just finished watching it. I find it too much Exactly like the blair witch project with AK-47's.

Hey film buff, do a bit more research on where this movie was filmed. Shots include the Mustafa Hotel, some of the base of TV Hill and various others of the streets of Kabul and surrounding areas. Re-read the first line of Franko's post and check his profile, I think he may have just a touch of insight on this one.

cheers.
 
I thought it was a real documentary - I never read the box and figured it for one.  Needless to say I said WTF? when I seen the dead translator talking in the Special Features section.
 
Hahaha thats the way I was. What the **** is going on here. O well in was kind of entertaining
 
This sounds pretty bad... I don't know if I even want to bother with it...  :-X
 
Future Unknown said:
He didn't get whacked because the movie was filmed in pakistan

Strange....I've been to alot of those places in the movie...as mentioned the Mustafa Hotel, TV Tower Hill...all are here in Kabul. Noticed a few spots that look very familiar...probably near Pol-e-Charki and Surobi, just west of Kabul.

Not filmed in Pakistan Hitman.  ::)

Regards

 
Well they were there at least , I was surprised when I watched it though.
It was real until came the "hollywood-style" later in the movie during the gunfights close to the borders, now I really know I wasn't crazy to think these parts weren't real.  ;)
 
Franko said:
Strange....I've been to alot of those places in the movie...as mentioned the Mustafa Hotel, TV Tower Hill...all are here in Kabul. Noticed a few spots that look very familiar...probably near Pol-e-Charki and Surobi, just west of Kabul.

Not filmed in Pakistan Hitman.    ::)

Regards
I'll second that.  I also noticed The Palace hotel and the market on "Chicken st"
 
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