Sunday, August 22, 2010

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Cast And Crew
Starring: Pat Tillman,
Mary "Dannie" Tillman,
Richard Tillman, Patrick Tillman,
Sr., Marie Tillman,
Russell Baer, Bryan O'Neal,
Philip Kensinger,
Jason Parsons, Stan Goff
Director:Amir Bar-Lev
Writer:Mark Monroe
Studio:Passion Pictures
Genre:Documentary
Official Site:TillmanStory.com
Rating: for not rated.
Runtime:1 hour 34 minutes
Release Date:August 20th, 2010

Hollywood movie online English movie online Comedy movie Romantic movie online movie Review movie story Fantasy Movie Adventure Movie Documentary Movie The Tillman Story Movie The Tillman Story Directed By Amir Bar-Lev

The Tillman Story Plot Summary:
Pat Tillman never thought of himself as a hero. His choice to leave a multimillion-dollar football contract and join the military wasn't done for any reason other than he felt it was the right thing to do. The fact that the military manipulated his tragic death in the line of duty into a propaganda tool is unfathomable and thoroughly explored in Amir Bar-Lev's riveting and enraging documentary.

The Tillman Story: Synopsis:
Pat Tillman gave up his professional football career to join the Army Rangers in 2002—and became an instant symbol of patriotic fervor and unflinching duty. But the truth about Pat Tillman is far more complex, and ultimately more heroic, than the caricature created by the media. And when the government tried to turn his death into war propaganda, they took on the wrong family. From her home in the Santa Cruz mountains, Pat’s mother, “Dannie” Tillman, led the family’s crusade to reveal the truth beneath the mythology of their son’s life and death. Narrated by Josh Brolin and featuring candid and revelatory interviews with Pat’s fellow soldiers as well as his family, Amir Bar-Lev’s emotional and insightful film not only shines a light on the shady aftermath of Pat’s death and calls to task the entire chain of command but also examines themes as timeless as the notion of heroism itself.

The Tillman Story Review:

One of the bumper stickers popular during the Vietnam War and later during the Iraq and Afghan wars states: "Governments lie. People die." If President Bush lied by saying that Saddam Hussein's Iraq was hiding weapons of mass destruction, there's no end to the prevarications we can expect from the higher-ups in our government. Individual stories can easily be created, cover-ups can be implemented. If you don't believe this, consider the scandal of Pat Tillman, a handsome, squared-jawed professional football player who walked away from a multi-million dollar contract with the Arizona Cardinals to volunteer as a ranger with the American military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. (The Army rangers is an elite, special operations force.) A private person, he never gave the public a reason for this incredible action, though it's hinted that he was motivated by the exploits of some family members who fought in World War II and in Korea.
The essence of Amir Bar-Lev's "The Tillman Story" is that the U.S. government covered up the real story behind Pat Tillman's death on April 22, 2004 while on a mission in Afghanistan. The truth is that he was killed by friendly fire, bullets shot from the guns of fellow Americans who allegedly thought that he was Taliban, though one must be susp*cious of even this potential canard. He was gunned down in a hail of bullets that took away his head although he was just forty feet from the division of his unit that opened fire. According to Bar-Lev, whose "My Kid Could Paint This" is an exposé of a family who claimed that their four-year-old could paint abstract works as good as those of the masters, the U.S. government covered up the real circ*mstances of Tillman's death because a) they did not want it known that a sports celebrity lost his life from friendly fire; b) they were looking to make a recruitment poster out of Tillman by branding him a hero who is awarded the Silver Star for extreme bravery.
Most of the talking heads are from Tillman's immediate family: from his brother Bryan, who joined the Rangers as well, from his father, Patrick Sr., an attorney; from his widow, Marie Tillman, and most of all from Pat's mother, Dannie Tillman, a special education teacher, who is the most outspoken critic of the cover-up.
Pat Tillman was not just a jock but a well-read person, an atheist who had no problem reading The Book of Mormon to understand the religions of others, and a fan of the far-left linguist, Noam Chomsky who has been one of the leading critics of American foreign policy for decades. Aside from Pat's atheism, which you can be sure no-one from President Bush on down would comment upon in creating this hero, the young man possessed all the makings of a guy whom the country would like to look up to, thereby creating a major motive for the lies: Tillman becomes a poster boy for war. Never mind that he opposed the American mission, though one must seriously wonder why, then, he would not accept an offer to get an honorable discharge after the passage of a year and a half but instead went right back to the fighting to complete his three-year-term.
"The Tillman Story" is concisely edited to form a narrative, though one could have done with some cutbacks in the talking heads and more clips from Tillman's career on the football field and more videos and tapes from the battlefront. Some of the spokespersons were so inarticulate that they repeated "you-know" and "kind of" so often that you may wonder to what extent they are themselves covering up. One item not considered at all is whether the friendly fire could have been hostile fire: that is, from members of a unit that had something against Tillman and knowingly pumped him full of bullets for an entire minute though only forty feet from the man. There is a suggestion, though, that these Rangers were hopped up, eager for a firefight, and needing to prove themselves as genuine combatants who "saw action" during the war.
As though an encouragement to the audience, Bar-Lev notes how nothing would have come of the affair if Pat's dad, Pat Sr., did not write a letter accusing the military of fraud-thereby setting in motion a full investigation. "Speak up," Bar-Lev appears to say, "persevere," and do not let injustices go unpunished.
Unrated. 94 minutes. © 2010 by Harvey Karten Member: NY Film Critics Online

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