Anti-Bush Film Makes Party Circuit

Author: 
Steve Gorman, Reuters
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2003-12-21 03:00

LOS ANGELES, 21 December 2003 — In the midst of a film industry crackdown on digital movie piracy, filmmaker Robert Greenwald is urging rampant, unauthorized copying of his documentary criticizing the Bush administration’s reasons for invading Iraq.

The 56-minute film, “Uncovered: The Whole Truth about the Iraq War,” concludes that President George W. Bush and his team distorted intelligence data and misled the American public ahead of the March invasion that toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein. Greenwald has bypassed movie theaters and television, and instead has organized “parlor screenings” in thousands of homes across the United States with the help of Internet-based liberal advocacy group, MoveOn.org.

People attending can buy DVD or VHS copies that they in turn are urged to reproduce and pass along for free to others. “You have my permission to give it away. This film is meant to be a tool, so you will take it and do with it as you will,” Greenwald implored a recent audience in Los Angeles. Some 50,000 copies have been sold, raising nearly $800,000, since the campaign began in November, organizers said.

Greenwald said proceeds will go toward the cost of the film and future projects. Last Sunday alone, nearly 3,000 parlor screenings were held simultaneously where “Uncovered” was seen by about 100,000 people, said co-producer Kate McCardle. Greenwald, whose previous credits include the feature film “Steal This Movie” about 1960s radical Abbie Hoffman, believes his film may be the first to be widely circulated in such a manner.

It’s a strategy that runs contrary to current Hollywood studio policy to carefully control film distribution and safeguard intellectual property at all costs.

“It’s real democracy in action,” he told Reuters. The film features former CIA officials, diplomats, weapons inspectors and military experts rebutting administration prewar assertions that Iraq posed a threat to the United States. They conclude the White House exaggerated, ignored or manipulated intelligence to fabricate reasons for deposing Hussein.

Their comments are juxtaposed with statements by President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other officials making a case that Iraq was aligned with terrorists and held weapons of mass destruction. As intended, the film has become a rallying cry for anti-war activists and Bush administration critics.

Financed by MoveOn and the left-leaning Center for American Progress, headed by former President Bill Clinton’s chief of staff, John Podesta, the film has since drawn the support of such groups as Veterans for Peace, Military Families Speak Out and Physicians for Social Responsibility.

On Wednesday night, an invitation-only showing in Los Angeles drew a handful of notable celebrities, including Ed Asner and James Cromwell, and representatives of four Democrats running for president — Howard Dean, John Kerry, Wesley Clark and Dennis Kucinich — who embraced the movie and its message.

All four have criticized US conduct toward Iraq, and made it a centerpiece of their campaigns. They seized on “Uncovered” as a means of refocusing attention on the origins of the war at a time when the Bush administration is exalting in the recent capture of Saddam Hussein.

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